Showing posts with label Andrew Esiebo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Esiebo. Show all posts

11.24.2014

Project Shortlist 11.24.14: Zachary Rosen

Project Shortlists share recommended portfolios, sites and projects. A recommendation does not mean more than that - just a recommended look. These shortlists are archived on the site links page.

Today's guest for Project Shortlist is Zachary Rosen.

Zachary Rosen is a writer/photographer based in Washington DC. He is a frequent contributor to the website Africa Is a Country and recently co-organized the Ba re e ne re Literature Festival in Lesotho.

Through his writing and images, Rosen seeks to awaken public consciousness about the subtleties of visual representation.

Nataly Castaño helped organize this post.
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Here is a list of ten exciting African photographers working today:

© Sipho Gongxeka

Sipho Gongxeka's Township Youth Portraits
Young South African photographer Sipho Gongxeka documents the creative flair of the township with his portraits, capturing the style, energy and relationships of contemporary urban youth. A graduate of the Market Photo Workshop, Gongxeka was a 2013 Tierney Fellow and has been mentored by the photographer Pieter Hugo.
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© Michael Tsegaye

Interview with Michael Tsegaye
I appreciate the way Ethiopian photographer Michael Tesgaye rejects labels with his images. He is unconcerned with stereotypical portrayals of "Africa" and instead documents social phenomena in Ethiopia in order to understand them better, taking on issues of death, prostitution and urban life. Tesgaye's images have been shown in Paris, New York, Oslo and Bamako.
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Afrikan Boy, 2013 from the series "My Rockstars" © Hassan Hajjaj

Hassan Hajjaj's "Rockstars"
It's amazing how Moroccan image-maker Hassan Hajjaj has added life to the studio portrait by incorporating bright colors not only into the image's visual content, but into the actual frame as well. He photographs friends and artists that he respects with an ongoing series he calls "My Rockstars," creating playful works that incorporate items of popular culture and the bright textiles found in many African styles of dress.
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© Namsa Leuba

Namsa Leuba: Guinean-Swiss Fashion Remix
I find Namsa Leuba one of the most exciting photographers working in fashion today. With Swiss and Guinean roots, Leuba has crafted her own style that creatively blends a West African aesthetic with traditional studio photography. Leuba is a master of remixing unexpected textures, patterns, objects and colors into gorgeous images with vanguard style.
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Breakfast at Onomo’s, 2013 from the series "ONOMOllywood Series" © Antoine Tempé

A Senegalese take on Hollywood
A collaboration between Senegalese photographer Omar Victor Diop and Dakar-based French photographer Antoine Tempé, the series ONOMOllywood integrates African actors into images of popular Western cinema, taking on The MatrixPyschoBreakfast at Tiffany's and American Beauty. The point, Diop says, is not to take "revenge" on Hollywood, rather it’s to demonstrate that with a great story and characters, the actors can look like anyone.
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From the series "Black History March" ©Anthony Bila

Recreating Vintage South African Images
Johannesburg-based photographer Anthony Bila worked with the fashion collective Love is African to create a photo series called "Black History March" that emulates vintage South African photography in look and feel.  With their simulated dust and scratches, these stunning images appear timeless. Not usually a fan of heavy digital manipulation, but this series is quite well executed.
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© Mehdi Sefrioui

Fashion Photography goes Infrared
Mehdi Sefrioui, a Paris-based Morrocan photographer, has allowed the fashion world to see portraits in a new light. Inspired by the designers unafraid to use dark-skin models, he photographed a fashion collection with pink-hued infrared aesthetic that he called Infro.
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Jun. 19, 2013. Payer time at Eko Akete Grammar school, Lagos Island, Nigeria
© Andrew Esiebo

Everyday Nigeria on Instagram with Andrew Esiebo
A huge number of African photographers are making their mark on Instagram these days including Andrew Esiebo, based in Lagos. Through his elegantly composed street scenes, Esiebo demonstrates the wonders of the decisive moment in everyday Nigerian life.
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Thobe and Phila I, 2012 © Zanele Muholi

Queer identity in South Africa
Zanele Muholi documents the tenderness and trials of same-sex relationships in South Africa. Though constitutionally legal, these relationships are not always socially accepted. Muholi’s work responds by brilliantly capturing the intimacy, strength and struggle of these individuals and their community.
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© Lakin Ogunbanwo

Breaking the Nigerian Fashion Mold with Lakin Ogunbanwo
Nigerian photographer Lakin Ogunbanwo has shown himself to be a master of light and form with his high contrast fashion images. He boldly breaks the conservative Nigerian aesthetic mold with his explicit presentation of male and female bodies, skin powdered, splattered, shimmering and glowing.

10.23.2014

Guest Project Shortlist 10.23.14: Salym Fayad - Africa, photography and the digital era

© Sahel Digital Art

Project Shortlists share recommended portfolios, sites, and projects. A recommendation does not mean more than that - just a recommended look. These shortlists are archived on the site links page.

Today's guest for Project Shortlist is Salym Fayad.

Salym Fayad is an independent reporter and documentary photographer from Bogota, Colombia based in Johannesburg, South Africa. He has traveled the African continent reporting on issues related to popular culture and music, migration, conflict and human rights. His articles and photographs have appeared in El Tiempo, Arcadia Magazine, Semana, El Malpensante, Gatopardo, The Sunday Times, Mail & Guardian, Southern Pulse Magazine, Agence France-Presse and Libération.

Nataly Castaño helped organize this post.
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© Paul Sika

Paul Sika – At The Heart Of Me

Inspired by the esthetics of comic books, video games, sci-fi films and Japanese animation, "photomaker" Paul Sika from Cote d’Ivoire creates theatrical images depicting African urban scenes that he describes as "one-frame films." Influenced by pop icons ranging from Andy Warhol and David LaChapelle to Ivoirian footballer Didier Drogba, Sika composes psychedelic, digitally-intervened Technicolor series that he complements with written entries in his digital book At The Heart of Me: The logbook of a joyful dreamer.
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Instagraming Everyday Africa

Instagram project Everyday Africa uses the photo-sharing platform to challenge stereotypical and one-dimensional perceptions of the African continent often portrayed by Western media. Through a network of contributors including foreign correspondents and African photographers such as Nana Kofi Acquah and Andrew Esiebo (also known for his series of barbershops in West Africa), the project brings together mobile and street photography and social media to disseminate vignettes of ordinary life captured in different parts of urban and rural Africa.
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© François Beaurain

François Beaurain – Monrovia animated

The surroundings of the once luxurious and now derelict Ducor Hotel in Monrovia, Liberia, provide the location for the animated GIFs of French photographer François Beaurain. The cyclical motion of his models, infinitely multiplied, brings the abandoned building back to life and offers a warm and often humorous view of Liberia's capital, while it traps the spectator's eye through the hypnotic effect of animated images in perpetual repetition.
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© Sahel Digital Art

Sahel Digital Art

Mobile and web-based applications for graphic design and lo-fi image manipulation have allowed Sahel's cellphone users to reimagine themselves in apocalyptic scenarios, with robotic limbs or surrounded by wild animals or stacks of cash. The trend, which has been documented by ethnomusicologist Christopher Kirkley, has also allowed Tuareg separatists to create a digital world in which their unrecognized state of Azawad in northern Mali has an airline, a football team and even a seat at the United Nations.

© Sahel Digital Art
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© Mutua Matheka

Mutua Matheka – Nairobi City

Nairobi's skyline, framed by dramatic dawns and sunsets, headlights and city lights (and a fair amount of Photoshopping) compose Mutua Matheka's vibrant cityscapes of the Kenyan capital. The images are Matheka's answer to the often exaggerated glow of first-world cities' postcards. Yet he argues that the pictures were not taken "to change the perception of foreigners" about the city, but for Kenyans themselves.