Joseph Chila is a Cameroonian photographer from Mbouda in the West Region of Cameroon. For most of his working life he was based in Mayo-Darlé in Adamawa Region.
Joseph Chila was born in 1948 near Mbouda in the West Region of Cameroun, in the Bamiléké area. He was apprenticed to an uncle, Jacques Toussele, in Mbouda from 1969 to 1974; then he set up a studio for some six months in Mbouda before moving to Mayo-Darlé in the Adamaoua Region in 1975 after one of his relatives told him that there was no photographer there.
Joseph Chila worked as a studio photographer in Mayo-Darlé, a small town that then had a tin mine operating that brought wealth to the residents. He remained in Mayo-Darlé until the mid-1990s when he retired to Bankim (some 70 km from Mayo-Darlé) where he currently (2020) lives, farming and undertaking occasional photographic commissions.
His work has been exhibited in Yaoundé, Douala and Bamenda and in the National Portrait Gallery (London). In Joseph Chila and Samuel Finlak: Two Portrait Photographers in Cameroon,[1] which accompanied the London show, Andrew Wilson points out how different Chila's work is from Irving Penn's images from Cameroon;[2] and while there are parallels with other African photographers such as Seydou Keïta, Chila's work is distinct. Chila's work has also been discussed by the art historian Graham Clarke.[3] Of one of Chila's portraits, Clarke makes parallels with Richard Avedon and says "The effect . . . is to both suggest an extraordinary sense of presence which, in relation to Barthes' use of the [']mask', achieves, once again, a remarkable sense of the individual subject."[4] [5]