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Genevieve Iris Esper
is a Haitian Modernist who studied at L'Ecole Beaux Art in Paris
and has an art degree in architecture. Iris did not begin painting
until she was 33 and at 39 she is still called upon to execute the
occasional structural design, but purely creative art is now her
domain. The artist's distinctive style shows architectural influences
of Byzantine and medieval style, intricate geometric patterns and
folk art symbols, these paintings all the while are executed in
bold Haitian colors. Author, Marie Alice Theard explains in her
book Haiti, la voie de nos silences, that Iris sets up correspondences
with the compositions, decomposition, and re-compositions, naive
or sophisticated, drawn from the abysses of vaudou. Her retina captures
and transmits the signs, sacred symbols and forms of Taino heritage.
She performs a descriptive execution of the western academic referrals.
She also remembers Saint-Soleil. The heretic characters of her paintings,
void of narrative content, give off the aspect of an Egyptian bas-relief.
She has exhibited widely throughout Haiti, France, and Florida.
Most recently, she has shown at the Espace Klee Gallery, Paris France,
The United Nations, New York, and The Black Arts Festival in New
York. This is her first exhibition in Washington, DC.
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