Essayer OR - Gratuit
The shape of things to come
The Guardian Weekly
|January 28, 2022
Senegal cast-off western influences after gaining independence in 1960, but though its new African style is neglected, Dakar’s buildings still dazzle
Built on the outskirts of the Senegalese capital as a showcase for global trade in 1974 , t his astonishing city-sized hymn to the three-sided shape was designed by young French architects Jean Francois Lamoureux, Jean-Louis Marin and Fernand Bonamy. Their obsessive geometrical composition was an attempt to answer the call of Senegal’s first president, the poet Léopold Sédar Senghor , for a national style that he curiously termed “asymmetrical parallelism”.
Senegal had gained independence from France in 1960 , and Senghor was determined to use the arts to forge a national identity liberated from western tradition and drawing from African civilisation, particularly Sudano-Sahelian traditions, “without wavering from the requirements of modernity”. Senghor never defined this brave new style , but he spoke vaguely of “a diversified repetition of rhythm in time and space”. Forceful, faceted forms and strong, rhythmic geometries became the vogue.

Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition January 28, 2022 de The Guardian Weekly.
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