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Ousmane Sow

Ousmane Sow

Acting

Biography

Ousmane Sow, born on October 10, 1935, in Dakar, and died on December 1, 2016, in the same city, was a Senegalese sculptor. Ousmane Sow was born in Dakar to a mother from Saint-Louis and a father from Dakar, thirty years his senior. He grew up in Reubeuss, one of Dakar's toughest neighborhoods, where he received an extremely strict upbringing during which his father instilled responsibility in him from a very young age. From his father, he inherited rigor, a sense of duty, and a free spirit. After his father's death, and despite his deep affection for his mother, he decided to leave for Paris, penniless. While working various odd jobs, and after giving up his studies at the School of Fine Arts, he earned a degree in physiotherapy. Why did Ousmane Sow sculpt? Out of basic necessity, his family would say. As a child, he began sculpting stones he collected along the beach in Dakar, and later, as a physiotherapist in his Parisian practice, he continued to mold the paste used as plaster for patients' fractures. He animated and filmed these small figures to bring them to life. It was like a need to breathe; he had to mold. He became a physiotherapist to sculpt the human body and a sculptor to mold his famous material, which he calls "my product." Although he had been sculpting since childhood, it was only at the age of fifty that he made sculpture his full-time profession. But the physiotherapy he practiced until then undoubtedly contributed to the magnificent sense of anatomy found in his work. Throughout these years, he transformed his medical office and successive apartments into sculpture studios at night, destroying or abandoning the works he created. By focusing on the ethnic groups of Africa and then America, he works in series. The sculptures emerge from the earth, imposing themselves, figurative and powerful, to tell the story of life. Free men, always in action, whom he sculpts in perpetual struggle. Pastoralists, warriors, anonymous heroes, great men—so many figures who come to tell us their story and challenge us to imagine our own. Drawing on ethnology, history, photography, and film, Ousmane Sow presents a reconstruction of life. But what do Ousmane Sow's works evoke in us? What did passersby on the Pont des Arts in Paris feel in 1999, confronted by the features of the Nuba, the Maasai, the Fulani, or by "The Battle of Little Bighorn," staged a few meters above the scene? These are gazes one does not forget, a message conveyed by the body. By exhibiting his works for the first time at the age of fifty, the Nuba series, emblematic of his work, Ousmane Sow was immediately revealed to the public. His dazzling oeuvre circulated throughout the world. On December 11, 2013, Ousmane Sow became the first Black artist to be elected to the French Academy of Fine Arts. He died on December 1, 2016, in Dakar, his birthplace.

Known For

La Grande Librairie
8.0

La Grande Librairie is a 90-minute literary program, launched by François Busnel in September 2008 and presented by Augustin Trapenard since 2022, broadcast live every Wednesday on France 5. A direct successor to Bernard Pivot's Apostrophes, it is the only literary program scheduled in prime time and is considered the most influential program on book sales, thanks to its connection with small bookstores, which attest to the return of readers in many French cities.

La Grande Librairie

2008
Ousmane Sow
10.0

No description available.

Ousmane Sow

1996
Ousmane Sow, Le soleil en face
10.0

This is the story of time passing, at the slow pace of Ousmane Sow, and of time rushing by, from the birth of a work to its unveiling one spring day in Paris on the Pont des Arts. For a year, while preparing the exhibitions in Dakar and Paris, Béatrice Soulé witnessed the creation of Two Moon, Sitting Bull, Chief Gall, and Crazy Horse by Ousmane Sow—Sioux and Cheyenne chiefs who, gathered along the Little Bighorn River, won the most important Native American victory against the American army in 1868, a victory that led to the death of General Custer. In the intimacy of the sculptor's home in Dakar, a home itself a place of creation, she shares with us her emotion at seeing works emerge from the sand, works that seem to journey from death to life.

Ousmane Sow, Le soleil en face

1999
Le Jardin des Corps
8.0

Once upon a time there was a morning, noon, evening and night when the inseparable shadows of man told us about memory... Interview with Ousmane Sow, life sculptor, for the first part of a series entitled Black Memory.

Le Jardin des Corps

1994