Joëlle le Bussy Fal explained

Joëlle le Bussy Fal is a Franco-Senegalese sculptor, art dealer, arts organizer, and art curator based in Dakar, Senegal, where she founded Galerie Arte in 1996.

Joëlle le Bussy Fal
Birth Date:1 February 1958
Birth Place:Mont-de-Marsan
Nationality:Senegal France
Known For:Gallerist, sculptor, promotor of African artisans and crafts

Biography

Of Belgian-Congolese origin, Joëlle le Bussy was born 1 February 1958, in Mont-de-Marsan, France. She founded Galerie Arte in 1996 in the Plateau district of Dakar. Since 2009, the gallery has had a branch in Saint-Louis du Senegal, a city classified as a World Heritage Site.[1] She is also President of the Association for the Promotion of Visual Arts (PAVA) in Africa. In 2009, she was appointed President of Arts and Letters by Amadou Diaw,[2] Secretary General of Saint-Louis, 350.[3] She has since founded the contemporary art festival, Le Fleuve en Couleurs, and through this vehicle, the city of Saint-Louis has become the kick-off point for the Dakar Biennale. The Fleuve en Couleurs is an event organized annually.[4]

Joëlle le Bussy Fal's gallery offers furniture and precious wood objects from the African continent, which she designs and commissions in her Dakar workshops from experienced Casamance craftsmen. The gallery also exhibits many African artists (painters or sculptors) and promotes handicrafts, jewelry and fabrics from West Africa.[5]

Career

Exhibition curator

Arts Organization Work in Saint-Louis

Expertise in Craftsmanship

Designer

Design teacher

Joëlle le Bussy Fal has been teaching introductory design courses since 2012 at Gaston Berger University in Saint-Louis, Senegal.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chouaki. Yasmine. 23 December 2010. En Sol Majeur : Joëlle le Bussy. 31 March 2021. rfi.
  2. Amadou Diaw is also president of the Institut Supérieur de Management of Dakar.
  3. Web site: Guigny. Fériel Berrales. 26 January 2013. Une touche contemporaine et métissée à l'Artisanat. 31 March 2021. United Fashion for Peace. French.
  4. Web site: 22 December 2016. Reconnaissance du luxe Made in Senegal. lesoleil.sn. fr.
  5. Web site: 14 June 2013. Furniture made in Africa, built for the world. Financial Times (website). en.