グッゲンハイム美術館のインスタグラム(guggenheim) - 10月13日 09時46分
#WorkoftheWeek: Malick Sidibé opened Studio Malick in the Bagadadji neighborhood of Bamako, Mali, in 1962. Unlike those of his predecessors, his studio was an electrified indoor establishment that achieved its heyday during the 1960s and ’70s.
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Under the repressive socialism of President Modibo Keïta (1960–68) in the mid-1960s and the subsequent military dictatorship of President Moussa Traoré (1968–91), Studio Malick’s photographs represent the irreverent attitudes and activities of men and women in Bamako who were frustrated by and defied restrictive governmental policies. Violating curfew, they organized and attended late-night parties, wore provocative Western clothing, and enjoyed imported consumer goods such as records and alcohol, at times illegally. Thus, portraits made by Sidibé and his assistants during the late 1960s and ’70s—like “Soirée familiale” (pictured)— depict recalcitrant individuals enjoying forbidden freedoms.
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“Soirée familiale” (1966), © Malick Sidibé
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2020/10/13