A series of events celebrating the life and work of the pioneering Ghanaian-British photographer James Barnor will take place across Ghana this summer.
The programme, titled James Barnor 95 Festival and expected to launch at the end of May, has been arranged to coincide with the artist’s 95th birthday. It was conceived by the gallerist Clémentine de la Féronnière following a conversation with Barnor during which he expressed his “wish” to spend the special occasion in his homeland.
For more than six decades, Barnor, born in Accra in 1929, has photographed major social, cultural and political developments across Ghana and England. As a young man, he became his country’s first photojournalist, chronicling for the newspaper The Daily Graphic the rise of Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana’s first president, for example, and the country’s transition to independence from the United Kingdom in 1957. He also set up his first studio, Ever Young, in 1953. After moving to England in 1959, he captured growing multiculturalism, the Swinging Sixties cultural revolution and the African diaspora—his images regularly appearing in Drum, the influential South African magazine which had offices in London.
Barnor is also credited with setting up the first colour processing laboratory in Ghana, after returning there in the 1970s. He moved to London again in 1994, where he lives today.
In recent years, Barnor’s birthdays have coincided with exhibitions of his work at the Serpentine Galleries and Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the Galerie Clémentine de la Féronnière in Paris. This year’s festival takes it up a gear, with exhibitions taking place at around eight spaces in Accra and Tamale. Among them is a retrospective held across the Nubuke Foundation in Accra and the Nuku Studio in Tamale (opening 3 June), and a show about “Barnor on the road”, opening on 2 June at Savannah Centre for Contemporary Art in Tamale.
Also planned is a panel discussion with Barnor at the Institute Museum of Ghana (1 June), focusing on the women depicted in his work in the 1950s; as well as music and dance performances; documentaries screenings; and free community archiving and photojournalism workshops.
Speaking to The Art Newspaper, De la Féronnière says that, even though Barnor has connections with Ghanaian artists, she is looking forward to seeing his “reaction” to ”the quality of the contemporary art scene in Ghana”, upon his return there. The festival will also be a chance for Ghanaians to enjoy a wide range of Barnor’s output, which is an important record of ”the history of Ghana and by extension of Africa”, she adds.
Key to the festival is a mission to take the work and broadcast it to a wider public, who might otherwise not have access to it, says Féronnière. Indeed, one of the more unusual events will be an exhibition on an airplane, purchased by the artist Ibrahim Mahama, which will travel by road from Accra to Tamale, stopping in villages along the way.
Féronnière hopes that showing Barnor’s photographs across the country will provide a “democratisation of the work”. This speaks to, she adds, “one of the very important peculiarities of James as an artist”, who, from the very beginning of his career, has loved to share and help others.