Entries in Grenada (58)

Tuesday
Apr142026

Sirens & Sinners

This month's exhibition with Asher Mains at Art House 473 in Calliste, Grenada is a little bit of a wander down memory lane.  Works from 30 years of painting the Mask Series, with new little paintings continue the exploration into human nature.  Asher creates the Sirens, incorporating ghost nets from the beaches of Calliste. Asher Mains and Susan Mains at opening of Sirens & Sinners

 

Installation View Asher Mains Installation View Asher Mains

Sirens and Sinners

In the intimate, chapel-like hush of Art House 473. It is a space itself steeped in reinvention as a former church turned contemporary art sanctuary, Sirens and Sinners unfolds less as an exhibition than as a quiet reckoning. The collaborative presentation by Asher Mains and Susan Mains resists spectacle. Instead, it leans into something more disquieting: the slow, persistent gaze of faces that seem to remember you.

The title gestures toward myth and morality, temptation and transgression, but the works themselves complicate any such binaries. Here, the “sirens” do not seduce so much as confront, and the “sinners” appear less condemned than deeply, almost tenderly, human. There is a sense that these figures, many rendered as mask-like visages, are not archetypes imposed from above, but identities accumulated over time, sedimented through experience. Indeed, the exhibition draws from what has been described as a decades-long exploration of masks and the stories they carry .

Susan Mains’ contribution feels especially steeped in this temporal layering. Her “little faces,” as they have been called, carry an uncanny weight: miniature yet monumental, naive yet knowing. They recall not only Caribbean masquerade traditions but also something inward, psychological, faces as thresholds rather than surfaces. One senses that each is less an object than a residue, the trace of a lived moment that refuses to fully dissolve.

Asher Mains, by contrast, brings a spatial and atmospheric counterpoint. His work situates these faces within a broader visual language, one that oscillates between abstraction and figuration, between environment and apparition.  His collection of found objects, ghost nets that wash up on the fishing village beaches of Calliste, become props in the presentation, and find their way in to the paintings, holding, caressing, even trapping the “sirens”.  As he studies Homer in the Odyssey and the works of St. Lucian Derek Walcott in Omeros, he creates his own magical realism narrative, deeply routed in the Caribbean life of the sea. 

If Susan’s pieces are intimate confessions, Asher’s are the rooms in which those confessions echo.

What binds the exhibition is its refusal to resolve. There is no clear moral axis here, no didactic narrative separating virtue from vice. Instead, Sirens and Sinners proposes a more unsettling thesis: that the categories themselves are porous, perhaps even illusory. The viewer is left to navigate a terrain where allure and guilt, innocence and complicity, coexist within the same gaze.

And perhaps this is where the exhibition finds its quiet power. In a cultural moment that often demands clarity, labels, positions, declarations, Sirens and Sinners insists on ambiguity. It invites us not to judge the figures before us, but to recognize them. To see, in their layered faces, something uncomfortably familiar. 

In the end, the show does not ask who the sirens are, or who the sinners might be. It asks, more subtly and more dangerously; when you look long enough, can you still tell the difference?

 Her Slippery Crown 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

Saturday
Jul012023

Yes we are still in it!

Woefully absent from this platform, my extreme apologies!  Seems like Instagram and Facebook have dominated the posts for a long while, and it is time to remedy that!

 

Just a little timeline news.  In 2022 Susan led the team of artists from Grenada to the pavilion at Biennale di Venezia to show off our collective work on Shakespeare Mas. You can get more details from grenadavenice.org/archive It was fabulously successful with over 100,000 people visiting. 

Here is my contribution in painting --

 

The Grenada Contemporary came off in Late October of 2022 at Art House 473 -- see the catalog here.

And forward ever, the Grenada Pavilion for the  18th Architectural Biennale di Venezia, which you can see at Grenadavenice.org

Teaching a class today!  Professional Practices for Artists

Sorry this is so brief -- follow on Instagram, @susanmains. Facebook susanmains

More to come!

Tuesday
Feb082022

The gifts of the pandemic.

 

Having exhibited at Gallery of Caribbean art just about every two years since its inception. Susan Mains wasn’t going to let a little thing like a world-wide pandemic stop her from a regular appearance.

 

A Caribbean person with historic roots in Barbados, (think 1648) her artistic history encompasses Dominica, Barbados, and Grenada.   Her island home in Grenada is no stranger to conflict — worker riots in the 50’s, a rocky 1974 independence from Great Britain, a fiery revolution and invasion by a super power in the late 70’ early 80’s, a devastating Hurricane Ivan in 2004 that destroyed her home and studio, and now, this pandemic that froze us all in time for almost two years.  

 

The response to all this? Art takes centre stage.  In her quiet studio in St Paul’s Grenada, she has been assembling a body of work that honours that which never fails us — the resilience of the land and sea and of course the women who populate our lives and strengthen us.  Her characteristic bright colored paintings vibrate with impressionistic strokes of color, laid down with a pallet knife or quick moving brush.  That intermediary space between the colors, where the complimentary grays appear are her favorite passages.  Susan says, “ Our lives are made up of passing moments, those incidences that you only appreciate fully when you look back at them.  These paintings are metaphors for those moments”.

 

Thanks to the internet, she was also able to accomplish another whole volunteer job during these quiet days.  Grenada participated as a national pavilion in la Biennale di Venezia Architecture Exhibition for the first time May through November of 2021.  The pavilion showed Grenada’s new House of Parliament, which was designed by Bryan Bullen, a son of the soil.  Only the faithful crew on the ground in Venice made this possible, because of travel restrictions, no one could go. The Biennale had over 300,000 visitors, inspite of the rigid Covid protocols.  It was the only outpost for Grenada in the heart of Europe during this bleak time. 

 

Then there was Expo 2020 in Dubai.  (actually totally in 2021) Susan also volunteered to curate the art that Grenada presented as part of its display.  By December of 2021 travel had eased enough that she actually travelled to see it! Several artists from Grenada had their first opportunity to show internationally at this event.  The expo will continue through the end of March.

Further flexing her curatorial muscle, she is now organizing the Grenada Pavilion for the 59th Biennale di Venezia, set to open in Venice in April.  The Cypher Art Collective of Grenada will show the result of more than a year of zoom meetings, portraying the very interesting ritual of Shakespeare Mas in Carriacou.  It is a huge task, but the intangible rewards are immeasurable. 

 

Susan says, “In this time of tremendous change in the Caribbean, we need to stand our ground and tell our own stories.  Heritage is more than a buzz word for accessing funding for projects—it is the living of our lives well as we remember our ancestors”. 

 

Susan will be at the Gallery of Caribbean Art on 17th Feb in the afternoon from 1 pm to 7 pm. Stop in for a chat!  The show continues through the end of February.

 

Click here to see some of the pics! Or point your phone at it!

 

 

Friday
Oct012021

We are open at Expo2020!  

After many many months of making plans, making art, making shipping crates, making ourselves crazy, the Grenada pavilion is open in Dubai today!

We hope to share pics with you soon, but in the mean time, meet the Artists!

Couldn't have done this without my colleague Asher Mains, and without the team on the ground in Dubai. Much appreciation to all who worked, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Business of Grenada.

Shanta Cox--you are a rock star!  Stay with us--more info to come. 

Meet the Artists

 

Sunday
Jul252021

An look back at the unknown...

I have been painting women images for decades, but for awhile I stopped using the adinkra symbols from Ghana.  Too much talk of "appropriation" and who has a right to tell the stories.

My historian Friend John Angus Martin recently said, "I like to think of the unknown as an exploration, a way of finding out truths hidden in our history..."

So here come the ladies again--a bit of mystery still intrigues us, and their allure is a Westindian melange. 

 

Melange 26" x 22"
Detail from Melange
Melange 26' x 22" acrylic on domestic cloth

Duality 30"x 30" acrylic on domestic
Both 30" x 46" acrylic on coffee bag