Caribbean Art Forms
Caribbean Art Forms
Module 1
Caribbean art forms
‘The Arts’ are described as “vehicles for cultural expression”.
(Thompson, 2017).
Note that there is:
• ‘High Art’ – classical approaches to art such as sculptures;
• Popular culture – mainstream culture based on the tastes of
ordinary people or the masses, rather than the elite.
The Arts can be divided into 3 major categories:
• Literary – literature, poetry.
• Performing – music, dance, drama.
• Visual – sculptures, paintings, music.
Past Paper Questions
• 2017. 1. Explain FOUR ways in which the arts have contributed
to human development in the Caribbean. 20 marks
• 2016. 2. Explain FOUR ways in which the historical experiences
and culinary practices of Caribbean people have
shaped/influenced food choices today. 20 marks.
• 2017 6. Festivals in the Caribbean have become
commercialized as a result of the influence of extra-regional
countries. Discuss the extent to which you agree with this
view. 30 marks
• 2015. 5. “Carnival and Phagwah create opportunities for
Caribbean people to publicly express their identities.” Discuss
the extent to which you agree with this statement. 30 marks
Caribbean art forms – popular music
• Popular music in the region:
Reggae – Reggae, style of popular music that originated in Jamaica in
the late 1960s and quickly emerged as the country’s dominant music.
By the 1970s it had become an international style that was particularly
popular in Britain, the United States, and Africa. It was widely
perceived as a voice of the oppressed. (Carolyn Cooper 2021, February
17). Reggae. Encyclopedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com
Caribbean art forms – popular music Reggae
Thompson, et al 2017.
Caribbean art forms - Festivals.
• Thompson, et al 2017.
Caribbean art forms - Festivals.
Carnival
Thompson, et al 2017 argue that it is no longer a national
festival because it has been influenced by countries outside the
region (extra regional countries) in the following ways:
• How individual events reflect a global market
• How overall presentation also reflects a global market
• How it is packaged to cater for tourists needs
• Has experienced increased commercialization due to
technology.
Caribbean art forms – Regional Festivals.
Crop Over festival in Barbados
• Started in 1780’s when Barbados was the largest world’s
largest producer of sugar.
• It lasts for 5 weeks.
• Highlights the history, art and culture of Barbados.
• Has a large Carnival-style show called Cohobblopot where
there are bands and costumes being showcased.
• The festival ends in a parade – the Grand Kadooment.
Junkanoo (The Bahamas)
• Origins in slavery as well, when they were allowed to leave the
plantation and join with their community.
• Celebrated in December around Chritsmas.
Caribbean art forms - Regional Festivals.
Reggae Festival (Jamaica)
• Started in 1978 .
• Usually takes place in Early August.
• It lasts for 1 week.
• Different types of Reggae music is played every night.
• Has become the Reggae Sumfest.
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk
Art Forms in the diaspora – Notting Hill Carnival
• It involves a lot of dancing, singing and processions that take
place through the streets.
• It also features various foods and folk traditions of the region. Since the late 1980s, participation by
groups from Central and South America, Africa, the Bahamas, Haiti and elsewhere in Canada has
added a dimension of multiculturalism to the festival that is uniquely Canadian.
• Festival events include calypso “tents” (shows), “jump-ups” (dances), “fetes” (parties), “mas”
(masquerade) competitions, a junior carnival, “pan blockos” or “blockoramas” (steel band street
parties), and “talk tents” (shows featuring storytellers, comedians and others well versed in oral
traditions).
Source: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/caribana-emc
Art Forms in the diaspora - CARIBANA
• Although the Toronto Caribbean Carnival is the official name for the
series of events organized by the Festival Management Committee,
other organizations and individuals mount carnival-type events during
the Caribana season. For example, the Organization of Calypso
Performing Artistes (founded in 1981) holds an annual Calypso Monarch
Competition featuring the talents of local calypsonians.
• The Caribana Arts Group, which owns the Caribana trademark, credits
itself with having paved the way for other Caribbean festivals held in
Toronto on the first weekend of August, such as Irie Fest and Jambana.
Source: https://
www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/caribana-emc
Art Forms in the diaspora - CARIBANA
• The highlight of the Caribana festival is the Grand Parade, which is now a 3.5 km
route.
• It is scheduled on the first Saturday of August in commemoration of the abolition of
slavery throughout the British Empire in 1834, it is a spectacular display of costume,
sound and colour that winds its way past dense crowds for several hours.
• Participants in the parade are organized into masquerade “bands”, each of which is
accompanied by live music bands (usually steel and/or brass, but the use
of percussion groups is a more recent development). Each masquerade band
expresses a particular theme (be it historical, satirical, political or fantasy) and is led
by a “king” and “queen” who appear in the most lavish costumes.
• These bands compete with one another and are judged based on their costumes,
energy and creativity.
Source: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/caribana-emc
• The late Professor Ralston ‘Rex’ Nettleford was a leading Jamaican academic, poet
intellectual visionary & dancer.
• https://youtu.be/XdD4F5LSoEQ
• According to Moniquette (2017) “the experiences of Caribbean people and their struggles
for intellectual, cultural and political independence were pivotal to Nettleford’s intellectual
and artistic engagements.”
• Moniquette (2017) continued to say that Nettleford’s “writings, lectures and choreography
of his dances reflected confidence in the creative power of people of the region, a power
which was struggling to unleash itself from the historical and neo-colonial forces”.
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities –
literature
Ralston ‘Rex’ Nettleford
• Moniquette (2017) argues that he was always concerned about the
Caribbean cultural Identity.
• One of his acclaimed publication was ‘Mirror, mirror: Race, Identity
and Protest in Jamaica’ in 1970. It was set in the 1960’s when
Jamaica was newly independent, and examined the way that black
Jamaicans looked at themselves (hence mirror, mirror) and the
relation between that ‘schizophrenic and ambivalent relation’ they
have toward their national identity.
• Moniquette (2017) mentions his other works which also examines
Caribbean cultural identity, and includes: Caribbean Cultural Identity
(1978), essays (1995)– Inward Stretch, Outward Reach: A voice form
the Caribbean. She believed that these works started with the
understanding that ‘culture constructed from the lived experiences
and realities of Caribbean people are to serve as the principle means
of constructing a cohesive national and regional identity’ as well as
an avenue to economic development.
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
literature
Ralston ‘Rex’ Nettleford
• He co-founded the National Dance Theatre Company of
Jamaica – a company made up of unpaid dancers, musicians,
designers. They were to become cultural ambassadors of the
Caribbean.
• Through this dance company, he created an awareness among
the Jamaicans, of the indigenous practices of Kumina,
Pocomania and folk music from the island.
• He contributed significantly to the cultural, socio-political
landscape of the Caribbean.
• Moniquette, 2017 described Nettleford’s argued that his
importance to the Caribbean and its diaspora came from the
fact that his ‘master project has been the decolonization of
the Caribbean spirit and imagination’.
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
literature
• Louise Bennett-Coverly (“Miss-Lou”).
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
literature
Louise Bennett-Coverly (“Miss-Lou”).
• She was born in Jamaica in 1919. She was a Jamaican Poet,
Folklorist, performer, tv and radio personality. Moniquette (2017)
described her as “a model professional on stage, radio and
television, and an unselfish scholar of Jamaican folklore,
language and poetry.”
• Seen as one of the most influential figures in Jamaican culture,
she was seen by many as the ‘mother of Jamaican culture’ due
to her efforts to popularize Jamaican patois and to celebrate
the lives of ordinary Jamaicans (Moniquette, 2017).
• Poem by Louise Bennett – No Lickle Twang: https://
youtu.be/fj-S0J9MWYc
• https://youtu.be/aY08tz_rqUw
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
literature
• Mrs. Bennett-Coverly liked Literature and writing from an early age
and attempted these using standard English. However she eventually
started to wonder why more Jamaican writers were not writing
about the Jamaican realities and experiences in the Jamaican dialect
instead of in the Standard English and about European events.
• So eventually she started writing poetry using Jamaican creole.
• She participated in dramatic presentations and became increasingly
involved in the performing and assessing performance.
• She was awarded a scholarship in 1945 to hr Royal Academy of
Dramatic Art (RADA) in Britain.
• In a matter of a few months of arriving in England, she had her own
BBC programme – Caribbean Carnival and West Indian night.
• https://youtu.be/4Q-LHmEC4zw
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
Literature
Paule Marshall (Literature)
• She was born Valenza Pauline Burke in 1929 in Brooklyn, New York
to Barbadian parents, passed on 2019.
• She was novelist whose works emphasized a need for black
Americans to reclaim their African heritage. The Barbadian
background of Burke’s parents informed all of her work.
• Her works were generally based on poverty and oppression in the
Caribbean.
• Among her writings include an autobiographical novel in 1959:
Brown girl, Brownstones. It spoke about an American daughter
with Barbadian parents, who travelled to their homeland as an
adult. This book was critically acclaimed for its accute rendition of
dialogue.
source: Moniquette, 2017.
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities -
Literature
Paule Marshall (Literature)
• https://youtu.be/4Q-LHmEC4zw
Some of her works include:
• Praisesong for the Widow – a 1983 novel in which she showed
her belief in the African-Americans’ need to rediscover their
heritage. It is believed that this novel positioned her and made
others aware of her as a major writer. Its character Avatara
goes to the isle of Grenada.
• Daughters – a 1991 book which described a West Indian
woman in New York who returned (to the West Indies) to
assist her father’s re-election campaign. The main character
has an epiphany after confronting her personal and cultural
past.
Contributions of Caribbean Personalities
Martin Carter
Aubrey Cummings
Aubrey Cummings
• Aubrey Cummings was born in the year 1947 and grew up in Guyana.
• Early in his time, he became known as an artist as he loved to draw. However, he bemace better known
for his music.
• His decision to develop a career in pop music was influenced by Michael Bacchus and the Heartbreakers.
The magic of popular music and show business excited him, and he became a self-taught guitarist.
• The first band Cummings joined was Bumble and the Saints in 1965--the early days of the string band era.
he was described as a ‘musician of a generation’, whose experience provided valuable insights into the
dynamics of Guyanese society during the late colonial period and the early post-independence era.
• In Barbados, Cummings established an active musical career as guitarist and vocalist. In 1984 and 1985,
Cummings won the Best Male Vocalist Award in Barbados. During the same period, he consistently won
prizes at the Caribbean Song Festivals organized by the Caribbean Broadcasting Union.
• His guitar work also attracted critical acclaim, and he was a regular contributor to the acoustic guitar
festivals organized by Barbados' National Cultural Foundation.
Source: https://www.guyanagraphic.com (newspaper)
Contributions of Caribbean
Personalities
Aubrey Cummings
• Cummings believed that popular music contributed to the healing of Guyana during
the 1960s and 1970s. Moniquette 2017) argued that Cumming’s musical experience
provided valuable insights into the dynamics of Guyanese society during the later
part of colonialism and early period after independence.
• Throughout his musical career, the influence of race, class, and colour in Guyana
during the 20th century could be found in his music. Many of the musicians of
Cummings's era who have migrated established careers overseas. Overall, Cummings
was described not only a musician of a generation, but as a cultural hero.
• Source: https://www.guyanagraphic.com (newspaper)