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Artist Osmond Watson titles the work in Jamaican Creole, turning “Psalm 23” from the Christian bible into everyday speech and locating faith in the lived world of a market. He monumentalizes a working Black Jamaican woman whose spiritual practice sits alongside economic self-reliance with produce for sale below, and holy scripture at the center. 

The woman sits looking slightly to our right with calm steadiness. She wears a pale blue headwrap that catches the light, a short-sleeved checkerboard blouse in warm reds and golds, and a blue skirt that folds in soft, heavy arcs across her bare knees. Her hands clasp an opened brown “HOLY BIBLE” book in her lap. She sits inside a market stall improvised from boards, nails, and sheet metal as angled wood planks hold up a tarp above her, a wooden barrel curves at left, and a patterned blue metal panel frames the right edge like a patched wall. At her feet, ripe round, orange-red and golden fruit spills forward, while a basket of red beans and a metal cup sits at the lower right.

The space feels intimate and guarded as dark corners press in, yet the woman’s presence holds the scene, as if prayer and work share the same seat. Her skin is rendered in deep, glossy browns with cool green shadows, outlined with decisive dark contours that sharpen cheekbones, eyelids, and her nose. Two silver bangles circle one wrist and a ring glints on a finger. Her mouth is closed, neither smiling nor stern, more like someone looking up while reading. The geometry of the stall and the careful stillness of her pose make the Bible feel like the painting’s quiet compass.

Painted in early post-independence 1969, it affirms Black Jamaican dignity being direct, unsentimental, and public. The cubism-touched geometry, saturated color, and heavy outlines lend a stained-glass intensity, elevating everyday items and daily labor into icon. As critic David Boxer put it, Watson wanted art that could be “understood and appreciated by all levels of society.”

Artist Osmond Watson titles the work in Jamaican Creole, turning “Psalm 23” from the Christian bible into everyday speech and locating faith in the lived world of a market. He monumentalizes a working Black Jamaican woman whose spiritual practice sits alongside economic self-reliance with produce for sale below, and holy scripture at the center. The woman sits looking slightly to our right with calm steadiness. She wears a pale blue headwrap that catches the light, a short-sleeved checkerboard blouse in warm reds and golds, and a blue skirt that folds in soft, heavy arcs across her bare knees. Her hands clasp an opened brown “HOLY BIBLE” book in her lap. She sits inside a market stall improvised from boards, nails, and sheet metal as angled wood planks hold up a tarp above her, a wooden barrel curves at left, and a patterned blue metal panel frames the right edge like a patched wall. At her feet, ripe round, orange-red and golden fruit spills forward, while a basket of red beans and a metal cup sits at the lower right. The space feels intimate and guarded as dark corners press in, yet the woman’s presence holds the scene, as if prayer and work share the same seat. Her skin is rendered in deep, glossy browns with cool green shadows, outlined with decisive dark contours that sharpen cheekbones, eyelids, and her nose. Two silver bangles circle one wrist and a ring glints on a finger. Her mouth is closed, neither smiling nor stern, more like someone looking up while reading. The geometry of the stall and the careful stillness of her pose make the Bible feel like the painting’s quiet compass. Painted in early post-independence 1969, it affirms Black Jamaican dignity being direct, unsentimental, and public. The cubism-touched geometry, saturated color, and heavy outlines lend a stained-glass intensity, elevating everyday items and daily labor into icon. As critic David Boxer put it, Watson wanted art that could be “understood and appreciated by all levels of society.”

“The Lawd Is My Shepard” by Osmond Watson (Jamaican) - Oil on canvas / 1969 - National Gallery of Jamaica (Kingston) #WomenInArt #OsmondWatson #NationalGalleryofJamaica #JamaicanArt #CaribbeanArt #PortraitPainting #BlackArt #art #artText #BlueskyArt #PortraitofaWoman #JamaicanArtist #CaribbeanArtist

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