Rose-Myrtha Vercammen Fortuna Dorsant
is a multidisciplinary artist and curator who conjures spaces where art becomes ritual and storytelling is woven with the threads of ancestry. Her work is a poetic act of decolonial care, where Afro-diasporic spiritualities and ecofeminism bloom into immersive environments. Through her art and curatorial vision, she crafts ceremonies of sound, scent, movement, and touch—inviting audiences to step into worlds where healing flows, and the invisible finds form.
Bloodwork: Weaving Ancestry and Healing into Form
As an artist, I create decolonial, multisensorial environmental experiments that intertwine Afro-diasporic spiritualities with a critical revision of colonial narratives. My work serves as a vessel for community healing and earth justice, weaving together human and other-than-human beings into a tapestry of care, resilience, and liberation.
Rooted in the legacy of maroon struggle and ecofeminism, my art transforms spaces into sacred environments where ritual, sensory experience, and storytelling converge. Through performances such as "Matrigenesis" and installations like "Bloodwork," I navigate themes of ancestry, rebirth, and spiritual ecology. My artistic practice is both deeply personal and profoundly collective, aiming to conjure intergenerational healing, honor silenced voices, and cultivate rightful relationships with the earth.
I see myself not merely as a creator but as a master of ceremonies, guiding audiences through rituals where food, smells, textures, and sounds play as significant a role as the visual elements. Drawing inspiration from traditions such as Ayitian Vodou and the wisdom of the Mapuche, I invite participants into an immersive experience where art becomes a portal to rest, reflection, and restitution.
In all my work, I strive to create spaces of radical care—where healing, love, and feminine liberation are not only envisioned but actively practiced. Through this process, I seek to hold space for both personal and collective transformation, nurturing a world where art is prayer and every performance a collective invocation for justice and belonging.
Onkruid: A Collective Prayer for Love and Feminine Liberation Through an Afrocentric Lens
Matrigenesis II Matrigenesis: Reclaiming the Earth as Womb
I see myself not merely as a creator but as a master of ceremonies, guiding audiences through rituals where food, smells, textures, and sounds play as significant a role as the visual elements. Drawing inspiration from traditions such as Ayitian Vodou and the wisdom of the Mapuche, I invite participants into an immersive experience where art becomes a portal to rest, reflection, and restitution.
In all my work, I strive to create spaces of radical care—where healing, love, and feminine liberation are not only envisioned but actively practiced. Through this process, I seek to hold space for both personal and collective transformation, nurturing a world where art is prayer and every performance a collective invocation for justice and belonging.
The Umbilical Cord: A Collective Meditation with Mother Earth