Leah Gordon
The Caste Portraits Series
The Caste Portraits Series by Leah Gordon investigates the practice of grading skin color from black to white, which marked the extent of racial mixing in 18th century Haiti. Médéric Moreau de St Mery (1750-1819), a French créole slave owner and freemason living in Saint Domingue (now Haiti), created a taxonomy of race classifying skin color from black to white using names derived from mythology, natural history, and bestial miscegenation. His Description topographique, physique, civile, politique et historique de la partie française de l’isle Saint-Domingue (1789) hierarchizes 128 possible combinations of black-white miscegenation into nine categories (the sacatra, the griffe, the marabout, the mulâtre, the quarteron, the métis, the mamelouk, the quarteronné, and the sang-melé). Each category corresponds to a percentage of the fusion of black and white blood. Gordon takes these categories, depicting nine skin varieties, with herself at the white end of the scale and her partner André Eugene, a Black Haitian artist, at the other end, and creates a taxonomy of skin types in the guise of renaissance portraiture.
For this project, Gordon found her models in the Grand Rue area of Port-au-Prince, home to the artist collective Atis Rezistans. She worked with local craftsmen to make the costumes for her sitters and wooden plaques behind which the models stand, bearing the identifying names of the caste colors. Each character in the series inhabits their costume with confidence and natural poise with the exception of Gordon herself as Blanche, who appears uneasy and uncomfortable, holding a hare defensively close to her chest. The source for this photograph is A Lady with a Squirrel and a Starling by Hans Holbein the younger. Gordon recreates some of the illusionistic mannerisms of renaissance portraiture with figures breaking through the picture plane or turning in a three quarters pose away from the viewer. This photographic series is an ironic commentary on the impossibility of people of color being portrayed in this manner five centuries ago, as well as a critique of a taxonomic system that enshrines racism and promotes a hierarchy of skin color, which resulted from a preoccupation with interbreeding and intermarriage of white colonial settlers and their slaves. Though Moreau de St Mery’s system placed white skin as the top of the color hierarchy, Gordon physically inverts this by suggesting Black as the pure, founding race and white as inferior.