The Halsey Institute is pleased to present Crossed Looks, the first solo exhibition of Swiss-Guinean artist Namsa Leuba in the United States. The show will feature over 90 works from the photographer’s projects in Guinea, South Africa, Nigeria, and Benin, and it will premiere new work created in Tahiti.
As a photographer working across documentary, fashion, and
performance, Namsa Leuba’s images explore the fluid visual identity of the
African diaspora. With a dual heritage between Guinea and Switzerland, Leuba
draws inspiration from her own experience growing up between two different
cultural traditions.
Leuba’s images are influenced by the Animist traditions of her
mother’s family in Guinea Conakry, and the visual codes of statues,
masquerades, and religious ceremonies in West Africa. They are also inspired by
contemporary fashion and design. The result is a unique perspective that
straddles reality and fantasy. She re-stages and constructs narrative scenes
in collaboration with her sitters, incorporating bold colors, striking
patterns, and intricate clothing and props. Leuba often uses models that she
informally meets in the street, who become active collaborators in the
portraits.
Leuba’s photographs pose fundamental questions
about the medium of photography and its role in forming our understanding of the
cultural “Other.” Leuba states: “I have always been characterized as the Other,
whether I am too ‘African’ to be European or too ‘European’ to be African. In
this unique positioning, I am interested in the politics of the gaze—who is
looking, who is being looked at, and the medium of which this looking occurs.”
Leuba has continued her focus in challenging
the visual representation of the cultural other in her newest series,
Illusions, created in Tahiti. After living in Tahiti for over two years, Leuba
collaborated with a group of transgender youths to re-stage imagery reminiscent
of the “Primitivist” paintings of Paul Gauguin and “tropical” images in modern
art. The series poses an ideological assault to the symbolism of Gauguin’s
paintings in Tahiti, which fetishized the indigenous female body and its myths
of exoticism.
Through her photographs, Leuba ultimately searches for a visual sense of belonging, of finding a vocabulary that speaks to the experiences and perspectives of not fitting in one ready-made mold. The title of this exhibition, Crossed Looks, references this diverse perspective, creating an alternative visual proposition that transcends fixed modes of representation.
The exhibition is organized by guest curator Joseph Gergel,
currently based in Lagos, Nigeria. Namsa Leuba: Crossed Looks is supported in
part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Swiss Arts Council Pro
Helvetia, and Garden & Gun Magazine. This exhibition is supported in part
by Belinda and Richard Gergel, Diane and Garey De Angelis, South State Bank,
Kathleen and Tom Wright, Carol Perkins and David Rawle, Cindy and Shon M.
Barnett, Deena and Walter McRackan, and Marissa Sams. The exhibition’s
accompanying publication, Namsa Leuba: Crossed Looks, was designed by Swiss design
studio Maximage and will be published by Damiani.
https://halsey.cofc.edu/main-exhibitions/crossed-looks/
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