The Stolen Sun: Art as a Collective Utopia in Duvalier-Era Haiti by Luce Perez-Tejedor
This essay interprets Luce Perez-Tejedor's "Saint-Soleil" (Seuil, 2026) as a novel that intertwines the emergence, flourishing, and destruction of a Haitian artistic community in the 1970s with the long duration of colonial violence. At its core is the project of a collective, ritually grounded artistic practice that defies Western aesthetics of genius and market logic: peasants, workers, and outsiders develop—guided but not dominated—an independent visual language from local materials and spiritual practices, whose vibrant colors and expressive gestures unfold an aesthetic splendor that is directly and sensually perceptible. At the same time, this artistic development is embedded in the repressive political context of Haiti under the Duvalier dictatorship, where violence, corruption, and control of living space are omnipresent and constantly threaten the community's utopia. The moment it becomes visible, art is endangered: international recognition, mediated by André Malraux and others, turns into appropriation, and the images become commodities in a global art system that perpetuates colonial ways of seeing. This interpretation reads the novel as a systematic juxtaposition of two incompatible logics—an aesthetic-spiritual practice of the shared and an economic logic of extraction, which materializes not only in the art market but also in drastic motifs such as the blood plasma trade. The concentric structure of the plot, the vertical spatial order (mountain vs. city), the semantic fields of sun and blood, and the parallel montages (gift vs. theft) are all read as expressions of the same historical dialectic. Thus emerges the image of a novel that reflects on its own poetics while simultaneously demonstrating that every representation of this art is already entangled in the very mechanisms it criticizes.
➙ To the article