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MALICK SIDIBE
Untitled 4, 2000

30(w) x 40(h) cm
12.01(w) x 15.98(h) inches
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Untitled 4, 2000

INFORMATION
30(w) x 40(h) cm
12.01(w) x 15.98(h) inches
Show scale of piece
Gelatin silver print

Image size: 25(w) x 37.5(h) cm.

Unsigned.
PRICE
$ 1,170.00 Available from a private collection
Price of artwork and Shipping Fee are dependent on country of delivery. Shipping fee to United States is $ 95.00 [change country here]
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Malick Sidibe Biography

(Malian, 1936 - 2016)
Young couples enjoying a night out and a twist on the dancefloor, Malick Sidibé captured the enthusiasm of a Malian generation in the wake of the country’s independence in the early sixties. The only photographer in town - equipped with a handheld camera and flash - roamed the nights of Bamako leaving monochrome snapshots of what optimism and the expectations of a new future looks like. ‘Bamako Nights’ shows Sidibé’s talent at the earliest of his career, unintendedly forming a documentary of the capital in a period of transition.

Being the centre of attention in the Bamako nightlife and offering excitement and prestige to any party simply by his presence was not in the cards for Sidibé early in his life. Born in a Fulani village on the southern edges of Sahara, he was goat herding by the age of five in a family where only one child was chosen amongst several siblings to be sent to school. A privilege given to the young Malick. Always drawing, his artistic promise didn’t go unnoticed at primary school and soon enough it reached the local Mayor’s office, who suggested that Sidibé relocated to Bamako to study jewellery making.

In ’55, the principal at the Maison des artisans du Soudan (now Maison des Artisans de Bamako) introduced him to the French photographer, Gerard Guillat, for whom he started by decorating the shop window, cataloguing and organising the day-to-day work in the studio. The work experience would throw Sidibé onto an entirely new journey. Guillat was looking for an apprentice and the young helper didn’t think twice; after all, working alongside Guillat had made him realise that a click of a button was significantly faster than the work of a paintbrush. Within weeks, Sidibé bought his first camera, a Brownie Flash, working daytime under the guidance of his mentor - and evenings out and about in Bamako photographing weddings, birthdays and other private events.

Sidibe’s legacy stretching over five decades continues to play a significant role on the West African art scene, inspiring later photographers, such as Dorris Haron Kasco and Alioune Ba, as well as the younger generations of today.

Already a legend within the community of black-and-white photography, it took almost three decades before the rest of the world was enlightened by the West African artists. The inaugural Bamako Biennale in ’94, in which Malick Sidibé played a vital role, led to his first solo show outside Mali the same year; and as lights were adjusted for the retrospective of Seydou Keïta in ’97 at Gagosian Gallery in Wooster Street, New York, the spotlight was firmly onto West Africa. The twenty years that followed, Sidibé’s work was widely exhibited in Europe and United States, and is today part of a long list of prestigious collections and museums, including The Guggenheim, MoMA and The Metropolitan, New York; The Art Institute of Chicago; SFMoMA in San Francisco; and The National Portrait Gallery, London. His oeuvre was the subject of numerous books, such as ‘Mali Twist’ released by Fondation Cartier in 2017, and during his lifetime he became the most decorated African photographer, achieving the Hasselblad Foundation Award (2003), Golden Lion Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Biennale (2007), and World Press Photo (2010). Sidibé’s career started and ended in his beloved Bamako as he passed away in 2016.
 
Recommended Reading
Young couples enjoying a night out and a twist on the dancefloor, Malick Sidibé captured the enthusiasm of a Malian generation in the wake of the country’s independence in the early sixties. The only photographer in town - equipped with a handheld camera and flash - he roamed the nights of Bamako leaving monochrome snapshots of what optimism and the expectations of a new future looks like. ‘Bamako Nights’ shows Sidibé’s talent at the earliest of his career, unintendedly forming a documentary of the capital in a period of transition. Eyestorm’s representation of his fellow countryman, Seydou Keïta, opened a dialogue with Sidibé; one that shaped exclusive collaborations with the best of West African photographers.
Read more ...
OTHER ARTWORK BY MALICK SIDIBE
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 7
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 6
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 5
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 4
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 3
Malick Sidibe - Untitled 1
 

Untitled 7

Untitled 6

Untitled 5

Untitled 4

Untitled 3

Untitled 1

Available from a private collection
Available from a private collection
Available from a private collection
Available from a private collection
Available from a private collection
 
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