Contributors
Dominique Brebion is the arts advisor to the Regional Cultural Affairs Board of Martinique since 1987. Brebion is also a founding member of the South Caribbean section of Association Internationale des Critiques d’art (AICA – SC) and chairwoman of this section since 2007.
Charles Campbell is a Jamaican-born visual artist and writer. He has exhibited widely in the Americas and Europe, representing Jamaica in regional and international biennials and major exhibitions of Caribbean art.
Tatiana Flores is Assistant Professor of Art History at Rutgers University, New Jersey, and an independent curator. Her most recent projects include Disillusions: Gendered Visions of the Caribbean and its Diasporas and Wrestling with the Image: Caribbean Interventions.
David Knight Jr. is a writer from St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. He is currently working on contributions to The Caribbean Review of Books and The Caribbean Writer.
Sharon Millar holds a Creative Writing MFA from Lesley University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. She lives in Trinidad and is currently working on her first collection of short stories.
Oscar Moralde is a Los Angeles-based writer and filmmaker whose work has been featured in Slant Magazine and The Hypermodern. He is currently in residence at the MFA Writing Program at the California Institute of the Arts.
Petrona Morrison is an artist and art educator who lives and works in Kingston, Jamaica. Morrison is currently Dean of the School of Visual Arts, Edna Manley College, where she has been a faculty member since 1988.
Kristina Newman-Scott is an independent curator and the Director of Marketing, Events and Cultural Affairs for the city of Hartford, Connecticut. Her numerous curatorial projects have been praised by a variety of national and international publications including The New York Times.
Rob Perrée studied Dutch, Literature and Art History at the University of Amsterdam. He has published several books, essays and articles in various art magazines, catalogues and newspapers. He
lives and works between Amsterdam and New York City.
lives and works between Amsterdam and New York City.
Sarah Stacke based in Brooklyn and Durham, North Carolina, is a photographer specializing in documentary arts. In May she will graduate from Duke University with a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies focusing on African and African American Studies.
Michelle Stephens was born in Jamaica, received a Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University, and teaches courses in African Diaspora and Caribbean Literature and Culture at Rutgers University.

























