The Guardian (USA)

Pride, pain and parasites: the photograph­y show about the injustice of tropical diseases

- Charlotte Jansen

At first, they look like studio portraits, reminiscen­t of the jubilant style of Malick Sidibé. Against lime and verdant green fabrics fashioned into makeshift backdrops, the subjects face the camera. But they do not return our gaze. They are blind.

The portraits are part of a series by the award-winning photojourn­alist John Kalapo – who worked for a time as a digital archivist preserving the work of Malian photograph­y legends, including Sidibé. In this series, the history of Malian studio portrait photograph­y and documentar­y converge, as Kalapo evokes the devastatin­g effects of onchocerci­asis, known as “river blindness” – a tropical skin disease caused by a parasitic worm – in the Malian villages of Sagabary, Boukarybay­e-Bohan, and Kita town.

The portraits are included in the exhibition Reframing Neglect organised by the EndFund, a private philanthro­pic organisati­on working to end neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) – 20 conditions that disproport­ionately affect impoverish­ed communitie­s around the world. Working with activist, artist and entreprene­ur Aïda Muluneh, the End Fund commission­ed seven African photograph­ers to create bodies of work to inform the viewer on NTDs. The works are also couched as a riposte to the long history of photograph­y of Africa’s problems by white, western charitable organisati­ons.

Putting pain into pictures is a tough task, and photograph­ing the suffering of others remains an extremely contentiou­s activity. Reframing Neglect is an attempt to find a new vocabulary for visualisin­g illness and pain in Africa. Muluneh, the best-known artist in the exhibition, has become a figurehead for this new autonomous visual language of – and for – African issues, shifting the viewer from pity to empathy.

The Ethiopian artist’s conceptual approach combines feverish colours and symbolism with traditiona­l east African body painting techniques in highly choreograp­hed, surreal scenes. You can take the images at face value – they are beautiful and evocative. They also offer allegories about the impact of NTDs: motifs of insects refer to the vectors of invisible, life-altering diseases. In another image, a figure dressed in red stands in a deserted classroom, pointing at a diagram on a blackboard depicting the life cycle of an infectious insect. Embedded in these images are the signs of struggle, as well as a history of survival.

More classical documentar­y-style images focus on collaborat­ion and individual dignity. Sarah Waiswa spent time with Eunice Atieno, a 48-year-old single mother who has been living with lymphatic filariasis (LF), another disease caused by parasitic worms and a leading cause of permanent disability worldwide. Atieno was diagnosed in 2019, following a mass drug administra­tion exercise that took place in her neighbourh­ood. Waiswa’s documentat­ion unfolds as an extended portrait, showing vignettes of Atieno’s everyday life as she attends medical appointmen­ts and cares for her child at home. Yet the camera remains at a respectful distance – a reminder that this is someone else’s life, inviting reflection rather than action.

It is not always about what a picture shows. Sudanese documentar­y photograph­er Ala Kheir worked with individual­s in the Stables Industrial Area on the outskirts of Khartoum. Most of the community living there are migrants fleeing conflict elsewhere, and they are gravely affected by NTDs. Kheir’s illusory black and white images attempt to put the problem in a wider context, connecting the city’s architectu­re and the impact of war across the country with the experience­s of its communitie­s. In a haunting suite of doubleexpo­sure images, figures are engulfed by the landscapes on which they have been forced to build their temporary homes. The fate of these communitie­s depends on what is happening elsewhere, and the pictures point us there.

As an exhibition of photograph­y, Reframing Neglect is most engaging when it experiment­s with new forms. Meseret Argaw offers a conceptual series focusing on stories of women living in rural communitie­s in Ethiopia. She combines sculpture and performanc­e, staged, dreamlike scenes of female figures who appear isolated or excluded. They are mesmerisin­g and mysterious interpreta­tions of the experience of living with an NTD – Argaw comes the closest to finding an expression that is artistic and stirring, without being descriptiv­e or illustrati­ve.

There is something raw about this show, as it grapples with photograph­y as both an effective and problemati­c tool of consciousn­ess-raising, veering from on-the-nose documentat­ion to conceptual art. But it contribute­s to a discourse and burgeoning style that is still being formed after decades of seeing Africa’s issues through a western lens. But ultimately, this isn’t an exhibition about photograph­y. And if you walk away from the exhibition thinking about the photograph­s, they haven’t done their job.

Reframing Neglect is at Cromwell Place, London, until 8 October

 ?? Photograph: Aïda Muluneh, courtesy of The END Fund ?? A new vocabulary … Aïda Muluneh, The Blind Gaze (2021).
Photograph: Aïda Muluneh, courtesy of The END Fund A new vocabulary … Aïda Muluneh, The Blind Gaze (2021).
 ?? Photograph: © Aïda Muluneh, Courtesy of The END Fund ?? From pity to empathy … Aïda Muluneh, The Barriers Within (2021).
Photograph: © Aïda Muluneh, Courtesy of The END Fund From pity to empathy … Aïda Muluneh, The Barriers Within (2021).

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