
artist enamoured with the erotic
SDk: One question immediately suggests itself from the outset: you do not present yourself as “Canadian” – including in your SDk profile – but, instead, state your nationality as your ethnic backgrounds. Why is this?
Amoxes: Good question! When people ask me my nationality I rarely say Canadian; my
answer is most of the time Métis. Why? Well to start, I’m half Native Indian with various ethnic
back-
grounds, and because of this mix I never really saw myself attached to one side of my
family roots but more like a mixture of all of them. I see myself as being part of the world and
less a part of a country, state or even a single culture. We all need to be born somewhere and
we get this ethnic heritage depending where we arrive, and we live with it during this life. If
we look around us today, people do not just relate to one identity; we are starting to relate to
many people at once and never before has the world been so open to this.
Does your emphasis on ethnic identity have anything to do with the “Middle Eastern”
paintings you exhibited in 2004? What is the connection between yourself and the Middle East, and how did you come to do these paintings?
This question is a complex one to answer. My connection with the Middle East is strangely a very deep artistic and personal one. Even perhaps a spiritual one but not in a religious way. I always felt grounded with the people there and in a way connected with the essence of the various countries we find there. I was born and raised in Toronto and during my youth many of my good friends where from the Middle East or close to there, not to mention lots of Haitians as well. I guess having the chance to grow up with these cultures created a bond from the start.
Your focus as an artist rejects mainstream consumer culture; can you elaborate on how you came to adopt this position?
I guess it’s in my nature. With this said I’m not someone who seeks out public attention and uses a sort of “Je suis an original artist” slogan, making people believe my work is pure, original and special,
like we see a lot of these days. Absolutely not, and I want to make this
very clear. It’s not really a choice not to follow the commercial road but, rather, a need to
follow what truly repre-
sents my inner self. I don’t have a problem for those who decide to
make commercial art, we all need to pay our bills and it’s the safer road if we want to live a
stable life. Of course, I won’t refuse a well-paid commission if it’s offered – I just don’t
concentrate all my work in that direction.
Since I was seven it was already clear to me I would not follow the mainstream. Believing and
apply-
ing this creates consequences and I learned this the hard way. Still today it’s not always
easy but it’s my choice. I’d rather work a part-time job and be able to create what I want than
to be castrated mentally and artistically and create insipid work that doesn’t represent what I
truly want to express. Money doesn’t always come into it and quite frankly it’s frustrating at
times, but that’s the deal. For those who read this and would like to follow this path,
understand what you are truly getting into. This
choice might create social prob-
lems, financial
problems, and could even cost some of your friends and loved ones who might reject you.
Why? Simply because it might be-
come too hard for them to cope with your situation, and that
is understandable. Everything has a price, even this form of liberty. But is “liberty” truly out
there, or do we think we're free but really caught up with something else?
Do you regard your non-erotic



























































