Laura Heyman

Atis-Rezistans, from left: Andre Eugene, Celeur Jean Herard, Ronald Bazile (aka Cheby),
Pierre Isnel Destimare (aka Luoco), Grand Rue, December 2009

Heyman is an associate professor of photography in Syracuse University's College of Visual and Performing Arts. Her work has been exhibited at such venues as Ampersand International Arts, San Francisco, CA; Deutsches Polen-Institut, Darmstadt, Germany; Senko Studio, Viborg, Denmark; and The National Portrait Gallery, London, United Kingdom. Her most recent curatorial project, Who's Afraid of America, featuring the work of Justyna Badach, Larry Clark, Cheryl Dunn, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Zoe Strauss and Tobin Yelland, was exhibited at Wonderland Art Space, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Light Work will feature a Syracuse Symposium event with the artist on Thursday, October 7 from 5–8pm. The evening will begin with a spoken-word poetry performance by Verbal Blend, followed by a lecture by Heyman and a gallery reception. Verbal Blend is a spoken-word poetry program sponsored by Syracuse University's Office of Multicultural Affairs, designed to enhance participants' confidence in writing and performing original poems. The program is comprised of a five-week workshop series on poetry forms and formats, journal entry and peer-reviews. Participants get the opportunity to showcase their work at public venues such as open mike nights. For this event, a group of SU students, high school students and community members have prepared spoken-word performances in response to Heyman's images. Syracuse Symposium is a semester-long intellectual and artistic festival celebrating interdisciplinary thinking, imagining and creating, presented by SU's College of Arts and Sciences to the entire Syracuse community. The 2010 Syracuse Symposium theme is Conflict (Peace & War).

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LAURA HEYMAN
Pa Bouje Ankò: Don't Move Again

Light Work Main Gallery
September 13 – October 15, 2010
Gallery reception: October 7, 5–8pm

Palitz Gallery at the Syracuse University Lubin House
11 East 61st Street, New York, NY, (212) 826-0320
May 12 - June 16, 2011

Several months ago Laura Heyman, a professor in the Transmedia Department at Syracuse University, asked Light Work if we could help support a project she had planned for the Ghetto Biennale in Haiti. We have a small endowment fund to support mid-career artists and decided that this would be a worthwhile project to support, and we offered her our assistance.

André Eugene, Jean Hérard Céleur, Rònald Bazile, Pierre Isnel Destimare, Leah Gordon, and Myron Beasley organized the Ghetto Biennale in Haiti's capitol Port-au-Prince to ask the question, "What happens when first world art rubs up against third world art?" Heyman joined an international group of artists who started with this basic question, and the Biennale took place November through December of 2009.

For her project Heyman was interested in exploring formal portraiture that followed the example of artists like Mike Disfarmer, James Van Der Zee and Seydou Keita, who used the commercial and utilitarian aspects of their practice to portray their subjects with a consideration and respect that was both clear-eyed and beautiful.

Aware of the many cultural complexities of representation she had many questions, candidly stating, "I was highly conscious of everything that stood in the way of a real exchange between a subject from the first world and a subject from the third world—race, class, opportunity and lack of opportunity, agency, the ability to move freely through the world; all of the things that make communication difficult, as they are always present, but rarely discussed. […] What I found when I arrived in Haiti was that I was working within a community of fellow artists and their families and neighbors."

Less than a month after Heyman returned from Haiti, the devastating earthquake struck causing unimaginable destruction and loss of life. Heyman is planning to return to Haiti within the next several months to offer her small part to the relief effort and to extend her project that has now become part record and part memorial.

The artist has created a list of organizations that need donations for the ongoing relief and recovery efforts.

Heyman image

Blondine Herard, Polycarpe Racine, Mariot Herard,
Daschmine Herard, December 2009
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Leni Exavier and Joshue Brounache, Grand Rue, December 2009next

Margaret Denis, December 2009next

Camesuze and Evana Mondesir, Grand Rue, December 2010next

Robert, Keke and Falene Palinquet, Grand Rue, December 2009next

Chery Fequiere, Grand Rue, December 2009next

Contact Sheet 156

nextMitcheyla Ambroise, Grand Rue, December 2009

Contact Sheet 158

Gallery installation viewnext

Contact Sheet 158

start   Contact Sheet 158: Laura Heyman