Sunday Times

‘AS IF THE STARS WERE THEIRS’

Malian photograph­er Malick Sidibé captured a world of joy

- The Daily Telegraph

For me photograph­y is all about youth,” Malick Sidibé told me with a smile, when I visited him at his studio in Bamako, Mali, in 2003. “It’s about

[capturing] a happy world full of joy, not some kid crying on a street corner or a sick person.”

“Malick had a real love and admiration for people,” says the French fashion designer Agnès B, a long-standing collector of Sidibé’s work. “He was looking for elegance and beauty — but always through people.”

Sidibé’s photograph­s started appearing in the West in the early 1990s, picked up by the influentia­l curator and impresario André Magnin, who has produced a string of books and exhibition­s on Sidibé, including Mali Twist, the current blockbuste­r exhibition at Fondation Cartier in Paris.

In 2007 Sidibé became the first photograph­er to win the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievemen­t at the Venice Biennale, and some of his images are considered among the most romantic and evocative ever taken. His Nuit de Noël — hailed by Time magazine as among the 50 most influentia­l images of all time — is a prime example. “People love that photograph,” says Agnès B, who has reproduced the image of a young couple dancing, their foreheads touching, on a range of T-shirts. “It has a graciousne­ss and an elegance. You can look at those two young people forever.”

Sidibé made it his personal mission to record youth culture. Every weekend he would photograph youth groups with quirky names such as the Black Socks, the Sputniks and les Djentleman­s, who vied with each other to wear the coolest outfits and listen to the hippest music.

If Sidibé was modest about his technical abilities — “It’s just about getting the right distance and a flash and that’s it!” — his images of youngsters twisting and jiving or cavorting on the banks of the Niger capture the rush of postindepe­ndence optimism.

“I loved the music and the atmosphere, but above all I loved the dancers,” Sidibé said. “The moments when young people dance and play as though the stars belong to them — that’s what I loved the most.” ©

To see more works from the Mali Twist exhibition, visit www.fondationc­artier.com

 ??  ?? A child accompanie­d by his father, 1974/5.
A child accompanie­d by his father, 1974/5.
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 ??  ?? Nuit de Noël (Happy Club) 1963. Courtesy of Contempora­ry African Art Collection and Afronova Gallery
Nuit de Noël (Happy Club) 1963. Courtesy of Contempora­ry African Art Collection and Afronova Gallery

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