Ousmane Sow

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Ousmane Sow is a Senegalese sculptor of life-size statues of humans and groups of humans.

Work

Sculpture of Victor Hugo in Besançon made by Sow

Sow was born in Dakar in 1935. In 1957 he left for France where he obtained a diploma in nursing and physiotherapy. He returned in 1965, came back to France again in 1968, to return to Senegal again in 1984 with the goal to start a practice in physiotherapy there.[1]

Inspired by the photographs of the Nuba peoples in southern Sudan, made by Leni Riefenstahl (1902-2003), he changed his career in order to work from 1984 to 1987 on a series of sculptures of muscular Nuba wrestlers. These statues are bigger than the Nubas are in reality. During this process he developed a series of new techniques and materials. Subsequently, he made sculptures of the Maasai, a people in Kenya and Tanzania, and of the Zulu, a people that live mainly in KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.[2]

He exhibited worldwide, like on documenta IX in 1992 and on the Pont des Arts in Paris in 1999.[2]

In 2008 Sow was honored with a Prince Claus Award from the Netherlands in the theme Culture and the human body.[2]

External links

References

  1. Autobiography
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Prince Claus Fund (2008) biography
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