You Can’t See This DIA Exhibition on James Barnor Anywhere Else in the Country (Yet)

James Barnor captured Muhammad Ali and inspired Beyonce’s 2018 Vogue cover photographer.
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"Sister holding broker outside studio X23, Accra, 1979." // Photograph by James Barnor, courtesy of Galerie ClΓ©mentine de la FΓ©ronniΓ©re, Paris and the Detroit Institute of Arts

The Detroit Institute of Arts is the first place in America to show an exhibition from a highly influential Ghanaian photographer. features over 170 photos Barnor took from the β€˜50s to the β€˜80s.

He photographed Muhammad Ali, numerous political figures, fashion models, and musicians. As a photojournalist, he documented Ghana’s liberation from colonial rule. But many of his subjects are unsung peopleβ€”families, friends, and childrenβ€”and these portraits are equally captivating. To the 94-year-old, β€œthere is no hierarchy between the images,” said exhibition curator Lizzie Carey-Thomas.

β€œI am honored the [DIA] chose to spotlight my work, allowing Detroit audiences to receive an opportunity to discover the important years in African history and culture that the photos represent,” said Barnor in a statement. β€œIt is my hope that these images can inspire a new generation of artists.”

Many cite Barnor as an influence, including Brooklyn-based photographer Tyler Mitchell, who, at 23, . Mitchell was the first Black photographer to have his work appear on the cover of American Vogue.

In 1953, Barnor opened Ever Young, a portrait studio in Accra, Ghana’s capital. At the time, Ghana was a British colony called the Gold Coast. Barnor photographed people who comprised Accra’s middle classβ€”doctors, lawyers, teachers, and government workersβ€”on the brink of independence from British colonial rule.

β€œAll of those things convey an impression of a vibrant city that was very much comparable to what was happening in post-war America; in African American communities,” said Nii O. Quarcoopome, curator of African art at the DIA. β€œI’m hoping that when [Black Americans] walk through the galleries, they’ll see themselves in this exhibition; that they will take a little bit of pride from it.”

In 1957, Ghana was the first sub-Saharan country to declare independence from colonial rule. In 1960, 17 more African countries followed. When viewing Barnor’s images, the DIA invites visitors to draw parallels to U.S. history.

β€œYou have the Civil Rights movement in the β€˜50s and β€˜60sβ€”this is the same time that Africans were also agitating for political independence,” said Quarcoopome.

In 1959, Barnor moved to London and worked as a fashion and editorial photographer, taking photos for publications, notably Flamingo and the anti-apartheid South African magazine Drum. He captured the dress and lifestyles of Africans living in London. In the β€˜70s, Barnor returned to Ghana and started the country’s first color photo processing lab. His later work includes album art for Ghanaian musicians and portraits of sports figures.

Detroit is Accra/London’s third stopβ€”it debuted at London’s , and showed at the , Switzerland last year. It’s on view May 28 through Oct. 15, 2023, and free for residents of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties. Tickets for non-residents of those counties and more information is .

Find details on more exhibits and things to do in metro Detroit at ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕDetroit.com.

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