Art Bytes

Michael Campbell’s Art Collection goes to UWI, Mona

 

Before he died last year businessman Michael Campbell, founder of Island Car Rental, asked his close friend former Prime Minister P.J. Patterson to make The University of the West Indies, Mona the repository of his 261-piece Jamaican art collection.

This month UWI Mona accepted the US$2.3 million collection in a private ceremony. The late art patron’s collection comprises works by 67 Jamaican artists and cover Jamaica’s cultural and social evolution over the past several decades. The oldest painting in the collection is an oil painting of road workers that Albert Huie created in 1944.

“Michael Campbell’s collection is not just an assemblage of art; it is a narrative of our nation’s soul, chronicling our trials, triumphs, and aspirations,” said Patterson. Himself a patron of the arts, Patterson said the handover gave him a chance to pay tribute to Campbell, who had collected perhaps the most impressive and wide private collection of art in Jamaica.

Art Bytes

Developed together with Steve Madden, the collection was designed for warm weather with the use of bright neon colors with rope, rhinestones, and buckle embellishments.

The work of photographer Nadine Ijewere is featured in the March 2020 issue of American Vogue.

Dr Rachel Moseley-Wood, head of the Department of Literatures in English at UWI, Mona recently launched her 254-page book, Show Us as We Are: Place, Nation and Identity in Jamaican Film.

Six students from the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts designed a mural to mark the starting line of the Sagicor Sigma Run in February.

Ivorhod Walters’ Before They Came will be part of the second staging of Due West, the National Gallery West’s annual exhibition that runs till April 11th. Walters, a St.

Ebony Patterson’s installation Invisible Presence: Bling Memories is at the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle as part of the In Plain Sight exhibition.

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