Marie-Denise Douyon begins a life of migratory peregrinations growing
up in North Africa, first in Algeria and then in Morocco. Her childhood
experiences were like an arabesque, interlaced with distinctive
confluent artistic idioms of the Maghreb and the Mediterranean,
rendering an organic, multifaceted identity. From Africa, Douyon moved
her permanent residence to Montreal, after an interim of a few years
when she lived in Haiti. To anchor her multicultural identity, Douyon
focuses her art on her African heritage.
The
artist's inspiration
Her inspiration plunges back in the homeland
of the Haitian culture,
the African kingdom. Combining her contemporary know how to her passion
of recycling, the artist pays a tribute to the richness of the African
traditional society and the greatness of its cultural heritage in
danger of extinction. Furthermore, as a Quebec artist, her concerns for
the socio-environmental disasters which threaten our planet have led
Marie-Denise Douyon to create a series of works using recycled
materials: old bike chains, metal pieces and computer parts. The artist
tackles current issues such as the exodus of environmental refugees,
the export of dangerous waste and the effects of green house gases, to
question our conscience.
Exhibitions
The artist has exhibited in Canada, in the
United States, in Europe and
in the Carribean. Her work has been shown at the UNESCO headquaters in
Paris, at the IDB Cultural Center of the Inter American Development
Bank in Washington, at the Black National Fine Art Show in New York.
The Hammond's Museum and in several galleries and cultural centers in
Montreal. Douyon's art can be found in private collections in Montreal,
Miami, New York, Chicago, the Indian Ocean and the Carribean. Her work
has been featured in numerous publications.
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