Fauna
2024
digital print on commercial porcelain, gold lustre
various dimensions
FAUNA
Tea Service | Limited Edition SetÂ
RECENTLY ON VIEW
if you should forget me for a while
Exhibition at Sienna Patti Contemporary
June 27 through August 25, 2024
Lenox, MA
Featuring work by Jacqueline Bishop, Melanie Bilenker, Venetia Dale, & Lauren Kalman
ABOUT “FAUNA”
More on Jacqueline Bishop HERE
Jacqueline Bishopâs interdisciplinary practice is focused on making visible the ephemeral, in speaking aloud the unspoken, in telling untold stories and voicing voicelessness. Bishop is acutely aware of what it means to be simultaneously an insider and an outsider having lived longer outside of her birthplace of Jamaica than on the island itself. This has allowed her to view a given environment from a distance.
Fauna arises out of Bishopâs long-standing questions about the position of black women in Caribbean society. Her first collection of poems published in 2006, also titled âFaunaâ, used Caribbean flowers as metaphors to explore the lives of enslaved women. Bishop sees this new commissioned work as a visual manifestation of these poems.
Further research revealed that prior to the ending of the slave trade there was no attention given to either the maternal health of pregnant women or their babies. Where and to whom did enslaved women turn when they were trying to conceive, could not conceive or found themselves with unwanted pregnancies? The answer lay in the plants, flowers, fruits and herbs of Jamaica. Each one contained a unique botanical element that could either end an unwanted pregnancy or encourage fertility. In Fauna Bishop has surrounded the women and their children with healing and protective herbs. Indeed, in one case, the mother is offering her child up to the arms of the natural environment.
Fauna was commissioned by The Harris and will go on display when the museum re- opens in Spring 2025. Unveiling overlooked and brutal histories of slavery and colonialism, Bishopâs work is an important acquisition for The Harrisâ ceramic collection. Creating dialogues with other pieces in The Harrisâ collection, most importantly an oil painting recently identified as âA Jamaica Landscapeâ (c. 1774), attributed to George Robertson, Bishop said that her work âintervenes in the idyllic presentation of slavery and enslavement of the painting to present enslaved women using the environment to shield themselves and their children. Both works speak to each other.â Both works will be displayed together as this timely acquisition will play an integral part in a new display exploring the global history of tea, weaving together histories of British Empire, Colonialism and the Transatlantic Slave Trade.
Jacqueline Bishop (b. 1971, Kingston, Jamaica) lives and works in New York and Miami, Florida. Bishop worked with Emma Price; a British ceramicist based in Stoke- on-Trent in the former Spode factories in the realisation of this new work.
Recent exhibition solo exhibitions include British Art Studies, Paul Mellon Center, London (2022); SRO Gallery, Brooklyn, New York (2018); Meyerhoff Gallery, Baltimore, Maryland (2016). Recent group exhibitions include The Valentine Museum, Richmond, Virginia (2024); Gardiner Museum, Toronto, Ontario, CA (2024); Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (2023); Ferrin Contemporary, North Adams, MA (2022); British Ceramics Biennial (2021); Stoke-on-Trent (2021) and Jamaica Biennial, National Gallery of Jamaica. Kingston (2017).
NEWS
New Acquisition: Fauna by Jacqueline Bishop
The Harris is thrilled to announce a new acquisition to our collection, presented by the Contemporary Art Society
Jacqueline Bishopâs interdisciplinary masterpiece, âFaunaâ, sheds light on overlooked narratives of enslaved women in Caribbean society. Commissioned by The Harris, this evocative ceramic work intertwines botanical elements with maternal themes, unveiling poignant stories of resilience. Displaying alongside historical pieces, âFaunaâ sparks dialogues on the global history of tea and colonialism. Donât miss its unveiling in Spring 2025!