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Picture Alter gogo getters (1)
- Country
- Nigeria
- Photoprapher
- Andrew Esiebo
- Picture name
- Alter gogo getters (1)
- Biography
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© Andrew Esiebo © musée du quai Branly, Photoquai 2011
Andrew Esiebo
Born in 1978, Andrew Esiebo lives and works in Ibadan, and is a founder member of the Nigerian photojournalism collective Black Box. Esiebo taught himself his craft with a camera he was given in 2000: since then he has been documenting pictures of the youth, nightlife, football, religious revival, galloping urbanisation and the country's cultural traditions.
Enthusiastic reactions to his work led to residencies abroad and, in turn, to a broadening of his range of interests. When he won a Culturesfrance (now Institut Français) Visa pour la Création award in 2007, he set about documenting the everyday life of a Cameroonian homosexual in Paris. This series laid the groundwork for his characteristic approach: addressing the taboos and injustices undermining African and quietly denouncing them. A similar discretion marks his series on the Nigerian community in London. Andrew Esiebo takes his time: he knows that intimate experience and the harshness of the immigrant life cannot be captured in photographs until a relationship of trust has been established.
Photography, he says, makes him "think global and act local." Alter Gogo takes a quirky look at the global phenomenon that was the Soccer World Cup in South Africa in 2010. In Orange Farm, a shantytown near Johannesburg, he met the Gogo Getters, a soccer team made up entirely of grandmothers: the resulting two-part portraits show each of these elderly ladies first at home, most often with her grandchildren, then out on the pitch in full soccer outfit. This series is a direct contradiction of the media image of the aged in South Africa, as it challenges the cliché of football as a sport strictly practiced by men and young people. As such, it restores these women their rightful place on the country's visual and social landscape.