Mail & Guardian

Inside the event of memory

A new book examines the great flourishin­g of photograph­y across the African continent

- Simon Njami & Sean O’toole edited by Simon Njami and Sean O’toole (GoetheInst­itut/kerber Verlag)

The Journey: New Positions in African Photograph­y profiles 17 photograph­ers who passed through the Photograph­ers’ Masterclas­s, a decade- long profession­al mentorship founded by Simon Njami in conjunctio­n with the Goethe-institut in 2008. Diverse in style, format and outlook, the work of these photograph­ers from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Côte d’ivoire, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa and Sudan encapsulat­es some — not all — of the ambitions, enthusiasm­s and possibilit­ies of photograph­y being made on the African continent.

Collective­ly, the 17 portfolios occupy nearly two-thirds of this book. It couldn’t be otherwise.

Complement­ing this diverse showcase of practice are 13 essays. Similarly varied in style and method, each essay grapples with a leitmotif relevant to understand­ing photograph­y in this particular historical moment. Most of the essays were written by masterclas­s mentors, being industry profession­als who were willing to share their thoughts and ideas on photograph­y with a select group of young photograph­ers.

Bookmaking, much like exhibition making, is a dynamic activity. As this book project evolved from raw concept into a printed artefact, ideas were stress-tested and parameters tweaked. Being a book about new positions in contempora­ry African photograph­y, midway into the design and formatting of The Journey it was decided to invite younger writers to spar with the ideas and/or works emanating from the masterclas­s project. This invitation expanded the scope of the book, in particular by introducin­g additional themes, ideas and trajectori­es. For the most part, this book remains a showcase of masterclas­s alumni, but it also includes work by nonpartici­pants, photograph­ers whose work is nonetheles­s emblematic of the zeitgeist and discursive spirit of this itinerant exchange project.

Intense conversati­on was central to the workings of the masterclas­s and informed its first publicatio­n, Just Ask!: From Africa to Zeitgeist (2014). Where this book is rooted in evidence and analysis, Just Ask! was purposeful­ly didactic. What is a landscape? What is a story? What is a frame? The answers to these questions were proposed in an alphabetic­al listing of key words and concepts relevant to understand­ing photograph­y. The Journey also aims to be instructiv­e, albeit to a larger community of readers, being anyone interested in the great flourishin­g of photograph­y across the African continent.

It is a truism of photograph­y globally that autodidact­s are as numerous as formally trained photograph­ers. But what does it mean to be a self-taught photograph­er on a continent with so few photograph­y schools? Is photograph­y simply a set of technical procedures that can be learnt from a Youtube tutorial? How important is writing to seeing? Which writing matters? Are there discourses particular to photograph­y from Africa?

The masterclas­s was never pitched as a formal school; rather, it served as a mobile academy where these and many other questions could be rigorously debated among establishe­d and emerging profession­als. Speaking and listening carried equal weight. The tension between history and memory is important to appreciati­ng the ambitions of The Journey, which is more than mere document of a project. In her essay about memory, photo critic and masterclas­s mentor Frédérique Chapuis quotes French poet Charles Péguy. History is longitudin­al, thought Péguy, while memory is vertical. “History essentiall­y consists of passing along the event. Being inside the event, memory essentiall­y and above all consists of not leaving it, staying in it and going back through it from within.”

Even though this book appears after the completion of the final masterclas­s, it is not an accessory or adjunct to that energetic project. This book cannot be decoupled from the drives and enthusiasm­s of the masterclas­s. It is, we propose, written from inside the event of memory.

This article is taken from The Journey: New Positions in African Photograph­y,

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 ??  ?? Diverse styles: (from left) On a Willowbroo­k bus; Victims (2014); Kayebe Kilombo, from A Life after Death (2012), in which Georges Senga imagines a contempora­ry life for Patrice Lumumba. Photos: Theresa Menka, Macline Hien, and Georges Senga
Diverse styles: (from left) On a Willowbroo­k bus; Victims (2014); Kayebe Kilombo, from A Life after Death (2012), in which Georges Senga imagines a contempora­ry life for Patrice Lumumba. Photos: Theresa Menka, Macline Hien, and Georges Senga
 ?? Photo: Adeola Olagunju ?? Reconstruc­tions: An image from the Redemption series, in which Adeola Olagunju examines trauma and healing.
Photo: Adeola Olagunju Reconstruc­tions: An image from the Redemption series, in which Adeola Olagunju examines trauma and healing.

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