Milo Matthieu
Yute (2023)
Oil on linen, 12 x 12 x 1.5 in.
SOLD
Milo Matthieu
Milo Matthieu is a first-generation Haitian painter born in Los Angeles, CA in 1990. Drawing upon the artistic history of his family heritage, in particular the Haitian paintings and African masks that populated his childhood home, Matthieu has developed a distinctive visual language of bright colors and anthropomorphic forms by which he translates his cultural legacy into contemporary terms.
Representational paintings of landscapes, market scenes, and people traveling through towns and villages on tap taps—brightly colored buses with distinctive designs—have served as a longtime inspiration for Matthieu who grew up not in Haiti like his parents and extended family, but in Los Angeles and New York. Such paintings, as well as wooden sculptures, busts, and masks were thus integral to the the creation of the rich, though distant, Haitian imaginary that informed Matthieu’s understanding of his heritage and are reflected in his paintings of bold, abstracted figures. Grounded in psychic automatism, his paintings process begins with the loose, unconscious movement of his brush across the canvas. As line and color take shape, life emerges within his compositions and Matthieu embraces a dialogue with his unconscious, allowing intuition to guide him as he focuses on no one subject or idea but rather on the totality of his experiences, both lived and inherited.