Art and Fashion

Five works worth knowing about Seydou Keïta

Seydou Keïta (ca. 1921-2001), now regarded as the father of African photography, ran a busy studio in Bamako, Mali (French Sudan until 1960) from 1948 to 1963, a period of radical transformation from rural to urban, colonial to postcolonial, both in that country and in Africa as a whole. The thousands of people Keita photographed during those years represented all segments of Malian society, including Bamako’s cultural elite, ordinary citizens, nomads, students, and military officers.

While Keita did style his subjects—fanning a skirt here, adjusting a hand position there, even providing European clothing, watches, motorcycles, cars, and radios as props—he also encouraged them to be active participants in the process. The popularity of his studio among the people of Bamako depends largely on his skill in presenting his works and allowing them to appear the way he wishes: elegant, cosmopolitan and, above all, modern.

In 1963, Keita was forced by Mali’s post-independence socialist government to close his studio and began working as its official photographer. In 1991, his studio portraits were exhibited anonymously in the West for the first time in a group show at the Museum of African Art in New York; a subsequent solo show at the Fondation Cartier in Paris in 1994—prints made from negatives shipped from Mali to France—was a sensation, sparking interest in Keita’s work and African photography in general. As international fame came, more new prints were created, both during Keita’s lifetime and after his death. Larger in size and cooler in tone than the original photographs, they are now how most contemporary viewers experience Keita’s images.

For Western scholars and curators, Keita’s photographs – which coincide with the eve and early years of Mali’s independence – are both captivating portraits of self-defining individuals and important documents of African life at a moment of transition. For Keita’s Malian clients, the photos mean much more than that. Pocket-sized and intended for personal use, they symbolized worldly success, commemorated special events and holidays, assisted matchmakers, and even served as talismans.

The exhibition “Seydou Keïta: Tactile Lenses,” currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum, focuses on this latter aspect of Keïta’s photographs, emphasizing the role of self-fashioning in his creation. Organized by guest curator Catherine E. McKinley and Imani Williford, the museum’s curatorial assistant for photography, fashion, and material culture, the exhibition features more than 200 photographs, including negatives and vintage prints, as well as examples of clothing, jewelry, and textiles. The exhibition runs until March 8, and here’s a guide to Keita’s five major works.

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