Valè Series

VALUING HAITIAN ART AND SELF-EXPRESSION

VALÈ SERIES PART 2 WITH JULIE ORELIEN HERNANDEZ

I am Julie Orelien-Hernandez, a content creator and teacher. I was born and raised in Port-au-Prince, Haiti but now reside in the Bronx, NY. I am pretty drawn to the arts, be it painting, drawing, creative writing, or looking at different art museums and galleries. I believe I got this trait from my mother, whom I discovered, was into the arts as a young woman. At seven years old, I remember finding her notebook full of fashion design drawings that she had created, which inspired me to explore these forms of illustrations. Interestingly, she didn’t quite have that art exploration with my sisters and me growing up. I was definitely inspired by the tap-tap paintings and the canvases hung by the streets in Haiti.

For me, Haitian Valè means regarding Haiti and it’s culture with value.
— @MINIMAL.JULES

As Haitians, we tend to diminish our values and place American values above our own. I cherish certain things in our culture that I cannot find in the U.S. When I lived in Haiti, since everything was available to me, I didn’t necessarily understand its importance. As I moved to the U.S., I understood what it meant to not have some djon djon in my pantry to make some diri djon djon or not eat some lalo or some fresh Ju Korosòl. I not only missed the food but the language.

When I came to the U.S., I was surrounded by people who only spoke English, and it reminded me of how much I missed and appreciated my language. When I find people who speak my language, my heart rejoices, and I communicate in my mother language.

I am a preschool teacher, and art is embedded in the curriculum. I love that I get to explore art with children and experience how they freely express themselves through that medium. It has given me more confidence to just play with paint as I express myself.

Now that I am pregnant with my son, I want to share those cultural traditions with him: food, language, or art. 


I enjoy making representational drawings and paintings of people and objects. That’s my forte. When I am stressed or overwhelmed, besides going to God to meditate, art is my other method of relaxation and therapy. 

I don’t have a specific artist who has impacted my journey. Still, I remember seeing paintings of life scenes in Haiti, like people going to the maché; machann selling or caring their baskets on their heads, landscapes capturing Haiti’s greenery and mountainous lands. I love the way people are portrayed in paintings as faceless, like a silhouette with their clothes. I have included these attributes in my drawings of people. I also enjoy landscapes and nature paintings. It inspires me to notice the beauty around me, be grateful for living, and apply it to my paintings. 

Click below to watch this video where Julie explains why it’s important to her that her son knows more about Haitian Value.

TO LEARN MORE ABOUT JULIE, FOLLOW HER ON @MINIMAL.JULES

Introducing… The VALÈ SERIES

What comes to your mind when we talk about Value ? In the practical sense of the word, to value something means to cherish it and to acknowledge its importance. We can recognize the beauty in something but not cherish it enough…not give it the respect it deserves. Many of us Haitians feel like this when it comes to our heritage. Whether we talk about our food, our art, our people or our language, we cannot help but feel like many things in Haïti are treasures many cannot seem to see. Could it be that the reason for this is that we do not Value them enough?

The series Valè aims to do just that: Diving into different aspects that we love most about Haitian culture. The people, the history, the oral traditions that make up valè nou. 

We had the chance to collaborate with Anne-Marjorie René, an audio-visual storyteller who is dedicated to promoting Haïti through her creations. Let’s read more about what she has to say has she explains why she values small Haitian businesses so much.


PART 1: Valuing Haitian Entrepreneurs

I am Anne Marjorie René, a creative entrepreneur and visual storyteller. I was born and raised in Port-au-Prince but I am a country girl at heart. I come from a lineage of machanns and artisans and I am passionate about storytelling, community building and economic development.

Haitian Valè for me is a combination of things that make our essence. Part of our heritage and identity that we thoughtfully pass down from a generation to another. I value so many things about our culture and the way we function as people. I love how small business owners like to include God’s names and attributes in their business’s names, I love how the traveling street vendors make entertaining songs that they sing out loud to market their products, I love how content most of us are, it is beautiful to see how happy and resourceful we can be with so little while cultivating generosity .

I love to serve my community with my gifts, being able to connect people while creating opportunities for them. I am humbled to tell their stories to the world, to shine light on our true colors and show our bright side.

I believe that entrepreneurship is one of the key tools to foster economic development. Our community revolves around enterprises that meet almost all of our needs and give us the solutions to our problems. Leveraging entrepreneurship will make our community economically viable and it potentially bring stability. Entrepreneurship can easily take Haiti from aid to trade.

I grew up around so many entrepreneurs who impacted my life in a special way.

Frantz Jean-Ba is an artist I met a few years ago at place Saint-Pierre; he makes beautiful paintings that move me. He also has a stand where he sells arts and crafts for other artisans who cannot afford to have their own stand. It’s one of my favorite places to shop for unique gifts. We see each other from time to time and I stop by just to say hi even when I am not buying. Fritzner and Miguelito are my flower pratiks ,they are always one call away and they make me the most beautiful bouquets for me and my loves ones.

Antoinette is a vegetables machann that I have known since forever; she used to be my father’s favorite “Pratik” and now she is mine. I admire her perseverance and courage. One thing I’ve learned about her is that “Will is power “she likes to say “Depi w vle ou kapab” . She had to start over with her business multiple times because she is a single mother who could not afford to let her family down. Now that her kids are older they turned her vegetables basket into a family business.

I am intentional about buying local because I want my money to recirculate and in my community, the small business owners are less likely to leave to go somewhere else . It brings me joy when I am able to encourage local prosperity. At my local market I get to pick my fresh food and I know where it comes from. I am a sucker for handmade things and crafts, buying from my local artisans help them to stay and guarantee their ability to provide for their families.

Click here to watch Anne-Marjorie’s video for the Valè Series honoring Haitian small business owners.


To see more of Anne-Marjorie’s work, you can follow along on instagram- @annmarj0rie