Contact us

FAQs

Order Toll Free at 877-332-4478

Site Map

Home

Wilson Bigaud
Click on picture to see more Haitian Art.

Thinking of you...

"The Fish Sellers"
Style # Haiti 20

 


Style #Haiti 20 is available as:

5" X 7" Cards printed on recycled cardstock

$2.00 each

Card and envelope - Greeted as shown

Add to Cart

Card and envelope - Blank inside

Add to Cart

Memory Books: 128 pages - great for photos, drawings, poetry and written entries. Comes with a lined template.

$14.00 each

Black linen cover

Add to Cart

Natural kraft paper cover

Add to Cart

Matted Prints in 8" X 10" rag mats
ready to place in standard frames.

$ 8.00 each

Matted 5" X 7" Print with black mat

Add to Cart

GiftSets: Memory Book, Matted Print and Card

$ 22.75 /set

Matted Print with black mat & Memory Book with black linen cover

Add to Cart

Matted Print with white mat & Memory Book with naturnal kraft cover

Add to Cart


Wilson Bigaud was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti in 1931. After starting out as a sculptor in clay, in 1946 Bigaud was introduced to Dewitt Peters, who discouraged him from continuing in that medium, suggesting he turn his talents to painting. He enrolled at the Centre d'Art and began to paint under the direction of Maurice Borno. His canvas entitled "Paradise" won second prize at an International Exhibition in Washington in 1950 and is now in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In the same year Bigaud painted his masterpiece, "The Wedding of Cana", the famous murals of the Episcopal Cathedral in Port-au-Prince. Bigaud was able to establish convincingly the biblical story of the translation of water into wine in a wholly Haitian setting precisely because as a lifelong worshiper of loas he had witnessed such "miracles" during voudou ceremonies. The body of his work represents his customary themes: everyday life in Haiti, violence, color, the mysteries of voudou, all bathed in the golden light characteristic of his work.
Bigaud suffered from severe depression for most of his life, which caused him to cease painting almost entirely for many years. Dewitt Peters, founder of the Centre d'Art, described Bigaud as "obsessed by the fear of losing his gift," and the artist's friends believed that he had made a pact with a houngan - a voodoo priest - to preserve his talent. Bigaud is without question one of the major figures of Haitian painting.