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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Cameroon - London
Portrait Photographs
by Samuel Finlak and Joseph Chila
8 July - 16 October 2005
Gallery 38a
Admission free
Organised in collaboration
with the University of Kent and presented in association with
Visiting Arts as part of Africa 05

© Joseph Chila

© Samuel Finlak
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As part of Africa 2005, the National
Portrait Gallery has invited two Cameroonian photographers to
take part in a two-week residency in London culminating in a
display at the Gallery from 8 July until 25 September. During
the residency, which is supported by the Calouste Gulbenkian
Foundation, studio photographers Samuel Finlak and Joseph Chila
will make a series of portraits, in their own distinctive style,
of Londoners and Cameroonians living in London. These will then
be exhibited alongside examples of their work from Cameroon.
In 19th century Europe the practice
of clients visiting studios to commission their portraits, and
then posing amid the theatrical settings of backdrops and props,
had an immediate appeal and spawned a highly popular and profitable
genre. This simple idea has created social portraits of enormous
complexity and, as it has travelled the world, taken root in
many cultures in subtly different ways. Samuel Finlak's and Joseph
Chila's work responds to this tradition.
Samuel Finlak was born in 1958 in Mbem in the North West Province,
where he learnt photography. For the last 20 years he has lived
in the village of Atta. As the only photographer in the area
he has photographed all resident ethnic groups. Joseph Chila
was born in 1948 near Mbouda in the West Province of Cameroon,
where he served as an apprentice from 1969-1974 before setting
up a studio for six months. In 1975 he moved to Mayo Darlé
after one of his relatives told him that there was no photographer
in the area. He remained there until the mid 1990s when he retired
to Bankim, some 70 km away, where he now lives, farming and undertaking
occasional photographic commissions.
Following the National Portrait
Gallery's display, there will be a second showing at the Zandra
Rhodes Gallery at the Kent Institute of Art and Design in the
autumn. The display is organised by the National Portrait Gallery
in collaboration with the University of Kent and presented in
association with Visiting Arts as part of Africa 05.
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