Painting Haitian
Painting Haitian Art @ eBay
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![]() Haitian Artist Hand Painting Men Dominican Rep US $19.99
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![]() Beautiful Authentic Painting Henri Jean Louissigned US $385.00
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![]() Jean Claude Legagneur Original Oil NAVAJO CHILDREN US $35,000.00
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![]() Original Haiti Haitian Painting by Levoy Exil US $295.00
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![]() Original Haiti Haitian Painting by Simeon Michel US $195.00
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![]() EARLY HAITIAN PAINTING FOLK ART FIGURE ANIMALS NAIVE SIGNED 1973 US $202.50
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![]() Haitian Art by Andre Blaise US $195.00
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![]() ORIGINAL SIGNED HAITIAN PAINTING CARIBBEAN HAITI US $500.00
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![]() BERNARD SEJOURNE HAITIAN ART PAINTING 34X40 COLLECTIBLE BEAUTY US $15,650.00
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![]() Stunning Painting by Haitian Artist Jean Paul Milord US $349.00
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![]() Stunning30X40 Painting by Haitian Artist Jocelyn JOSEPH US $1,499.00
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![]() Stunning 30 X 40 Painting by Haitian Ismer Saincilus US $1,299.00
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![]() Authentic Painting by Master Roland DORCELY Reduced US $8,499.00
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![]() Original OIL PAINTING By Haitian Artist Audes Saul US $3,917.00
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![]() LITHOGRAPHY MIRO US $.99
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![]() Louisiane Saint Fleurant Haitian clay sculpture US $750.00
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![]() Primitive Folk Art Oil Painting Haiti 1980s 95x 75 Signed Bouta US $69.95
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![]() Authentic Haitian Painting Saincilus Ismael signed US $1,365.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIAN PAINTING by MJROLANDhuge 30x40 0013 US $100.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIAN AFRICAN PAINTING0007huge 30x40 US $90.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIANAFRICANCARIBBEAN PAINTING US $90.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIANCARIBBEAN PAINTING US $95.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIAN AFRICAN CARIBBEAN PAINTING00011huge 30x40 US $95.00
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![]() ORIGINAL HAITIANAFRICANCARIBBEANNAIVE PAINTING0015huge 30x40 US $88.00
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![]() HANDCRAFTED HAITIAN CARVING VINTAGE SOLID MAHOGANY MADE BY MEVS MARKED US $9.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Elie Rilien 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Fanfan 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Francoise Jean 30 x 20 US $1,500.00
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![]() Haitian Painting by Fritz 40 x 30 US $448.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Jacques signed 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Jn Elie 24 x 30 US $348.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Joseph Mckenson 36 x 40 US $698.99
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![]() Haitian Painting by Millien 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Haitian Painting Reloti Jn Robert 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Haitian Painting signed 20 x 24 US $298.99
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![]() Original widlerGermain Oil on canvas painting Haitian artist US $229.00
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![]() Petion Savain 60s Oil Haiti Modern Master Well LISTED US $2,280.00
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![]() HAITIAN ENCHANTING COLORFUL PAINTING OF VILLAGE SCENE US $499.00
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![]() 20c Haitian O B Modernist Multi Figured Painting US $46.00
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![]() Unusual Hatian Haiti African Painting Signed S S Abll US $34.95
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![]() 88 HAITIAN PAINTING by LAFORTUNE FELIX MAITRE SIMILOR US $999.00
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![]() 1986 HAITIAN PAINTING by LAFORTUNE FELIX LEGBA US $999.00
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![]() Modern abstract figural Haitian oil canvas painting sign Jaki US $29.99
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![]() Authentic Haitian Painting By Franklin Joseph Jean US $682.50
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![]() Haitian Painting by Gerard Fortune 30 x 40 US $1,200.00
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![]() HAITIAN ERZULIE DANTHOR VODOU VOODOO FLAG 30 HIGH BY GUS NOL US $216.00
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Ways to represent Dominican culture in contrast to Haitian?
I'm doing an art project,
it is reflecting on the Haitian people who work in Dominican garbage dumps and the apathetic if not cruel attitude from some Dominican people who don't want the Haitians receiving help or getting better jobs in the Dominican.
I was looking for a subtle way to show that the topic i'm commenting on is between Dominicans and Haitians, and I was going to subtly paint the flags into the background of their respective parts. But the flags are too similar -I don't think it will get my point across.
What else should I do? The national animal? Flower? I'm afraid they aren't recognizable enough and distract from my intended message :/
'Cracker Jax' - thanks, that is the point of my commentary.. but my question is about how I should portray this visually.
The contrast between Haiti and the Dominican Republic, which share the island of Hispaniola, is nowhere so stark as on its common border.
Pedernales, in the remote southwest desert, is poor by comparison to the rest of the Dominican Republic. Nevertheless, it has continuous electricity without the blackouts that often plague the rest of the country. It has a regular supply of running water and well ordered, paved streets with solid concrete houses.
Across the river in Haiti, Anse-a-Pitre has no paved roads, and only a few wells. Only the small barber shop with a solar panel and the small hotel with a generator have electricity. Fishing boats with large outboards line the rocky beach on the Dominican side while in Haiti, only one of the few dozen boats has a motor, the others must fish under sail.
It is easy for citizens of a country which has running water, electricity, gas stoves and plentiful food to assume that they are superior to citizens of a nation that does not have these modern conveniences.
"I do not blame Dominicans who hold negative views of Haitians since that is how they were taught since they were young," said Giselda Liberato, coordinator of Intercultural Programmes for the development agency Plan International. "We were told terrible things. We were told that they were savages, even that they were cannibals. So it is not the fault of Dominicans who have been misinformed."
"Many Dominicans do not have an opportunity to meet people of a high level of education. They do not meet their peers. We wanted Dominican journalists to meet Haitian journalists who are at the same level of education, so that they can meet one another as professionals," she told IPS.
With help from Plan International, six Dominican journalists who run espacinsular.org as volunteers recently organised a three-day meeting of Haitian and Dominican journalists. Their website carries news articles from both Haitian and Dominican news sources translated respectively into Spanish and French in order to promote better cross-cultural understanding.
Ruben Silie, sociologist and former general secretary of the Association of Caribbean States, explains the history of the island from the discovery by Columbus to the present day. When questioned particularly about why Dominicans do not identify themselves with any African heritage despite the obvious racial characteristics in their appearances, Silie explained: "Under Trujillo, the history books were written to eliminate all mention of slavery. The people were told that they were descendants of Spanish colonists and Indians."
The information caused a stir among the Haitians in the room. Marie Keetie Louis, a Haitian interpreter who lives in Santo Domingo, said, "But they were taught a lie. That explains so much about them."
Jose Seruelle, ambassador from the Dominican Republic to Haiti responded: "One must remember that Trujillo was a fascist dictator, that he used the issue of Haitians for his own benefit. He did this to maintain himself, as a pretext to combat his opponents, his Dominican opponents. There was always the pretext of the blacks, the Haitians, who had to be put out of the country. But it should be remembered that this same Trujillo used the Haitian workers to exploit them and to enrich himself. There was hypocrisy there."
But in the interior of the Dominican soul, there is no racism," Seruelle added. There is a racism that is present at the level of the schools, but this is fought more and more by the Dominican people and by the Dominican government because the Dominican government does not accept racism."
"President Fernandez is a man who is anti-racist. He does not accept racism or discrimination on the basis of religion or the colour of the skin because we a people who are truly diverse, We have blacks, whites, people who come from Arab countries, from European countries, the United States, Canada, Cuba, Caribbean, how then, could we be racist? It is not possible. This is not the Dominican mentality. It is true that there are some historic events that have been badly explained. We must try to understand one another better."
"If two people respect one another, they will get along. We are two people, the Dominicans and the Haitians, who are married to one another, in the sense that we share the same island, a common history, and a shared ecosystem. We must respect one another. We must preserve our island, we must love it," he said.
EDIT: Okay , how about a "map" picture depicting their differences in art?
Haitian Exhibit Opens at Widener
International attention was first directed towards Haitian art in the mid-1940s when Dewitt Peters, an American Quaker sent to Haiti by the U.S. Office of Education, founded the Centre d'Art in Port-au-Prince, the nation's capital. The institution, an epicenter of culture in a vibrantly artistic country, along with the collections at College Saint Pierre, the Holy Trinity Cathedral, and other ...
Haitian Art Haitian Painting Haiti


US $19.99































































































