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Writer's pictureCowry Art Studio

ATIS REZISTANS. Port au Prince junkyard make-do, survivalist recycling and artistic endeavor


Ti Moun Rezistans, at Cowry Art Studio. @ www.atis-rezistans.com
Ti Moun Rezistans @ www.atis-rezistans.com

ATIS REZISTANS are two square blocks in Port-of-Prince Haiti’s Grand Rue district, it houses an elaborate labyrinth of studios, workshops and living areas.


"Ti Moun Rezistans is the name of the group of children ranging from 6 to 18 years old that have been learning art skills from older artists in the neighborhood. All the children exhibit their work around the ateliers. They all took part in the Ghetto Biennale, notably creating a great performance work called 'Tele Geto'.


Grand Rue is the main avenue that runs a north-south swathe through downtown Port au Prince from Bel Air and La Saline to La Cimetière and Carrefour. At the southern end of Grand Rue, amongst the labyrinthine warren of back streets that line the avenue, is an area that traditionally has produced small handicrafts for the ever-diminishing tourism market. This close-knit community is hemmed in on all sides by the makeshift car repair district, which serves as both graveyard and salvation for the cities increasingly decrepit automobiles.

All the artists grew up in this atmosphere of junkyard make-do, survivalist recycling and artistic endeavor. Their powerful sculptural collages of engine manifolds, TV sets, wheel hubcaps and discarded lumber have transformed the detritus of a failing economy into bold, radical and warped sculptures. Their work references their shared African & Haitian cultural heritage, a dystopian sci-fi view of the future and the positive transformative act of assemblage. The artists from Grand Rue are extending the historical legacy of assemblage to the majority world. Their use of the ready made components are driven by economic necessity combined with creative vision and cultural continuity. Their work is transformative on many different allegorical levels, the transformation of wreckage to art, of disunity to harmony and of three young men, with no formal arts training, to the new heirs of a radical and challenging arts practice that has reached down through both modernist and post-modern arts practice. "


Information @www.atis-rezistans.com and pictures Courtesy of https://www.facebook.com/atis.rezistans

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