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Ibrahim Cissé Presents ‘People Come End Ghost’ at Selebe Yoon, Dakar

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Ibrahim Cissé presents new works marked by the power of childhood memories in this new exhibition titled ‘People come end ghost’. These works plunge the viewer into an old family album, questioning photography as a witness to the transcontinental trajectories of the African diaspora. According to Cissé, for Africans who migrated abroad, these photographs were the only visual means of telling their stories or announcing a birth to their families back home. The exhibition explores questions such as: What do the images not say about reality? In his compositions – or rather recompositions – of intimate scenes, Cissé addresses the experience of disappearance, grief and the desynchronisation of family ties caused by separation.

Selebe Yoon showcases light boxes bathed in coloured light which reveal scenes and portraits of Cissé’s family. Through cutting and collage, his compositions, defined by geometric divisions and vignettes, borrow from the language of ancient Persian miniatures, while the transparency and luminosity of the works recall the art of stained glass, historically associated with the embellishment of religious monuments. The artist’s technique consists of redrawing elements taken from the same photographs and transferring them to vinyl paper before manipulating them and the canvas with paint. Resembling photographic negatives or medical X-rays, the scenes are transformed, repeated and recomposed in a psychic, almost absurd space, between the memory of lived experience and the deliberate distortion of the past.

© Ibrahim Cissé, People come end ghost, installation view, 2024.
Ibrahim Cissé, People come end ghost installation view, 2024, Image courtesy of Contemporary And.

Questioning the mysterious alliance of determinism and contingency in the course of a life, the artist highlights key moments in his own family history, such as his birth, his mother’s departure from Gambia to France, the death of his father, followed by that of his younger brother, who was overcome by a blood disease. These moments are linked in his memory to a few indescribable visions or impressions, manifested in a bouquet of flowers offered at a funeral or the solitude of his mother sitting at the table in her living room. The repetition of images reinforces the tenacity of unshakable memories, while some of the portraits are based on images taken over the course of a lifetime.

‘People come end ghost’ (2024) is a portrait of Cissé younger brother as a child, surrounded by a snake, a fetish animal from ancient mythology and a fundamental figure in many religions. The animal’s amorphous body, as fluid as that of blood vessels, seems to trap the child’s body, alluding to the insidious and slow nature of certain blood diseases. In ancient Greece, the serpent symbolised the guardian spirit, offering another interpretation of the scene immortalised by the artist. The result of the exhibitions is akin to a lullaby haunted by shadows, the world of childhood disturbed by ghosts, where animal allegories unite with the human. Although these works are based on private images, Ibrahim Cissé invites us to reflect on the fine line between personal and collective memory, the role of the photographic image in filling absences and telling stories as well as the function of the imagination in the face of loss. ‘People come end ghost’ is open at Selebe Yoon in Dakar, Senegal until the 22nd of February 2025.

Ibrahim Cissé, BORN DAY SUITE, 2024, Acrylic, vinyl, polycarbonate, and polyester on linen mounted on a light box,
93 x 123 cm, Image courtesy of Selebe Yoon’s Facebook.
Author

Lelethu Sobekwa is a published author, freelance copywriter and editor born in Gqeberha, South Africa. She holds a BA Honours in English and an MA in Creative Writing with distinction from Rhodes University. Lelethu currently writes for Art Network Africa.

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