‘Extravagant grannies…’

This year’s Lagos Photo Festival in Nigeria brings together well-known photographers and their take on identity in Africa:

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Keyezua looks at fashion in her home country of Angola with this image, entitled Royal Generation, of a woman wearing fabric woven from raw materials.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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A series of self portraits by Ghanaian photographer Eric Gyamfi explores African male sexuality against a backdrop of religion and tradition.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Nigerian photographer Lakin Ogunbanwo considers tradition and modernity by combining traditional dress with fetish wear.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Acceptance is the theme of Broken Things by South African photographer TSoku Maela, who says: “Self-love is not to instinctively conceal and impulsively improve on our flaws.”

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Kenyan photographer Osborne Macharia imagines how retired businesswomen could look in a series called Nyanye – League of Extravagant Grannies.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Benin-based Ishola Akpo photographs his own grandmother as part of a series that looks at the importance of bride prices in African culture.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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This photo is from a collection entitled Genesis by Kudzanai Chiurai, who focuses on political and social conditions in Zimbabwe by trying to understand the psyche of what it is like to be colonised.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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Adad Hannah’s work The Raft of the Medusa, re-imagines a 19th Century work by Theodore Gericault, of a colonial ship that was wrecked off the coast of Senegal more than 200 years ago.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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The Art of Survival by French photographer Patrick Willocq, who once lived in the Democratic Republic of Congo, depicts what it is like to be a child refugee using storybook imagery.

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Lagos Photo Festival

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And Profit Corner is Mozambique photographer Mario Macilau’s take on the threat of electronic waste in Africa.

Photos courtesy of Lagos Photo Festival, which continues until 22 November 2016.

extravagant grannies 2016-12-12

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