NEW YORK, NY.- Jack Shainman Gallery is presenting Love Power Peace, Malick Sidibés seventh solo show with the gallery, which includes previously unseen photographs. Throughout the 1960s, Sidibé championed visual representation of the pulse of a modernist Mali, newly free from colonial constraints and ardently joining a global, diasporic youth movement. Much of this political expression took shape through individual and collective presentation in fashion, music, and dance something made palpable in Sidibés rhythmic compositions.
Capturing his subjects in the midst of ceremonial action, Sidibé builds the narrative of a specific time and space that empowered a culture to dictate their own stories. There is a distinct sense of chronicle felt in the movement of Sidibés subjects, who boldly occupy both the photographs frame and their recently decolonized nations public and leisure spaces. The universality of Malian youths self-representation throughout the 1960s is mirrored in Sidibés role in sculpting the fresh, global appearance of the African diaspora.
Sidibés work has held deep influence throughout the art historical canon, evidenced by a series of 2014 portraits of Chris Ofili, commissioned by The New Yorker and on view for the first time in this exhibition. Ofili has long been inspired by Sidibés work, particularly by Nuit de Nöel (1963), which has appeared in seven of Ofilis paintings, multiple works on paper, and as a sculptural frieze carved into Ofilis home. The tender moment of 1960s Bamako, Mali, in which a previously suppressed African personality burst into independence and joined a worldwide conversation, finds continued vitality through Sidibés legacy.
Sidibé was born in Mali in 1936 and spent his life in its capital city of Bamako. His work has been exhibited extensively, including a major 2017 retrospective organized by the Fondation Cartier, Paris, France, and a 2016-17 solo presentation at Somerset House, London, United Kingdom. In 2012, the DePaul University Art Museum, Chicago, organized an exhibition titled Studio Malick in collaboration with Gwinzegal/diChroma Photography that traveled to Cornell Fine Arts Museum at Rollins College, Florida, and to the Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College in Spring 2014. Sidibé has participated in many significant group exhibitions, including Making Africa: A Continent of Contemporary Design, which from 2015-2019 has traveled to the Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein, Germany; Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain; Kunsthal Rotterdam, Netherlands; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, Georgia; and the Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas, amongst others.
Sidibé has work in numerous public and private collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Getty Museum, California; the Brooklyn Museum, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California; the Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland; the Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania; and the Rhode Island School of Design Museum. He was awarded the International Center of Photography Infinity Award for Lifetime Achievement (2008), the Hasselblad Award (2003), and the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 52nd Annual Venice Biennale (2007), when he was included in Think with the Senses Feel with the Mind, curated by Robert Storr.