Jean-Guerly Pétion Viewing room

Jean-Guerly Petion uses symbols from Haiti, his country of birth, as well as imagery suggesting the extremes of wealth and poverty which exist there. His paintings confront emotionally charged first- and third-world class issues via theoretical texts and compelling images, such as that of his black man vaulting skyward over a strand of barbed wire. Often quoting theoretical texts drawn from Freud, Lacan, Deleuze and others, he refuses any simplistic reading of Voudoun symbology: Marcel Duchamp is stepping on Jean-Michel Basquiat! Petion’s depiction of power plays directly invokes the contemporary art scene itself in assemblage and mixed-media sculpture and painting. The work issues demands for a new reading of gods and commoners, hope and despair. Pétion holds a BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute, and an MFA from CalArts.

Selected Work

(Left tor right) (1) El Norte, 2013, Acrylic on canvas, 42 x 37 inches | (2) Venus de l’anse à pitre, 2022, Acrylic on wood panel, 24 x 18 inches.
Americana Dreaming, 2020, Acrylic, barbed wire on masonite, 27 × 27 in

Tears of Wild Horses

2009

Mixed media, acrylic, paper on denim

78 x 60 inches

Fleur Pays, 1999, Ink on paper, 30 x 22 inches
Myth of The Luck(y) Bath, 2019, Acrylic, paper on canvas, 105 x 60 inches

Lets come together on the Claire de la Lune

2022

Acrylic, paper, rope on canvas

84 × 55 inches

Aspirant

2008

Mixed media, acrylics, paper on canvas

45 x 45 inches