Lesson Learned: A Self Portrait of Rehab
       
     
Bingo: The New Math
       
     
Back Support
       
     
MA(H)GA - Make America's (Haiti) Great Again
       
     
Civic Duty
       
     
Jalousie: Blan Nan Mache (Whites in the Market)
       
     
Lesson Learned: A Self Portrait of Rehab
       
     
Lesson Learned: A Self Portrait of Rehab

The Canvas questions "What can 90 days teach you to replace the 15,330 days lost?"

2015 - Acrylic on Canvas

Framed - 32"x26"

Bingo: The New Math
       
     
Bingo: The New Math

The Canvas questions "how can this be relaxing when it takes 5 seconds for you to believe what you've heard, 10 seconds for you to make sure you didn't transpose what you saw, and an hour for you to come off the rant that this is a conspiracy?"

2016 - Acrylic on Canvas

Framed - 24" x 36 "

Back Support
       
     
Back Support

The Canvas questions "How many letters, words, phrases, sentences, statements does it take to hold me up, when I fall short of doing it for myself?”

2018 - Mix Media on Canvas

Framed - 24"x12"

In the Collection of - Anonymous

MA(H)GA - Make America's (Haiti) Great Again
       
     
MA(H)GA - Make America's (Haiti) Great Again

The Canvas questions "Is the CIA's generational wealth of the Duvalier regime enough to compensate those who still mourn their lost memories?"

2020 - mix media on canvas

24x48 in., framed

Fort Dimanche is an infamous prison in Haiti located near La Saline in Port-au-Prince that was notorious for torture and murder during the reign of François Duvalier. During the reign of Duvalier he and his Tonton Macoutes used the facility as an interrogation center and prison to incarcerate, torture, and murder political opponents. His son, Jean-Claude Duvalier, continued to use it as an instrument of terror. The Fort was destroyed by the 2010 earthquake, but the Duvaliers have resurged. Nicholas Duvalier, the grandson of Francois Duvalier, is considered a presidential contender for 2022.

Civic Duty
       
     
Civic Duty

The Canvas questions......"Why did the driver tell the state trooper that it was his "civic duty to run the n....s off the road'? Why did the doctors feel it was their civic duty to inform my parents that their ethnicity excluded them from saving their daughter's life? Why did the FDA decide that it was their civic duty to declare that AIDS patient zero were the 4H - Homosexuals, Hemophiliacs, Heroin Addicts, and Haitians? Why did 250,000 Haitians feel it was their civic duty to rally across the Brooklyn Bridge to protest the racism of the AIDS epidemic?"

2020 - acrylic on canvas

40 x 30 in., framed

April 20th 1990 150,000 Haitians Shook The Brooklyn Bridge Protesting Against FDA “Bad Blood” HIV Claims.

In the collection of Wanda Jacob, Long Beach, CA

Jalousie: Blan Nan Mache (Whites in the Market)
       
     
Jalousie: Blan Nan Mache (Whites in the Market)

The Canvas questions "If we couldn't stop them from stripping our mountains and our markets, how can we get them to stop them from stripping our soul?"

2020 - Mix Media on Canvas

24x48 in., framed

Foreign Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO's) have been part of the Haitian socio-economic infrastructure for the past 75 years. After the 2010 Earthquake, 1.3M people were left homeless. NGOs endorsed a $1.4 million effort titled "Beauty versus Poverty: Jalousie in Colours" - a government project to relocate people from the displacement camps that sprouted up after the earthquake. While most residents welcome the attempt to beautify Jalousie, a slum of 45,000 inhabitants, critics say the project was an example of superficial changes. Jalousie is unique in that its mountainside presence makes it visible to people living in the wealthy district of Petionville. Critics have suggested that the choice of Jalousie is as much about giving the posh hotels of Petionville a pretty view as helping the slum's residents. Many say that the money many say should have been spent on sanitation, water, electricity, schools, or infrastructure.