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Celestin Faustin (Haitian, 1948-1981) 24"x36" Vodou Dream of Village Life 1981 Oil on Canvas Unframed Painting #2JN-HA

Celestin Faustin (Haitian, 1948-1981) 24"x36" Vodou Dream of Village Life 1981 Oil on Canvas Unframed Painting #2JN-HA

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Description

This evocative composition by Haitian artist Célestin Faustin presents a Vodou-inspired dream of village life, where figures, animals, and symbolic elements unfold within a layered and surreal landscape. The painting brings together multiple scenes that merge interior and exterior space, suggesting a world shaped by memory, spirituality, and imagination. A reclining figure appears in the foreground while other figures emerge across the composition, including a standing nude and a figure in motion. A pig occupies the lower portion of the scene, grounding the imagery in rural Haitian life, while fluid architectural forms and organic shapes dissolve into one another. The composition evokes a sense of transformation and spiritual presence often associated with Vodou visual language. Faustin contrasts deep blues and shadowed forms with warm, light-filled tones, creating a dynamic tension across the canvas. Dripping, melting contours and softened transitions enhance the dreamlike atmosphere, suggesting a space where the visible and invisible worlds intersect. Célestin Faustin was a Haitian artist known for expressive and imaginative compositions that blend daily life with symbolic and spiritual themes. His work often reflects the influence of Haitian Vodou culture through layered imagery and narrative complexity. This original oil painting is hand-signed by the artist and is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity issued by Myriam Nader Haitian Art Gallery.

About this artist

Celestin Faustin (1948–1981) was a Haitian painter, Vodou priest, and one of the most visionary figures of modern Haitian art. Often considered a foundational Surrealist within Haitian painting, Faustin studied under Wilmino Domond before developing a haunting and poetic style of his own. His works combine surreal imagery, spiritual symbolism, and dense figurative compositions that explore personal anguish and the complex relationship between Vodou cosmology and inner experience. Art historian Gérald Alexis wrote in Peintres Haïtiens that Faustin was “too much of a virtuoso to be considered a primitive painter.” Faustin’s paintings have gained renewed international attention through exhibitions such as Life and Spirituality in Haitian Art (MOCA North Miami, 2022) and the 2022 Venice Biennale. Today he is regarded as one of the most powerful surreal voices in Haitian art
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