Keïta, Seydou. (1923–2001). Signed Photograph of Three Young Men in Mali. Original silver gelatin print of three young men from Mali, ca. 1954, by the Malian photographer best known for his portraits of people and families taken at his photography studio in Mali's capitol during the 1950s. Signed and dated "52 a 55 Seydou Keïta 1998" to the lower margin.
CONDITION. Sight 22 x 15.75 inches; framed to an overall size of ______.
Seydou Keïta’s photographs eloquently portray Bamako society during its era of transition from a cosmopolitan French colony to an independent capital. Whether photographing single individuals, families, or professional associations, Keïta balanced a strict sense of formality with a remarkable level of intimacy with his subjects. Like many professional photographers, he furnished his studio with numerous props, from backdrops and costumes, to Vespas and luxury cars. He would renew these props every few years, which later allowed him to establish a chronology for his work. His archive of over 10,000 negatives was gradually brought to light in the early 1990s; Keïta has since achieved international recognition. Inventive and highly modern, his emphasis on the essential components of portrait photography—light, subject, framing—firmly establishes Keïta among the twentieth-century masters of the genre.
In an interview with art curator André Magnin, Keïta describes his process and says that he showed his clients examples of previous portraits he had done, allowed them to pick a pose that they would like, and then he says “I suggested a position that was better suited for them, and in effect, I determined the good position. I was never wrong”.
Keïta, Seydou. (1923–2001). Signed Photograph of Three Young Men in Mali. Original silver gelatin print of three young men from Mali, ca. 1954, by the Malian photographer best known for his portraits of people and families taken at his photography studio in Mali's capitol during the 1950s. Signed and dated "52 a 55 Seydou Keïta 1998" to the lower margin.
CONDITION. Sight 22 x 15.75 inches; framed to an overall size of ______.
Seydou Keïta’s photographs eloquently portray Bamako society during its era of transition from a cosmopolitan French colony to an independent capital. Whether photographing single individuals, families, or professional associations, Keïta balanced a strict sense of formality with a remarkable level of intimacy with his subjects. Like many professional photographers, he furnished his studio with numerous props, from backdrops and costumes, to Vespas and luxury cars. He would renew these props every few years, which later allowed him to establish a chronology for his work. His archive of over 10,000 negatives was gradually brought to light in the early 1990s; Keïta has since achieved international recognition. Inventive and highly modern, his emphasis on the essential components of portrait photography—light, subject, framing—firmly establishes Keïta among the twentieth-century masters of the genre.
In an interview with art curator André Magnin, Keïta describes his process and says that he showed his clients examples of previous portraits he had done, allowed them to pick a pose that they would like, and then he says “I suggested a position that was better suited for them, and in effect, I determined the good position. I was never wrong”.