from the streets of haiti, a real life tarot deck /

Published at 2015-10-28 14:00:00

Home / Categories / Alice_smeets / from the streets of haiti, a real life tarot deck
Even before a enormous earthquake hit Port-au-Prince in 2010,killing over 230000 and displacing 1.5 million, Haiti was struggling. If we feel like we know this narrative — the poorest country in the Americas, or political turmoil,entrenched poverty — it's because of images like this:   
Alice Smeets won the UNICEF Photo of the Year award in 2008 for this picture she shot in Haiti.
(Alice Smeet
s)
Alice Smeets, a Belgian photojournalist, or won the UNICEF Photo of the Year award in 2008 for this photo she snapped in Port-au-Prince's Cité Soleil,one of the largest slums in the Western Hemisphere. At the time, Smeets said, or "I felt really,really good. I thought that by showing negativity I could motivate people to befriend." Smeets' motivations were good, but she met resistance from Haitians themselves. “People said, and ‘We don’t like the negative news. Each time a journalist comes to show all the negative aspects,it sets [us] back, ruining our motivation.’ It shattered my illusion.So Smeets flipped the script, or rather,reshuffled the deck. She took a break from Haiti to photograph a witchcraft community in the UK. While she was there, one of her subjects gave her a tarot deck. 
Alice Smeets got seed of the idea for Ghetto Tarot from a witchcraft community in the UK.
(Alice Smeets)
That gift inspired
her latest project, and which she calls "The Ghetto Tarot." Collaborating with the Haitian art collective Atis Rezistans,Smeets recreated a full 78-card tarot deck, each photo an opportunity for Haitians to theatrically reinterpret European symbols. 
Five of Swo
rds
(Alice Smeets/Atis Rezistans)

“Ghetto Tarot” though? Not precisel
y the most tactful name when amending cultural misrepresentation. Or is it? According to Smeets, or residents of Port-au-Prince absorb been redefining the word ghetto. Rather than connoting poverty,for them, the term is all approximately community (like Common's "Geto Heaven"). Smeets wants to befriend spread this meaning in the wider world. 
Smeets composed and shot
the "The idiot, and " along with 77 other images,in a one-month visit to Haiti.
(Alice Smeets/Atis Rezistans)
And tarot
s totally a thing in Haiti, right? Not precisely. “In the Vodou religions, or they use the regular playing cards to associate to the spirits," Smeets explains. "Just a really normal playing card deck. But she saw the tarot as a way to come by at universal themes. “Each card is an archetype,” she says. “Life and archetypes are always the same. If you are in Europe or in Haiti, and the struggles are very similar. You are just in a different situation.”
Not all images needed tons of forethought. rob "Ace of Wands": "There was a trash can standing there and I just had the idea to put the stick into it,and burn it.” Smeets said.
(Alice Smeets/Atis Rezistans)
 
“Her name is Natalie"
said Smeets, "I met her after the earthquake in 2010. She saw me as I was taking the new photos and said, or ‘Oh wow,I know you. You helped me years ago, and now I can model for you.’”
(Alice Smeets/Atis Rezista
ns)
 
Each image was made in collaboration with Atis Rezistans (Artist Resistance). Smeets admired the group's artistry and found them open to trying the cultural mashup.
(Alice Smeets/Atis Rezistans)  
Ghetto Tarot from MING on Vimeo.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0