Iran Daily

Malian designer repurposes recycled materials into ‘everyday objects’

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Malian designer Cheick Diallo uses recycled materials and local craftsmans­hip to create unique, contempora­ry pieces of furniture that are exhibited both in Africa and in the West. France 24 met him in the Malian capital Bamako.

From old tires and soda cans to bottle tops, Cheick Diallo mines discarded objects and turns them into unique pieces that are subsequent­ly exhibited in galleries and museums in cities like Paris and New York.

In an open-air junkyard in the heart of Bamako’s old town, Diallo and his team of artisans redesign and repurpose old car parts received from Europe. Diallo calls this concept ‘return to sender’, he explained to France 24 correspond­ent Anthony Fouchard.

“We revive them,” Diallo said of the car parts.

“They came here to die, this is their cemetery. We rework things that come from Europe and rede¿ne them as everyday objects.”

Diallo, 56, is one of Mali’s leading designers and architects. He studied in Rouen, France, at the École Nationale d’architectu­re de Normandie and at the École Nationale Supérieure de Création Industriel­le in Paris.

His work featured in the seminal ‘Africa Remix’ exhibition, which was presented at the Kunst Palast in Düsseldorf (Germany), the Hayward Gallery in London, the Pompidou Centre in Paris, the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo and Moderna Museet in Stockholm over a period of three years. His pieces also grace the French and Belgian embassies in Bamako.

When Diallo was based in Rouen he returned regularly to Bamako to collaborat­e with local craftsmen on his designs. In 2014 he returned to live permanentl­y in the Malian capital, where he is considered a pioneer and the grandfathe­r of contempora­ry African design. Today he lives in the house that his architect father, Seydou Diallo, designed in the 1960s and offers design workshops in Mali, Ivory Coast and Senegal.

For the inaugurati­on of the Rencontres de Bamako (Bamako Encounters) photograph­y biennale in early December, Diallo transforme­d the ground Àoor of his house into a showroom where he presented his furniture.

Diallo reinterpre­ts and remixes Western ideas with a Malian twist, which includes painting the structures of recycled parts and adding weaving and braiding. Building an armchair can take around four days, he said.

 ??  ?? Cheick Diallo france24.com
Cheick Diallo france24.com
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