POUGHKEEPSIE, NY.- A new installation of Hispanic Caribbean art is now on view at the
Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College.
Fluid Ecologies: Hispanic Caribbean Art from the Permanent Collection is an exhibition of thirteen works on paper by seven of the most celebrated Hispanic Caribbean artists of the last five decades. Organized by the Art Center and Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert, Professor of Hispanic Studies on the Sarah Tod Fitz Randolph Distinguished Professor Chair, the exhibition will be on view through May 8.
The Caribbean regions historical role as crossroads of the world has engendered cultures, literatures, and art born of dynamic intellectual and creative networks connecting writers, artists, and ideas across the Caribbean Sea, its islands and continental shores, and the world beyond. Like a fluid ecology forever interacting to generate the wholerooted in a particular geographic environment in which no place or person is ever too far from the sea that defines itCaribbean art is protean, hybrid, mercurial, yet always anchored in its historical and cultural environment, says Paravisini-Gebert.
The artists represented echo in their work many of the key issues in the regions history: momentous European encounters, the slave trade and the sugar plantation, a costly reliance on tourism, the slow violence of environmental mismanagement, and the ever-repeating cycles of human migrations . The artists includ e Wifredo Lam, Marisol, Rafael Ferrer, Tom á s S á nchez , Luis Fernando Roldán, José Bedia, and Enoc Perez . Each has sought in unique ways to disavow the reduction of the tropical landscape to a tourists paradise and to offer instead intense renderings created at this crossroads of the world, emerging from a history of fluid navigations of a multifarious space.