Ousmane Sow | |
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Ousmane Sow by Candace Feit
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Born | 10 October 1935 Dakar, Senegal |
Died | 1 December 2016 Dakar, Senegal |
(aged 81)
Nationality | Senegalese |
Awards | Prince Claus Award, 2008 |
Website | ousmanesow |
Elected | member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts, 2013 |
Ousmane Sow (10 October 1935 – 1 December 2016) was a Senegalese sculptor of statues of people and groups of people.
Sow was born in Dakar, Senegal, on 10 October 1935. After the death of his father in 1956, he left Dakar to study in France, where he obtained a diploma in physiotherapy. He returned to Senegal after it became independent in 1960 and started a practice in physiotherapy. He later went back to France and practised there, but returned to Senegal in 1978.
Sow was inspired by photographs by Leni Riefenstahl of the Nuba peoples of southern Sudan, and from 1984 began to work on a series of sculptures of muscular Nuba wrestlers. To make them, he developed a series of new techniques and materials. They were shown at the Centre Culturel Français de Dakar in 1987. Sow later made series of sculptures of Maasai people, of Zulu people, of Peul or Fulani people, and, in the late 1990s, of Native Americans.
Sow had many international exhibitions, including at documenta IX in Kassel in 1992, at Palazzo Grassi in Venice during the Biennale of 1995, and on the Pont des Arts in Paris in 1999.
In the 2008 Prince Claus Awards, on the theme of Culture and the human body, Sow was one of the eleven laureates.
On 11 April 2012 Sow was elected a Membre Associé Etranger ("foreign associate member") of the Académie des Beaux-Arts of the Institut de France, replacing Andrew Wyeth. He was the first black person to have been elected to membership.