鶹ý Museum of Art and Claremont Graduate University present The Crossing/La traversée: Art in Haiti and the U.S. (1915-1986)
March 3, 2016 – March 5, 2016
鶹ý Museum of Art and Claremont Graduate University presents The Crossing: La traversée: Art in Haiti and the U.S., a symposium convening national and international scholars and artists to examine the deep connections between the art and material culture of Haiti and the United States.
鶹ý is located in Claremont, California, 35 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Parking is free and located at 295 E. First Street. For additional parking information and driving directions, please visit .
Schedule of Events
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
6:00 pm Keynote Talk by Edouard Duval-Carrié (painter, sculptor, and installation artist) in the 鶹ý Studio Art Hall, Lecture Theater
Opening remarks by Tammi J. Schneider, Dean, School of Arts and Humanities, Claremont Graduate University and Claudine Michel, Department of Black Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
Reception to follow at the 鶹ý Museum of Art
Catering by Tigeorges Haitian Restaurant
Live Music co-sponsored by Ashé Africa featuring Fusion Band
FRIDAY, MARCH 4
Morning Presentations in the 鶹ý Studio Art Hall, Lecture Theater
Introductions by April Mayes, Associate Professor of History, 鶹ý
8:15 am Light refreshments, coffee & tea
9 am Welcome by Elizabeth H. Crighton, Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of 鶹ý
9: 15 am Erica Moiah James
Assistant Professor, History of Art and African American Studies, Yale University
Talk: “Testimony: The 19th Century Haitian Portraits of Louis Rigaud”
9:45 am Peter Haffner
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance, University of California, Los Angeles
"Tourists Turned Connoisseurs: Collection Histories of Haitian Art in the United States"
10:15 am Kate Ramsey
Associate Professor of History, University of Miami
“Transformative Visions: Reflections on Haitian Art History and Vodou Material Cultures Through the Lens of a Recent Exhibition at the University of Miami”
10:45 am Q&A
11 am Break: Light refreshments, coffee & tea
11:15 am Pascale Monnin, Artist, Port-au-Prince, in conversation with Terri Geis, Curator of Academic Programs, 鶹ý Museum of Art
12 pm Jean-Daniel Lafontant, Haitian Cultural Foundation, Port-au-Prince
Tour of the exhibition “Restoring the Spirit: Celebrating Haitian Art” at the 鶹ý Museum of Art
12:45 pm Lunch served at the 鶹ý Museum of Art courtyard
Afternoon Presentations in the 鶹ý Studio Art Hall, Lecture Theater
Introductions by April Mayes
2 pm Ronald Edmond, Artist, Port-au-Prince, in conversation with Robin Derby, Associate Professor of History, University of California, Los Angeles
SATURDAY, MARCH 5
Morning Presentations in the 鶹ý Studio Art Hall, Lecture Theater
Introductions by Marlene Daut, Associate Professor of English and Cultural Studies and Director of the Graduate Certificate Program in Africana Studies, Claremont Graduate University
8:15 am Light refreshments, coffee & tea
9 am Aura Díaz López
Head Librarian and Curator of the Collección Josefina del Toro Fulladosa, University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras
“The Nemours Collection of Haitian History”
9:30 am Terri Geis
Talk: “The Creative Exchanges of Maya Deren and André Pierre"
10 am Pascale Monnin
Artist and Creative Director, Le Centre d’Art, Port-au-Prince
“The History, Collection, and Contemporary Vision of the Centre d’Art”
10:30 am Q&A
11:15 am Alexandra Madsen, University of Texas at Austin
Curatorial tour of the exhibition “The Shake of a Man in Fever: Haiti's February Revolution through the Lens of Danny Lyon” at the 鶹ý Museum of Art
12 pm Lunch served at the 鶹ý Museum of Art courtyard
Afternoon Presentations in the 鶹ý Studio Art Hall, Lecture Theater
Introductions by Marlene Daut
1:30 pm Lindsay Twa
Associate Professor of Art, Augustana University
"Evil Dictators, Cannibalism and Zombies: American Visions of Haiti in the 1920s, 30s, and Beyond"
2 pm Cheryl Finley
Associate Professor of Art History, Cornell University, and Richard Cohen Fellow in African and African American Art, W.E.B Du Bois Institute, Harvard University
“The Mask as Muse”
2:30 pm Marcela Guerrero
Curatorial Fellow, Hammer Museum, University of California, Los Angeles
"Sartorial Imperatives: The Politics of Clothes in Jean-Ulrick Désert's Negerhosen2000 and The Burqa Project”
3 pm Q&A
3:15 pm Break: Light refreshments, coffee & tea
3:30 p.m Alison Saar, Artist, Los Angeles, in conversation with Patrick Polk, Curator of Latin American and Caribbean art, Fowler Museum, University of California, Los Angeles
4:30 pm Myriam J.A. Chancy
Hartley Burr Alexander Chair in the Humanities, Scripps College
Reading from novel-in-progress Douze
"Co-existing with the Dead: Narrating Life after the Earthquake"