TALLIS PHOTOGRAPHY
TALLIS PHOTOGRAPHY
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Courses
    • Promo Videos
    • Ethos
    • Learning & Teaching
    • GCSE Photography
    • A-Level Photography
    • Documentation
    • Photo Literacy
    • Assessment
    • Home Learning
    • Exhibitions
    • Multimedia
  • Resources
    • What is photography?
    • Threshold Concepts
    • Bloom's Taxonomy
    • Evaluating your work
    • Writing about photography >
      • Walter Benjamin
      • Susan Sontag
      • John Szarkowski
      • Roland Barthes
      • John Tagg
      • Michael Bracewell
      • Graham Clarke
    • In Focus >
      • Berenice Abbott
      • Eugene Atget
      • Anna Atkins
      • Lewis Baltz
      • Brassai
      • Harry Callahan
      • Susan Derges
      • Louis Faurer
      • David Goldblatt
      • Nan Goldin
      • David Hockney
      • Seydou Keita
      • Dolores Marat
      • László Moholy-Nagy
      • Abelardo Morell
      • John Stezaker
      • Jindrich Styrsky
      • Hiroshi Sugimoto
      • Garry Winogrand
      • Erwin Wurm
    • Themes
    • Visual Analysis
    • Presentations
  • Links
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Courses
    • Promo Videos
    • Ethos
    • Learning & Teaching
    • GCSE Photography
    • A-Level Photography
    • Documentation
    • Photo Literacy
    • Assessment
    • Home Learning
    • Exhibitions
    • Multimedia
  • Resources
    • What is photography?
    • Threshold Concepts
    • Bloom's Taxonomy
    • Evaluating your work
    • Writing about photography >
      • Walter Benjamin
      • Susan Sontag
      • John Szarkowski
      • Roland Barthes
      • John Tagg
      • Michael Bracewell
      • Graham Clarke
    • In Focus >
      • Berenice Abbott
      • Eugene Atget
      • Anna Atkins
      • Lewis Baltz
      • Brassai
      • Harry Callahan
      • Susan Derges
      • Louis Faurer
      • David Goldblatt
      • Nan Goldin
      • David Hockney
      • Seydou Keita
      • Dolores Marat
      • László Moholy-Nagy
      • Abelardo Morell
      • John Stezaker
      • Jindrich Styrsky
      • Hiroshi Sugimoto
      • Garry Winogrand
      • Erwin Wurm
    • Themes
    • Visual Analysis
    • Presentations
  • Links
  • Contact

This episode of the BBC series The Genius of Photography (see the text opposite) explores the notion of what photographs are worth on the art market and features Seydou Keïta's work (4:30 min onwards):

Seydou Keïta

The following text is a transcript of an episode of the BBC documentary The Genius of Photography featuring Seydou Keïta's iamges (see below left):

"In October 1997, the Gagosian Art Gallery in New York introduced a new photographer to its fashionable clientele. Manhattan was a long way from Bamako in Mali where, in the 1950s and early 1960s, Seydou Keïta served a different kind of market. By the 90s he was long retired, but in his day he had been a studio photographer of national renown.

"Seydou Keïta was the place to go if you wanted to have a beautiful image of yourself. That was the studio to go for the local bourgeoisie and even for the middle class who wanted to grow in the social level." (N'Gone Fall, Curator)

"Bicycles, mopeds, cars, the props went from small to medium to large. Vespas were average but a car was luxury. And it didn't just stop at one he had lots, so people thought he was well-off and for the time he was." (Lancina Keita, brother of Seydou Keïta)

Seydou Keïta would have remained a strictly local hero if three of his photographs hadn't turned up in a show of African art in New York, in 1991. The pictures were attributed to the world's most prolific photographer 'Unknown'. On seeing the exhibition, Andre Magnin, a Parisian curator, set off for Mali immediately with photocopies from the photos from the catalogue as his only lead. By asking around he managed to track the 'unknown' photographer down.

"So I went to Seydou Keïta and introduced myself and I showed him the photocopies and he said they're mine and he was astounded that someone would come so far for this. So I explained to him that we were putting together a collection and were interested, amongst other things, in photography". (Andre Magnin, Curator)

Magnin left Mali trusted with some of Keïta's negatives hoping to find a new audience for his work in the West. With Magnin as a guide around the art market Keïta's photos, some now blown up to 80 times their original size, migrated from the living room walls of Bamako to the gallery walls of the Cartier Foundation, in Paris, and the Gagosian, in New York.

"There were 2000 people at that opening at the Gagosian, it was a huge success everybody was there and knocked out by those photographs and they congratulated Keïta on his work and Keïta was extremely proud." (Andre Magnin, Curator)

He was also becoming extremely rich. His photographs were now selling for up to $16,000 a piece. He was even commissioned to shoot a fashion story for top American style magazine Harper's Bazaar."

Thomas Tallis School, Kidbrooke Park Road, London SE3 9PX