Dominica becomes the epicenter of Caribbean cultural innovation as it hosts the landmark L’Orizon artistic residency from January 5-13, 2026. This transformative gathering brings together seven distinguished creatives from Dominica, Martinique, and Saint Lucia to collectively reimagine the region’s storytelling traditions through multidisciplinary collaboration.
The residency, organized under the An Ba Lanmè initiative—a trilateral cultural cooperation project—challenges conventional narratives by exploring how Caribbean identities are constructed and shared. Participants including Caribbean Afro-futurism writer Michael Roch (Martinique), performer Ethan James (St Lucia), and circus artists Serena Williams, Irina Khade Elwin, and Russel Raymond (Dominica) will engage in intensive dialogue and creative exchange in Cochrane village.
Central to the program is examining whose perspectives dominate Caribbean storytelling, which heritages receive emphasis, and what realities define the contemporary Caribbean experience. The initiative uniquely integrates circus arts and performative practices alongside visual and literary arts, recognizing the region’s rich tradition of embodied storytelling that transcends linguistic barriers.
Beyond artistic exploration, the project addresses urgent regional concerns including climate change impacts, economic diversification, and sustainable development. Organizers emphasize that narrative reconstruction directly influences economic prospects, as traditional tourism imagery becomes increasingly incompatible with environmental realities like seaweed invasions, natural disasters, and coastal erosion.
The residency features extensive community engagement, including movement workshops led by N’jelle Thorne, exhibitions by the Waitukubili Artist Association, and conferences on cultural industries’ role in education and economics. Critical youth involvement includes January 7 workshops with Goodwill Secondary School students envisioning new Caribbean futures and January 9 theatrical improvisation sessions in Cochrane.
Nicolas Derné, Artistic Director of Zofi Association, states: ‘This residency creates shared expression space for Caribbean artists and structures a sustainable cultural ecosystem. New narratives emerge from interdisciplinary intersections across the Caribbean—this diversity sustains a creative ecosystem that becomes a development lever for our territories.’
The program culminates years of planning under An Ba Lanmè’s mission to revive historical and cultural connections between Caribbean islands, operating on the principle that ‘the sea connects more than it separates.’
