No Masks. No Apologies.
Part Two of the InnerView with Michèle Voltaire Marcelin was challenging. She is brutally honest. Persistent. She tends to answer questions with questions of her own. Caustic ones, at times. She’s searching for a certain truth. She dreams with her eyes wide open. She has known both the sharp and dull edges of real and make-believe knives. She survived to tell. Now, she laughs at it all — a sometime sad and sometime happy laugh that reverberates long after she’s gone.
Jah love Katia.
I think that she sounds lovely. I like those pics of her doing her art and with her art. Black women artists are revolutionaries. We transform pain and all kinds of feelings and experiences into art and that’s a revolution. I know about organizations like Tomorrow’s Art in DC with Mrs Georgette Powell (a well known artist herself) that seek to give a space to folks who want to express themselves through art. We need to create those spaces and organizations too as for Haitians from all walks of life to participate and contribute.
I love art. I especially love the artists who dare to create.
Jah bless.
Hi Marie Nadine, I agree with you 100 percent. Kenbe la. -k