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Hector Hyppolite

 
Art Encyclopedia: Hector Hyppolite

(b Saint-Marc, 15 Sept 1894; d Port-au-Prince, 9 June 1948). Haitian painter. The 250 works produced by him during the last two-and-a-half years of his life dominate the extraordinary achievements of the so-called Haitian primitives. Like his father and grandfather he was a priest of Vodoun. He also worked as a shoemaker and housepainter, and it was interest in some painted doors in a bar in Monrouis, near Saint-Marc, that led him to paint pictures. Hyppolite created his own myth and lived it. His claim to have spent five years in Africa is dubious, but it is certain that he was outside Haiti from 1915 to 1920, perhaps cutting cane in Cuba. Most of his life was lived in penury. The Haitian critic and poet Philippe Thoby-Marcelin brought him to Port-au-Prince in 1945. In the following year Andr? Breton bought his paintings and arranged an exhibition of his work at UNESCO in Paris, writing that Hyppolite's fresh and powerful imagery could reinvigorate European art (Breton). His subjects invite interpretation on many levels. His principal subject, with whom he contracted a spiritual marriage, was woman, in the form of Erzulie the temptress, the queen or the sea goddess. Figures, landscapes and other objects are represented almost summarily in his pictures; he placed little value on perfecting techniques, applying the paint rapidly with chicken feathers and his fingers. In his last year the darker side of magical Vodoun appeared in his pictures.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



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Hector Hyppolite (1894 - 1948) was a Haitian painter. Born in Saint-Marc, Hyppolite was a third generation Vodou priest, or houngan.[1] He also made shoes and painted houses before taking up fine art painting, which he did untrained.[1] Hyppolite spent five years outside of Haiti from 1915-1920.[1] Although he later claimed those years had been spent in Africa, scholars regard that as more likely an instance of promotional myth-making than factual.[1] Due to the poverty he faced during most of his life it is more likely that he spent those years as an agricultural laborer in a nearby country, perhaps Cuba.[1]

Hyppolite's talent as an artist was noticed by Philippe Thoby-Marcelin, who brought him to Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince in 1945.[1] There Hyppolite worked in the studio run by Dewitt Peters, a watercolorist and schoolteacher from the United States who had come to Haiti to teach the English language as part of the Good Neighbor Policy.[2][3] In 1944 Peters opened an art center in the capital that provided free materials.[2] Before arriving at the Centre d'Art Hyppolite had painted upon cardboard using chicken feathers and sold to visiting United States Marines because he owned no brushes.[3] Peters had first noticed Hyppolite's work in 1943 on the exterior doors of a bar in Mont Ruis, which Hyppolite had painted with flower and bird designs.[2] Flowers could represent attributes of deities in Vodou symbolism, and although the doors had not been explicitly religious Hyppolite recognized interest in Vodou among art buyers and incorporated Vodou themes into his work during his time at Peters's studio.[2]

André Breton, a leading surrealist, traveled to Haiti in 1945 with Cuban artist Wifredo Lam.[3] Lam purchased two of Hyppolite's paintings; Breton purchased five paintings and wrote about Hyppolite's work in Surrealism and Painting.[2] Although Breton included Hyppolite among surrealists, Hyppolite's work was more realistic and religious than an effort to reproduce dream imagery.[2] Nonetheless, Breton's regard for Hyppolite's work brought Hyppolite and Haitian painting to a wider audience.[2] In January 1947 Hyppolite exhibited at a UNESCO exhibition in Paris and received an enthusiastic reception.[1][3] The United States writer Truman Capote praised Hyppolite's painting "because there's nothing in it that has been slyly transposed".[3]

Hyppolite, a prolific painter, typically depicted Vodou scenes and created between 250 and 600 paintings during the last three years of his life.[4][3] He died at about age 54 in Haiti's capital city, Port-au-Prince.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Jane Turner, ed. (2000). Encyclopedia of Latin American and Caribbean Art. Macmillan Reference Limited. pp. 354-355. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Jacqueline Barnitz (2001). Twentiety-Century Art of Latin America. University of Texas Press. pp. 124-126. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f Kristin G. Congdon and Kara Kelley Hallmark (2002). Artists from Latin American Cultures: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Press. pp. 108-110. 
  4. ^ P. Schutt-Ainé, Haiti: A Basic Reference Book, 113

References

  • Schutt-Ainé, Patricia; Staff of Librairie Au Service de la Culture (1994). Haiti: A Basic Reference Book. Miami, Florida: Librairie Au Service de la Culture. p. 113. ISBN 0-9638599-0-0. 

 
 
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