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Victor Anicet

Visual Artist

Victor Anicet’s (1938, Le Marigot, Martinique) ceramic works are a continuous exercise in restoring the testimonies of the Martinican people. His father a fisherman and his mother a worker at the sugar mill of a habitation (an extension of the colonial production regime based on slave labor), Anicet’s first contact with the ceramics of the Amerindian Arawak people was as a child while assisting the archeological excavations organized by Father Pinchon at the Adoration site in Le Marigot, in the north of Martinique. Years later, while studying in Paris, he visited the Musée de L’Homme and realized how far he and his people had distanced themselves from their history, which had remained in the hands and voices of the colonizers. Anicet returned to Martinique in 1967 and has been addressing the lack of space for exhibiting contemporary art there ever since. His exhibition Soleil Noir [Black Sun] of black and white paintings on wood, was installed outdoors in 1970. Since then, his work has been taking place both in and outside the studio, whether joining together other artists interested in debating Caribbean aesthetics to found the group FWOMAJE (1984), dedicating himself to fostering an institutional space for Martinican art, or indeed creating public works.