Biography
Angèle Etoundi Essaamba was born in Douala, Cameroon in 1962, and grew up in Yaounde on her Grandfather's compound. In an interview with Femi Akomolafe, she recalled living with a large community of aunts, uncles, nieces, brothers, cousins, sisters, "with everyone living in complete harmony devoid of strive". At 9-10 years old, she moved to Paris with her father, where she lived up through receiving her high school education. Then, by 1982, she was married, and moved to Amsterdam (Netherlands) where she began studying photography at the Nederlandse Fotovak school (Dutch School for Professional Photography). Essamba later attended the Lyceum in Paris, where she studied philosophy, dance, and photography. She returned to Cameroon again after nineteen years of what she called a "self-chosen exile" in her interview with Femi Akomolafe. She is associated with DUTA, or Douala Urban Touch of Arts, which allows Central African visual artists in Douala to share their work. Essamba's social awareness of both Europe and Africa led her to create the Foundation Essamba Home in 2009, where she mentors street girls in Cameroon to build their self-esteem and self-worth, personally gives lessons, and teaches skills to help girls in Cameroon improve their living conditions and create careers for themselves.Photographic career
Essamba's photography focuses on the African women, and breaking gender stereotypes. She works to inspire discussions between cultures and people, and gives her subject value and voice. Her art is not only influenced by modernism, but by her African descent and her countries diverse cultural environment. Drawing on her personal experiences, history, culture, perspective and environmental influences, Essamba's photographs combine technique with a strong sense of emotion. Additionally, she defies the boundaries between realistic photography, social and political commentary, documentary and formal photography, while displaying her aesthetic vision of the black, female body. Her first exhibition was in 1985 at the Gallerie Art Collective in Amsterdam. Her 1995 series of black-and-white photographs, ''White Line'', was awarded the Prix Spécial Afrique at the Festival des Trois Continents, Nantes in 1996. She has shown her works in several exhibitions in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, the United Arab Emirates and the United States including: Bienal de La Habana (1994),References
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