From Ouidha to Somba
"Everything that’s born of the Earth or Sky seems to possess a positive or negative power for one thing or another. There’s nothing innocent about the slightest everyday gesture."
Abstracts
"On the roads in the North, in Natingou and at the Niger border, you can come across nomadic Peul shepherds. Lions fear their magic and spare their herds. Peul women are majestic and reputed for their knowledge about plants. They trade them on the side of tracks, elegantly laying at your feet the stacks of medicinal roots that they’ve been balancing on their heads. When they go on their way again, if you manage to get hold of a pinch of sand that their basket has rested upon, your lifelong happiness is ensured.
But no one ever manages to. With a swift foot movement, they disperse this paradisiac powder in the air and the spell vanishes. If they get caught out, they themselves are punished with unending happiness… No act is insignificant when you live with the Harmattan winds."
Extract from Carnets de voyage, 2000, Éditions Gallimard
Works
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Ink sur papier
37 x 46 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
18 x 24 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
18 x 24 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
37 x 46 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache sur papier
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
37 x 46 cm
Benin
Gouache on paper
46 x 37 cm