Iba N'Diaye
Iba N'Diaye | |
---|---|
Iba N'Diaye seated in front of one the "Tabaski" series, (1995) | |
Born |
1928 Saint-Louis, Senegal |
Died |
October 5, 2008 Paris, France |
Nationality |
Senegal France |
Education | École des Beaux-Arts and Académie de la Grande Chaumière, Paris |
Known for | Painting |
Iba N'Diaye (1928 – October 5, 2008) was a French-Senegalese painter. Trained in Senegal and France during the Colonial period, N'Diaye utilised European modernist fine arts training and medium to depict his views of African realities. He returned to Senegal upon its independence, and became the founding head of Senegal's national fine arts academy. Disenchanted with the prevailing artistic and political climate of mid 1960s Dakar, N'Diaye returned to France in 1967 and exhibited around the globe, returning to his birthplace of Saint-Louis, Senegal, to present his work in Senegal again only in 2000. N'Diaye died at his home in Paris in October, 2008 at age 80.[1]
Early life and training
Born in Saint Louis, Senegal, when he was 15 years old began his studies at the prestigious Lycée Faidherbe. As a student he painted posters for cinemas and businesses in his town. He studied architecture in Senegal before traveling to France in 1948, where he began studying architecture at the École des Beaux-Arts in Montpellier. The sculptor Ossip Zadkine introduced him the traditional African sculpture, and he traveled throughout Europe, studying art and architecture. N'Diaye frequented jazz music clubs while in Paris in the 1940s, and his interest in the medium continues to show itself in his work. In Paris he studied fine art at the École des Beaux-Arts and Académie de la Grande Chaumière.
Return to Africa
When Senegal achieved independence in 1959, he returned at the request of President Léopold Senghor, to found the Department of Plastic Arts at the National School of Fine Arts of Senegal in Dakar. There he exhibited his work in 1962 and worked as a teacher until 1966. He taught and inspired a generation of fine artists, including painters such as Mor Faye.
N'Diaye, along with Papa Ibra Tall and Pierre Lods founded The Ecole de Dakar, a genre which allied painting, sculpture and crafts into the literary movement of Negritude: an attempt to assert a distinctively African voice in the arts, free of, if borrowing elements from, the traditions of colonial nations. "Africanité" (Africanness) combined the Negritude of Senghor and the Pan-Africanism of decolonialism. N'Diaye, though, remained committed to teach the fundamentals and techniques of Western art, at times putting him at odds with his fellow teachers and artists. He wrote of the danger of "Africanness" sliding back into a simplistic Noble savage self-parody if rejecting Western forms meant rejecting a rigorous technical background. The pursuit of this "instinctive" Africanness is best exemplified by Papa Ibra Tall, who felt that African artists must "unlearn" western habits, tapping instinctual African creativity. Tall and N'Diaye were the two best-known French-educated Senegalese fine artists of their time. While Tall's vision was to win out in the short term, the 1970s and 80s saw a reappraisal of N'Diaye's positions and an eventual rejection of the more straightforward state-sponsored "Africanité".[2] President Senghor, as a poet one of the founders of Negritude, devoted as much as %25 of the Senegalese budget to the arts and was seen as the patron of artists like The Ecole de Dakar. Misgivings by artists like N'Diaye (as well as outright opposition by artists such as film-maker/author Ousmane Sembène) fed into a later creative break with Negritude, in the 1970s led by the Laboratoire Agit-Art art community in Dakar. N'Diaye's disenchantment and return to France in 1967 came just a year after the World Festival of Black Arts was founded in Dakar: a triumph of the "Africanité" arts.[3]
N'Diaye died in Paris on October 4, 2008 at the age of 80 of heart failure.[4][5] The Senegalese Ministry of Culture is coordinating his interment, beside his mother, in the Catholic cemetery of Saint-Louis, Senegal.[6] Upon the artist's death, President of Senegal Abdoulaye Wade called N'Diaye the "Father-founder of Senegalese Modern Art."[7]
Exhibition history
Working at his Parisian "la Ruche Atelier" and his home in the Dordogne, N'Diaye painted some of his best-known works, a series on the theme of the biblical ritual slaughter of a lamb: the "Tabaski" series, exhibiting them at Sarlat in 1970 and at Amiens in 1974.
N'Diaye exhibited his paintings in New York City (1981), in the Netherlands (1989); in 1990 in Tampere (1990), and at the Museum Paleis Lange Voorhout in The Hague (1996). In 1987 was the subject of a retrospective at the Museum für Völkerkunde in Munich. In 2000, he returned to Saint Louis for his first exhibition in Senegal since 1981. In 1977, he was the subject of a retrospective at the Musée Dynamique, while in 1981, his work was presented at the Centre culturel Gaston Berger de Dakar. Since that time major showing of his work was staged at the Senegalese Galerie nationale (2003) and the Musée de la Place du Souvenir (2008), both in the Senegalese capitol.[8]
Work
Influenced equally by western Modernism and African tradition, one reviewer described him as "a Senegalese painter whose insistence that African artists can be whatever they want to be".[9] His study of African sculpture has shown in his subjects, but treated in colors and mood reminiscent of abstract expressionism. Equally, Jazz musicians, painted in movement and swirls of color, have been a recurring theme in his work: his "Hommage à Bessie Smith" perhaps the best known.
Notable works
- Tabaski la Ronde à qui le Tour - 1970
- Sahel - 1977
- The Cry / Head of a Djem Statuette Nigeria - 1976
- Study of an African Sculpture - 1977
- The Painter and his Model - 1979
- Study of a Wé Mask - 1982
- Jazz in Manhattan - 1984
- Big Band - 1986
- Juan de Pareja Attacked by Dogs - 1986
- The Cry - 1987
- Hommage à Bessie Smith - 1987
- Trombone - 1995
- Trio - 1999
References
- ↑ Cotter, Holland (October 15, 2008). "Iba Ndiaye, African Modernist Painter, Is Dead at 80". The New York Times
- ↑ "Rejetant l'idée selon laquelle « il faudrait être Africain avant d'être peintre ou sculpteur », Iba N’Diaye incite ses étudiants à se méfier de ceux qui, « au nom de l'authenticité […] persistent à vouloir vous conserver dans un jardin exotique »". Quoted in Maureen Murphy, review of Harney. Original quote from Iba N’Diaye, " À propos des arts plastiques ", Cited by O. Sow Huchard. Iba N’Diaye: Peindre est se souvenir. Dakar, Sépia-NEAS (1994)
On N'Diaye's conflict with Tall, see especially Harney( 2004) pp. 56, 63-66. - ↑ Michael R. Mosher Review of Harney, July 2005.
- ↑ "Official Webpage" (in French). Iba N'Diaye. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
- ↑ Cotter, Holland (2008-10-15). "Iba Ndiaye, African Modernist Painter, Is Dead at 80". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
- ↑ Nécrologie. Le peintre est décédé samedi à l'âge de 80 ans : Iba Ndiaye, une carrière bien remplie. Walf Fadjri - Dakar/African Press Service, October 2008.
- ↑ Hommage: Me WADE au peintre décédé : ‘Iba Ndiaye était le modèle par excellence’. Walf Fadjri - Dakar/African Press Service (n.d.).
- ↑ Nécrologie, Wal Fadjri, October 2008.
- ↑ REVIEW/ART; Africans Explore Their Own Evolving Cultures, MICHAEL BRENSON, the New York Times, May 17, 1991.
- Biography from the National Museum of African Art (United States).
- Elizabeth Harney. In Senghor's Shadow: Art, Politics, and the Avant-Garde in Senegal, 1960-1995. Duke University Press (2004) ISBN 0-8223-3395-3 p. 56, 63-90, 142-151, 159-66, 229.
- Elizabeth Harney. Ecole de Dakar: pan-Africanism in paint and textile, African Arts, (Autumn, 2002)
- Maureen Murphy, Harney, Elizabeth. – In Senghor’s Shadow. Art Politics, and the Avant-garde in Senegal, 1960-1995. Durham-London, Duke University Press, 2004, 316 p., Cahiers d'études africaines, 182, 2006.
- Bernard Pataux . Senegalese Art Today. African Arts, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Autumn, 1974), pp. 26–87
- R Lehuard. L'art nègre chez Picasso vu par Iba N'Diaye peintre africain. Arts d'Afrique noire, 1986, no58, pp. 9–22 .
- Clémentine Deliss. Dak'Art 92: Where Internationalism Falls Apart, African Arts, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Jul., 1993), pp. 180–185.
- Okwui Enwezor and Franz W. Kaiser. Iba N’Diaye, peintre entre continents: vous avez dit "primitif"? ( Iba N’Diaye, painter between continents: Primitive? Says who?) Paris: Adam Biro, 2002. ND1099.N43N3834 2002. OCLC 49199501.
- Tissières, Helene. "Iba Ndiaye: corps, lumière et embrasement ou la force du baroque". Revue Ethiopiques nº83, 2009.
- Iba N'diaye. Peindre est se souvenir. [s.l.]: NEAS-Sépia, 1994. (Conde-sur-Noireau (France) : Corlet). ND1099.S4N332 1994 AFA. OCLC 32042768.
- Portions of this article were translated from French language Wikipedia's fr:Iba N'Diaye.
External links
- Official website of Iba Ndiaye.
- Resume at Association pour la Défense Et l'Illustration des Arts d'Afrique et d'Océanie.
- Art History Archive: Biography and images of some of his works (nd).
- Review of Franz Kaiser and Okwui Enwezor. Iba N'Diaye PRIMITIVE? SAYS WHO? IBA NDIAYE, PAINTER BETWEEN CONTINENTS. Adam Biro, Paris (2002) ISBN 978-2-87660-332-5.
- Gamlin A. Diop: Images of four of Iba N'Diaye 's works.