We need to remember True, Pure and Cultured Caribbean Craft
The Caribbean needs to be reminded, re-cultured and
re-introduced to the entire craft heritage. It's this heritage that brings
millions of spectators to the region who care very little about product and
more about the un-chartered experience of the Caribbean
frontier. The re-discovery of this new world (old to us, new to them)
means every visitor is a relic hunter, who is disappointed in finding the exact
same souvenir/craft item their cousin bought in Chinatown $5 cheaper. Centering Craft as a entrepreneurial enterprise
and the perfect décor, fashion and "in thing" accessory among youth is an
almost impossible task, especially when bombarded with episodes of a "bling
bling" culture.
Can Caribbean craft keep it’s identity? The onslaught of
globalisation will fashion unique cultural parchments into generic items (of very similar look, taste and feel) in
efforts to meet competitive forces that drive perception of superior and
inferior goods. The tasks ahead are; to illuminate the Craft Artisan,
educate a brand fuelled market, and be radically creative with tomorrow’s art.
A visitor’s
attraction and extended stay at the Dominica KALINAGO Booth is not as a result of uniquely
hand crafted traditional Carib baskets. That surprise and excitement was extinguished
since Dominica's
first year of participation in the CGCS. The glue to the Carib Booth is the cultural
atmosphere of experiences (that can be heard and seen. And taking it a
step further with full participative activities; dancing & singing, weaving
and drum beating). Indeed, after such a display one's interest in Carib
Craft is immediately heightened.
If our indigenous
Artisans expect to evoke a certain thrill about their craft then they need to ACCESSORIZE
their Craft. How do you accessorize a Carib Basket? You make it sexy, you make
it vogue, and you make it be the most talked about item in the industry.
Getting a Carib Basket on the fashion runways of Milan,
Paris and New
York is not so impossible anymore. A "Creative
Quest", rethinking and experimenting with existing techniques and new
materials; Carib Baskets woven from tradition and fused with polymers, leather,
fabrics, fur, wood and precious metal is the only guarantee for a competitive
and future sustainable strategy. Dominican, indigenous hand crafted, all
natural, functional, fashion baskets should be the Gucci stamped bags
right here at home. However, before portions of culture are forgotten because
they've refused to evolve and reshape the cultural landscape, we must persist
relentlessly to adapt craft efforts to be fashionable.
For Caribbean
Export (CGCS organisers), the vision of CGCS needs to transcend its buy and
sell limitations if it is to appeal successfully to an island’s public
(especially youth). Dutch, French, Spanish and English craft is about
experiences, the storyline and not a cold fictitious booth rammed with
products. The Carib presence and this year's impressive Curaçao
presence emphasises, the activity and cultural sampling dimension that is taken
for granted. Certainly the future of CGCS is being able to bring a cultural show
to any part of the world, and allow buyer and public to indulge their senses
and all their monies.