Lionel Manga Explained

Lionel Manga
Birth Date:1955
Birth Place:Dschang
Occupation:Writer, Critic, Curator
Nationality:Cameroonian

Lionel Manga, born in Dschang, is a Cameroonian writer and cultural critic based in Douala. His 2008 book, L'Ivresse du Papillon, discusses Cameroonian visual artists such as Goddy Leye, Guy Wouété and Joseph-Francis Sumégné among others.[1]

Life and career

After studies in Cameroon and France, in December 2007 he collaborated with the French artist Philippe Mouillon and realized the work Bend Skins, a collection of life stories of 500 motorbike-taxi-drivers on the occasion of SUD Salon Urbain de Douala in December 2007. In 2015 he curated Presences an exhibition which focused on painting, sculpture and photography by Cameroonian artists at SCB in Douala and was featured in FACE-À-FACES, an exhibition profiling personalities from the cultural world in the salon prestige at Abidjan International Airport.

Since 2005, he has published in various francophone journals: Afrique et Méditerrannée, Local Contemporain, Riveneuve Continents, Politique Africaine, Douala in translation. Passionate about a transversality that he uncoils in his articles and columns for the newspapers Mutations (2001- 2003), Le Messager (2006-2008), this free radical, known for his frankness and casual mischievousness, has collaborated with doual’art regarding the question of urbanity in Cameroon, for the Ars&Urbis discussion series. He was invited to speak at the Ex-tensions, créations africaines et postcolonialismes conference in Rennes in 2009. His first book L’Ivresse du papillon.

Regard sur le Cameroun contemporain. Ombres et lucioles dans le sillage des plasticiens was published in 2008 by the publishing house Edimontagne/Artistafrica.

Bibliography

Essays and articles

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Maud de la Chapelle. L'Ivresse du Papillon de Lionel Manga. 9 September 2009. 4 July 2015.