Reporter
angelo.jedidiah@guardian.co.tt
No matter the mood or the weight of the day, art offers a way to express what words sometimes cannot. Paired with your favourite drink in hand, it can become a gentle form of healing—a truth understood by business owner Felisha Mohammed.
At 21 years old, Felisha is the owner of Canvas Café, located on Old Tim Road in St Augustine.
As sip-and-paint events continue to grow in popularity across the world for friend groups, businesses and artists, Felisha has carved out a space where the experience is no longer an occasional pop-up event, but a more regularly accessible activity.
“What I would do is go to different locations and host sip-and-paint events, but what was the struggle for me was finding a location to do it. And this was always a long-term dream for me to have my own space to host my events,” Felisha told Guardian Media.
This is, instead, a service offered throughout the week, just like at any dining spot. The concept is simple: arrive, order your favourite drink (whether it is coffee, a latte or matcha) and pastry, and select the art piece you would like to create. From colouring books and coloured pencils to micron pens, paints, easels, palettes and canvases, the supplies are nearly endless. All that is left is to don an apron, grab your drink and begin. And Felisha said it best: “They both tie in very well together.”
If you are familiar with the area, Canvas Café is within walking distance of quite a few schools and after-school centres in the St. Augustine area, including the University of the West Indies, St Augustine campus. According to Felisha, there is no day that goes by without a group of friends agreeing to meet up, catch up and socialise at her business in a peaceful environment to destress and release their artistic side.
“Since I opened, the common response has been that they’re just really happy for a place to escape. And the colours inside of here is very inspiring to them. It’s not like a lot of other places where it’s dark and low light. They really feel encouraged to come over because of the pop of colour, and they get an activity to do in between exams, stress of school. A lot of them are happy to come and colour,” she said.
At Canvas Café that day was Lili-Jane Thomas, a 24-year-old UWI student, along with a friend she had been meaning to “catch up” with.
“I love to paint, painting is my passion and I wanted to kind of introduce this new cool place to her,” Lili-Jane told us as she painted abstract art.
“Places like here might seem intimidating, but I like coming here because of Felisha and the art, the opportunity to paint and sip and eat. It is a unique experience. I don’t like to party, so this is me,” she added.
Among the students and working professionals who slip away on their lunch breaks to patronise Canvas Café are lecturers, along with some of Felisha’s former teachers from Lakshmi Girls’ Hindu College. They come not only for a brief moment of relaxation, but also out of pride in her creative business venture.
“Plus, a lot of them like to shy away from international franchise chains, so they’re happy for something a little more local too, in terms of the drinks.”
With a full-time business, it is hard to believe that Felisha is also a full-time undergraduate student at Costaatt, pursuing a degree in graphic design. Even though she herself sometimes finds it hard to believe, she makes it work.
“Honestly, it’s very, very difficult, because I do five courses while also managing the Café. But what really helps is just having proper time management. And also my lecturers are very, very graceful. They are very understanding of what the reality of the situation is … At least three of them [lecturers] have come.”
Felisha says she enjoys seeing how her business idea resonates with so many, as patrons come to view the café as a “safe space” to connect with others or even with themselves on solo dates while they sketch or paint. She is even partnering with another small business to host “sip-and-cake paint” events at the café.
Felisha believes Trinbagonians are booming with creativity and, as time passes, she is realising that as the art scene grows, more people are embracing it as a way to cope with the mental and emotional pressures of everyday life.
“You see them fixated on their canvas. While I’m wondering, ‘oh my gosh, are they enjoying their drink? They barely took a sip.’ But no, they’re just engrossed in the canvas and they’re painting. They spend hours here. Some, they may come at 12 pm and leave at closing time, you know. It is just visually seeing how present they are with their painting.”
Looking ahead, Felisha envisions Canvas Café evolving, introducing new expressions of art, expanding its creative offerings and allowing the business to grow at its own pace.
“… and possibly a bigger space.”
