Stay Strong, 2009 © Delphine Diallo
“Time is a different concept there,” says French-Senegalese photographer Delphine Diallo of her return to Africa. The six photographers included in New African Photography at Red Hook Labs don’t conform to any one linear narrative, though they all, like Diallo, take us back to the continent in one way or another, revealing ancient and contemporary stories alike
The show, curated in collaboration with media brand Nataal, includes artists Lakin Ogunbanwo, Namsa Leuba, Atong Atem, Owise Abuzaid, Kristin-Lee Moolman, and Delphine Diallo. Together, they span South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Guinea, Senegal, Sudan, along with the Australian, Swiss, and African American diasporas.
Though the collection indirectly covers over a century of history, the photographers are each decidedly fixed in the present moment, looking towards the future. Atem’s Third Culture Kids, for instance, spotlights this generation of African emigrants to Australia, while Abuzaid tours the streets of Egypt, carrying his classic yellow t-shirt wherever he goes. Moolman and Leuba both take on the high fashion scene, incorporating symbols and leitmotifs from South African and Guinean culture, respectively.
The influence of Malick Sidibé, who died just last month, is clear in this new generation of emerging photographers, especially in Diallo’s and Atem’s portraits. In the wake of the loss of Sidibé, New African Photography becomes an enduring reminder of the continent’s fertile and overflowing hubs of artistic influence.
Faka #02, Johannesburg (2015) © Kristin-Lee Moolman
Fela Gucci, Johannesburg (2015) © Kristin-Lee Moolman
Untitled I, From Cocktail series (2011) © Namsa Leuba
Highness – Hybrid I, 2012 © Delphine Diallo
Let It Be © Lakin Ogunbanwo
Not So Sorry © Lakin Ogunbanwo
Untitled © Owise Abuzaid
Untitled © Owise Abuzaid
Morayo © Atong Atem
Ajok © Atong Atem
All images courtesy Red Hook Labs