With time...

Movie by

C. Yacoub

30 Thousand...

Movie by

C. Yacoub

Tresor island

Movie by

Polibio Diaz

With the kind support of:

Ebony G. Patterson


Born in Jamaïca in 1981


Beauty, Gender, body and the grotesque are continued dialogues within my work. I am enthralled by the repulsive, the bizarre and the objectness of bodies and the contradictions that both have to art historically and culturally. The Jamaican vernacular, gendered cultural symbolisms and stereotypes serve as a platform for these discussions. I am enthused by words, conditions and experiences that objectify and abjectify.

Menstrual documents, cuts, bruises, language, feminine excrement, peeled skins, bleached skins, decadence, nippled and vulvic forms, the feminine, disease, feminine motifs, and accents are reoccurring images within my work. Referencing beauty through the use of the grotesque but visceral, confrontational and deconstructed.


Gangstas For Life, Disciplez + the Doiley Boyz , explores the fashionable practice of skin bleaching within Dancehall culture. The images raises questions about perceptions of masculinity within Jamaican dancehall culture.  The images are deconstructed into stereotypical homosexual beauties, with bleached faces, red glossed lips, glitter , hailos and feminine motifs. These images challenge practices of the emasculation  of young black males and question stereotypical standards of beauty amongst genders .The dancehall has become a place of major cultural significance amongst young working class Jamaicans.  It is the community waterhole where one learns about the latest slangs, songs, dances, fashion and social gender practices. The Dancehall is the belly of Jamaican society that reaffirms, reflects and assigns labels as it relates to social norms or behaviors deemed deviant with Jamaican society, such as homosexual stereotypes This body of work explores contemporary notions of beauty within a Jamaican context. Exploring the grotesque as the sought after beauty. It seeks to examine the dichotomy between Jamaican stereotypical ideologies of homosexual practices and its parallels within dancehall culture, where skin bleaching (whitening) has become trendy and fashionable primarily among young black males. This work raises questions about body politics and gender, gender and beauty, beauty and stereotyping, race and beauty, beauty and the grotesque.


Ebony G Patterson

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Contact: aica-sc@orange.fr

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