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Samuel Fosso: Jack Shainman Gallery.


Posed against a stained curtain, a slim young sailor-prince wearing high-waisted bell-bottoms, a cap printed with the Kodak logo, and extra-large sunglasses gazes off into an imaginary distance. The studio lights that illuminate him are visible on either side of the frame, as is the camera's own reflection in one of the lamps. In another image in this survey of Samuel Fosso's nearly three-decade-long practice of self-portraiture, the kneeling photographer supplicates his camera with two fistfuls of flowers, like a heartthrob in an old Hollywood romance. Fosso conjures instant glamour and fantastic personas with the barest of means: A cheap bath towel draped drape  
v. draped, drap·ing, drapes

v.tr.
1. To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds: draped the coffin with a flag; a robe that draped her figure.
 across his slight shoulders lends him the untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
 elegance of a movie star relaxing between scenes, and in several photos ordinary vinyl dishwashing gloves are worn with dandyish insouciance in·sou·ci·ance  
n.
Blithe lack of concern; nonchalance.


insouciance
lack of care or concern; a lighthearted attitude. — insouciant, adj.
See also: Attitudes

Noun 1.
. Ninjas, businessmen, pop stars, and aristocrats are among the many makeshift identities experimented with in the self-portraits Fosso began shooting during his teens in the mid-'70s.

Born in Cameroon, Fosso opened his own photo studio at age thirteen in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic Central African Republic, republic (2005 est. pop. 3,800,000), 240,534 sq mi (622,983 sq km), central Africa. The landlocked nation is bordered by Chad (N), Sudan (E), Congo (Kinshasa) and Congo (Brazzaville) (S), and Cameroon (W). . After business hours BUSINESS HOURS. The time of the day during which business is transacted. In respect to the time of presentment and demand of bills and notes, business hours generally range through the whole day down to the hours of rest in the evening, except when the paper is payable it a bank or by a  he would document himself, sending the pictures to his family, whom he'd left fit Nigeria following the Biafran war. The earliest photograph in this exhibition (Self Portrait [Reception], 1975) shows the boy entrepreneur seated behind his studio counter, which is hung with a handpainted sales pitch: vous SERGE BEAU, CHIC, GENTIL ET FACILE A RECONNAITRE. His earliest images were produced in a period of coups, violence, political instability, and the brutal reign and deposition of the self-declared emperor Bokassa. Equally remarkable--especially considering the turbulent context he was working in--are the joyful obsessiveness of the young photographer's subjective freestyling and the dreamy free space he articulates within the cramped confines of a single camera setup. Always posed against the same wall (sometimes painted with scenic views, sometimes decorated with bung Bung

experiences modified and extreme levels of want. [Br. Lit.: Sketches by Boz]

See : Poverty
 fabrics), Fosso elaborates an experimental process of self-invention and playacting inspired by popular-magazine imagery. Cindy Sherman's film stills might come to mind; but Fosso's images were produced in isolation, far from the international art world, and didn't find recognition there until the '90s. This solo exhibition, long-overdue, is his first ever in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
.

In a group of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 images from 1997, where Fosso appears in drag, as a sailor, in a suit talking on a cell phone, and as a pirate clutching a handful of costume jewelry, something obvious and campy invades his approach, and--perhaps thanks to art-world integration or because he now addresses a new and wider audience--his aesthetic starts to lose some of its fascination. But in the must recent work, and his return to black and white, Fosso regains the startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 singularity of his initial attempts. For these images (all dated 2000), he strikes haunted, sometimes terrorized poses--crouching naked in a cardboard box among rusty paint cans, reclining like a spooked Olympia under grim mosquito nets in a room resembling a prison cell. As existentially harrowing as these expressions appear, a playful narcissism narcissism (närsĭs`ĭzəm), Freudian term, drawn from the Greek myth of Narcissus, indicating an exclusive self-absorption. In psychoanalysis, narcissism is considered a normal stage in the development of children.  and a sovereign will to fiction persist. Stripping his images of fashion and pop references, the photographer addresses the realities of political violence without letting go of the fabulous and fabulating possibilities of his medium.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:... self-portraiture is a dominant theme of the photo exhibit
Author:Kelsey, John
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Dec 1, 2003
Words:533
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