Saint Laurent, in the person of its Creative Director Anthony Vaccarello, invited Ghanaian photographer born in 1929 James Barnor – the first photojournalist from his country-to exhibit some 20 photographs within the exhibition spaces of the Saint Laurent Rive Droite boutiques in Paris and Los Angeles.

At 93, Barnor still stands as a shining example of a forerunner of the times; he immortalized his people’s liberation in 1957 from European colonization; worked for the Daily Graphic, an emanation of the Daily Mirror in Africa; for the South African magazine Drum; and founded his Ever Young photography studio in Jamestown, one of the oldest districts in the Ghanaian capital Accra. In the late 1950s he moved to London where he documented the period between 1964 and 1970-the so-called Swinging Sixties, years when the United Kingdom went through enormous social and cultural changes that made it what it is today-as well as the African diaspora in the country. After this period, he returned to Africa where he founded and activated the first color processing workshop bringing a breath of fresh air throughout his country and beyond.

The exhibition hosts a series of the artist’s photographs, both in black and white and in color, through which one can glimpse the incredible naturalness, immediacy and genuineness of his work and philosophy where the subjects photographed range from ordinary people to figures who have made it to the history of our culture such as Muhammad Ali.







