Morel Doucet

#12 God Told Me Stars Used to Be Audible Through the Window Sills (2023)

Mixed media on wooden panel (Mylar, Aerosol paint, metal, and indigenous flora patterns), 24 x 19.5 in

$3,500.00

#3 God Told Me Stars Used to Be Audible Through the Window Sills (2023)

Mixed media on wooden panel (Mylar, Aerosol paint, metal, and indigenous flora patterns), 24 x 18 in.

$3,500.00

Black Maiden in the Veil of Midnight (2022)
Slip-casted white earthenware
12.5 in x 8.5 in x 16 in

Morel Doucet

Morel Doucet (b. 1990) is a Miami-based multidisciplinary artist and arts educator who hails from Haiti. His work utilizes ceramics, illustrations, and prints to discuss the impact of climate gentrification, migration, and displacement affecting Black communities in the African diaspora. Through a contemporary reconfiguration of the Black experience, his work catalogs a powerful record of environmental decay at the intersection of economic inequality, pollution, and policy-making.

Doucet's Emmy-nominated work has been featured and reviewed in numerous publications, including Vogue Mexico, The New York Times, Oxford University Press, Hyperallergic, PBS, WhiteHot Magazine, Miami Living Magazine, and Hypebeast. He graduated from the New World School of the Arts with the Distinguished Dean’s Award for Ceramics. From there, he continued his education at the Maryland Institute College of Art, receiving his BFA in Ceramics with a minor in creative writing and a concentration in illustration. Doucet's work is held in collections of the Pérez Art Museum Miami, the Tweed Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, the Plymouth Box Museum, Petrucci Family Foundation Collection of African American Art, Microsoft, Facebook, and Royal Caribbean.

Doucet has exhibited extensively in national and international institutions, including the Design Museum of Chicago (2023), the Venice Biennale (2022), the Havana Biennial (2019), the African Heritage Cultural Arts Center, Miami, FL (2019); the National Council on Education for Ceramic Arts, Pittsburgh, PA; the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami (2021), the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture (2023), São Tomé et Príncipe, Haitian Heritage Museum, Miami, FL (2019), and Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Miami, FL (2020). As an Arts Educator, he is interested in immersing young audiences in personalized courses that instigate curiosity, sensory perception, and visual literacy.