Alvaro Barrington blends Caribbean masquerade with Kuba cloth traditions
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, January 9, 2026


Alvaro Barrington blends Caribbean masquerade with Kuba cloth traditions
Alvaro Barrington, On the Road: TS 6, Blue Dancers, Kids Day, 2025. Oil, acrylic, Flashe, enamel on burlap, 200 × 135 cm (78.74 × 53.15 in) © Alvaro Barrington.



SALZBURG.- Thaddaeus Ropac Salzburg presents Alvaro Barrington’s most recent series of works in the artist’s second solo exhibition in Austria. The exhibition’s title, On the Road (TMS), evokes a wide range of references that run through the exhibition, including motifs from Barrington’s personal and cultural history. The title also refers literally to the works themselves: first exhibited in Barrington’s 2024 solo exhibition Grace at Tate Britain, they were subsequently expanded for the Notting Hill Carnival in 2025, installed on the Mangrove Sound Truck. Now, for its third iteration in Salzburg, this body of work is reimagined as collaged and intricately stitched wall hangings.

For Barrington, who has family roots in Grenada and Haiti, ‘On the Road’ echoes a familiar phrase about meeting someone on the streets during Carnival. Caribbean Carnival traditions are vibrant celebrations of cultural fusion and were expanded geographically by diasporic communities. Today, all over the world, Carnivals are hubs for various forms of cultural production. ‘The energy is high, the streets full of people. The sound is soca and reggae played on sound systems, the smell is of truck engine, grass and marijuana,’ the artist describes.

The burlap tapestries in the exhibition depict a variety of Carnival masquerade characters originating from Grenada and Trinidad and Tobago, and draw from the vocabulary of Kuba cloth patterns. Mas, the shortened form of masquerade, fuses religious and traditional aspects – from African masking culture and French colonial influences, to Indigenous cultures. Barrington’s depictions include Moko Jumbie, a stilt walker derived from West African protective figures, Blue Devil, J’ouvert, from the French ‘jour ouvert’, that grew from rebellious dawn rituals of freedom, Pretty Mas, featuring costumes with feathers, sequins and head pieces and Jab Jab, where masqueraders, often covered in black oil or paint and chains, embody the devil to symbolize post-emancipation resistance. Each painting is surrounded by a repeated portrait of the Jamaican dancehall musician Buju Banton, one of the most significant and well-regarded artists in Jamaican music.

The works are presented as tapestries, which historically would have been rolled up and carried by families from house to house, passed from generation to generation. ‘I really love this idea of tapestries being about travel. After the Tate and the truck at Notting Hill, for this exhibition, I tried to make the works feel like they had weight and belonged flat on a wall,’ explains the artist. The works are made of burlap, an inexpensive material primarily used to make sacks for transporting cocoa and coffee beans, but also favoured by artists including Paul Gauguin and Alberto Burri. In Barrington’s works, colourful abstract shapes are sewn into the coarse burlap surface using a variety of stitching techniques that hark back to traditionally gendered craft traditions passed down by the women in his family, as well as the Caribbean history of artistic expression in fabric and sewing.

The artworks draw from the sophisticated vocabulary of Kuba cloth patterns. These traditional fabrics are woven from palm leaf fibres, decorated with geometric shapes, stitched or embroidered onto long cloths, and have served as ceremonial attire and currency in the Kuba Kingdom of Central Africa since the seventeenth century. Kuba cloths have a long history of reception in Western art, notably in the work of Henri Matisse, who, after travelling to Africa, collected and hung the textiles in his studio. His colourful cut-outs and collages – specifically his 1947 Jazz series – also strongly resonate within Barrington’s works, where patterns have a musical connotation and resemble dancing bodies and energetic movement. ‘They testify to the enduring cultural exchanges among artists and the historic roots of trade,’ explains the artist.

I have this belief that we live fuller lives as human beings through trade, through the ability of trading stories, trading gifts, trading ideas. That was the overall vision. This show is a celebration of the people and places that make us feel like we belong.—Alvaro Barrington










Today's News

January 8, 2026

Sotheby's debuts the most valuable single-owner American Whiskey collection

National Museum of Asian Art announces major gift to endow and name Jeffrey P. Cunard Curator of Southeast Asian Art

Artcurial Motorcars discovers an automotive treasure in Paris

Kimberly Miller appointed Global Managing Director for Luxury

Bruce Conner's explosive Ray Charles homage comes to Chelsea

Exhibition at Bortolami debuts works by five artists redefining the technology of painting

Alvaro Barrington blends Caribbean masquerade with Kuba cloth traditions

Olney Gleason explores the materiality of the digital image

David Zwirner now represents Amy Sillman

Museum of Craft and Design announces the appointment of Masha Berek as Executive Director

Peeling back the past: Capitain Petzel navigates the maze of involuntary memory

Arthur Simms places his Byzantine-inspired panels in dialogue with new sculpture at Karma

Maison Européenne de la Photographie presents Paris's most significant Edward Weston retrospective in 30 years

The City of Aarhus and ARoS to open the world's largest museum-based Skyspace by James Turrell

Nelson-Atkins campus rejuvenated ahead of expansion

Fabian Knecht drapes the Langen Foundation in Ukrainian camouflage

Enrich.R explores memory and materiality at Alzueta Gallery

Artpace San Antonio announces Spring 2026 International Artists-in-Residence

Film London announces artists selected for this year's FLAMIN Fellowship development scheme

Larissa de Souza transforms the stage at Albertz Benda




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful