Samuel Fosso / African Spirits A2 Poster
This is a lithograph print poster by Samuel Fosso, using one of the pieces from his "African Spirits" series.
Samuel Fosso's self-portrait as Angela Davis. In his "African Spirits" series, he identifies with prominent figures from the 20th century Black liberation movement. Fosso reinterprets historical photographs, paying homage to the figures in the originals while also raising questions about the complex histories of individuality, celebrity, media, and representation.
Samuel Fosso (born 1962 in Cameroon)
One of Africa's leading contemporary artists, photographer Samuel Fosso forged his artistic path in unexpected ways through his work as a commercial portrait photographer. His experiences in commercial portraiture eventually inspired his signature conceptual self-portraits, and he developed a distinctive aesthetic that both celebrates and challenges notions of African identity while engaging with the history of studio photography in Africa.
With his studio business flourishing, Fosso realized his clients preferred quick turnaround times for portraits. Using up remaining film at the end of the day, he began taking photographs of himself to be processed for print and sent to his family in Nigeria. His early self-portraits reveal an innate interest in studied self-expression. Against improvised backdrops, he confidently experiments with props, poses, and costumes. Defying authoritarian decrees banning bell-bottoms and platform boots, he often rebelliously dresses in the flamboyant fashions of the 1970s.
Inspired by his Igbo heritage and its traditions of costume and body art, Fosso eventually began to create self-portraits in a more theatrical style. Series such as "Tati" (1997), in which he portrays colorful, satirical characters such as a tribal chief and a liberated woman of the 1970s, and "African Spirits" (2008), in which he portrays prominent cultural figures and civil rights and African independence leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr. and Haile Selassie, demonstrate the potential inherent in his earlier photographic experiments. In these and other works, Fosso engages with the Igbo notion of costume as a way for ancestral spirits to linger close to the living.
Fosso's work also displays a deep interest in the circulation of images: the poses and costumes in African Spirits are borrowed from famous photographs, such as Eve Arnold's quietly powerful 1961 portrait of Malcolm X for Magnum. Whether he painstakingly recreates famous portraits or playfully evokes and deconstructs preconceived notions, Fosso's keen understanding of the cumulative power of image propagation underpins his approach.Risograph print
Size: 594mm x 420mm
Editing, design and printing: Sébastien Girard
