From April 17, 2025 to May 31, 2025
Jack Shainman Gallery is thrilled to announce Regardez-moi, an exhibition of photographs by the
Malian photographer Malick Sidibé. The exhibition, the title of which translates to "Look at Me", marks
the gallery's latest celebration of Sidibé’s unparalleled ability to capture the heartbeat of Bamako, Mali
following the country’s liberation from colonial rule in 1960.
Featuring a vibrant selection of photographs — some of which have never before been exhibited — this
presentation invites viewers into the bustling parties, joyous gatherings, and tender moments that defined
the transformative era of a young nation relishing to establish its own national identity. In today’s cultural
climate, where visibility and representation hold immense weight, Sidibé’s work and legacy remain as
significant as ever.
Presented in conjunction with this exhibition is the publication of Painted Frames, a monograph by Loose
Joints, and the first exploration of Sidibé’s synergistic painted frame photographs. In these works, Sidibe
collaborated with local Malian artists to blend his iconic photography with the traditional West African art
of reverse-glass painting. Regardez-moi presents a selection of these painted frames; reaffirming the
sanctity of African photography as a medium of memory and identity. The publication also features an
essay by writer, independent researcher, and collector-archivist Amy Sall, in which she makes a case for
the continued and ever-expanding importance of Sidibé’s oeuvre:
“Malick Sidibé was witness to, and preserver of, a nascent, burgeoning postcolonial
society in which a new modernity was being constructed by way of transcultural osmosis.
From his studio to the soirées, and even to the banks of the Niger River, Sidibé and his
camera were at the center of it all. He was not only chronicling Malian history and culture,
but making pivotal contributions to it…. The night clubs, living rooms, and courtyards he
photographed were spaces of freedom and community. Sidibé’s oeuvre reflects dialectic
expressions of being because he captured his subjects as their imagined and authentic
selves. From his widely recognized Nuit de Noël (Christmas Eve, Happy Club) (1963) to
his series Vues de dos, the framed images carry the same undercurrents of power and
rebellion, tenderness and joy that flow throughout Sidibé’s entire archive.”
Regardez-moi underscores Sidibé’s role as a pioneer who sculpted the visual identity of the African
diaspora, offering a window into a Malian nation that boldly joined a global youth movement. His
photographs transcend their historical context, speaking to contemporary dialogues about identity,
agency, and the power of being seen. Sidibé's photographs don’t just freeze time, they transform these
scenes into vibrant stages where his subjects — young couples excited to be married, or older men or
women reclaiming their freedom of expression — assert their presence and identity. In Dansez le Twist
(1963-2010), Sidibé captures a young man and a woman in a state of joy while dancing the twist, an
American rock ‘n’ roll dance that became a global cultural phenomenon from 1959 to the early 1960s,
which was known for its simple yet lively steps that encouraged freedom of movement and expression. By
providing his subjects with ways to be seen and celebrated, Sidibé’s lens offers a powerful counterpoint to
our tech-filtered world, reminding viewers of the raw, unscripted joy of human connection. One of Sidibé
most celebrated series, Vues de Dos — with examples from the series held in the collections of numerous
museums such as the Getty Museum, The National Gallery of Art, as well as the Metropolitan Museum of
Art — provides viewers with a deeper understanding of the photographer’s curatorial eye, depicting
women in his studio with their bare backs to the camera against a signature backdrop of striped walls.
Sidibé’s photography serves as both a reflector and a loudspeaker, magnifying the vibrant, intimate
essence of Bamako’s people in the wake of gaining independence from French colonial rule. The works
capture a liberated people that resonates with a contemporary urgency now more than ever.