The Native | 12 AFRICAN FIGURES WHO HAVE INFLUENCED BLACK HISTORY

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We only have to look at the mythos of the Egyptian Pharos to realise how Africa has always played a significant role in terms of art, science and technology throughout history. Although white supremacist propaganda from the colonial era set us back with the false narrative that African culture is ‘savage’, we’ve fought for the abolition of slavery and for our independence and freedom to create cultural expressions that have impacted global community.

As inclusivity has now become the order of the day in popular culture, the visibility of African culture and artistry appears to be at an all-time high with so many new avenues available for us to celebrate our rich culture from social media to streaming platforms.

While not everyone might appreciate the significance of African culture being represented accurately and celebrated, Black Americans’ ancestral ties with Africa encourages them to contextualise themselves within the African culture. This has led to a lot of cross-cultural referencing between America and Africa as Marvel’s Black Panther’ showed the economic benefit of being inspired by Africa.

As we draw near the end of this year’s Black History Month, we’ve compiled a list of Africans who have made a global impact through music, photography, fashion and other expressions.

Chi Modu

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Displaced in his infancy, during the Biafran War, Chi Modu was born in Nigeria but raised, almost entirely in New Jersey. Coming of age in East Coast America, Chi Modu’s growing expertise in photography – which he had first fallen in love with whilst studying Economics at Rutgers University in his home state – coincided with the rise of arguably the most influential genre in contemporary music: Hip-Hop. Chi Modu was a key figure in documenting the music and the culture’s leading figures. His degree was followed by vocational schooling at the International Center of Photography after which he landed the prestigious role at The Source, where his eyes would go on to make history. Documenting Hip-Hop’s glory days in the ‘90s, Modu’s motivations were to share the stories with his audience, reveal the characters and lives of his muses. Chi Modu didn’t simply produce a picture of a famous rapper, he thoughtfully, yet plainly, captured the people behind his lens. From a Rolling Stone cover image to album covers for the likes of Mobb Dep, Method Man and Snoop Dogg (of whom he has an unforgettable tribute to California, and inadvertently West Coast Rap), Chi Modu’s eyes were deeply influential to, not only the popular consumption of hip-hop and it’s artists, but also their thorough documentation into the history books.

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Adewojumi Aderemi

Sotheby’s Historic First Auction Dedicated to HIP HOP

NEW YORK, 16 September 2020 – Tonight in New York, Sotheby’s inaugural auction dedicated to Hip Hop achieved $2 million, surpassing its high estimate with an exceptional 91% of all lots sold. The auction received remarkable interest with more than 400 registered bidders, more than 25% of whom were new to Sotheby’s, from 19 countries around the world, illustrating the widespread global reach of Hip Hop as a one of the world’s most impactful and beloved cultural movements…Continue at Sotheby’s

BeatRoute | Chi Modu is the Man Behind Hip-Hop’s Most Iconic Photos

The famed photographer has shot everyone from Tupac to Nas, Biggie, Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre—the list goes on.

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JODI TAYLOR·SEPTEMBER 10, 2020

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Mention Chi Modu’s name amongst the hip-hop crowd and numerous conversations will reverberate around how he managed to capture icons in their most memorable moments. Biggie’s famous photo in front of the Twin Towers? Chi captured that. The black and white photos of Tupac smoking and playing with his bandana? Chi captured that. Nas posted up in his childhood bedroom? Chi captured that. To put it simply: you just can’t talk about 90s hip-hop without mentioning Chi Modu. 

Born in Nigeria and raised in New Jersey, Modu watched his father behind a camera lens in his free time—often shooting family portraits on the weekends after church. When Modu was finally able to save up and purchase his own camera in college, he got to work taking self-timer portraits. After landing a gig at The Source in 1990, he began to make connections throughout the music industry. It was a time when hip-hop was in its prime and names like Snoop Dogg, Eazy-E, and Dr. Dre were just getting their start. We talked to the famed photographer about getting artists to trust him, capturing them in their most vulnerable moments, and the movie script he is currently working on.

BeatRoute: How did you know from the beginning that you wanted to shoot portraits?

Chi Modu: I’m a people person, and to do good portraits, I think it helps if you’re a people person. I can talk to my subjects and get to know them to [a point] where they will drop all of the facades. Once you do that, the best picture you can take at that point is a portrait because then you’re getting to the essence of that human being, you know? That was always my goal. I rarely look at the surface of anything; I want to look and see who that person is. 

I exude a bit of warmth in their direction, and it determines what they give back to me a lot of times. It’s not a schtick, it’s my personality. I come with my arms open, and because of that, my subject can be vulnerable because they’re safe with me. I think that gave me an extra advantage with my portrait work….Continue reading here

FOLHA BRAZIL | UNCATEGORIZED HELIOPOLIS SP

Hip hop photography icon exposes famous portraits in Heliopolis

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Hip hop photography icon exposes famous portraits in Heliopolis

One of those responsible for rap image in the 1990s, Chi Modu returns to Brazil with the project Uncategorized

SAO PAULO: About five years ago, Chi Modu was not exactly a household name. “I thought everyone knew my pictures, but nobody knew who I was.”

The Nigerian photographer then decided to spread his portraits of famous rappers on billboards around New York. Then he made an Instagram account. "I wasn't looking for a job, I just wanted to mark my position." The project, “Uncategorized”, arrives in São Paulo this weekend, with free exposure and a meeting of Modu with children in Heliópolis.

“The idea is to bring my art directly to people. Skip the art directors. ”

The photographer realized that Brazil was the second country where he had more followers in the world. But the last few times he was here, he only exhibited in rich areas of the city. “I can do the galleries, but I'm more the street guy.”

Modu is one of those responsible for the American rap image of the 1990s. He has clicked on people like Tupac Shakur, Notorious BIG, Snoop Dogg for magazines, especially The Source, hip-hop only.

“That's when rapping gained global character,” he says. “A lot of people were waiting for the magazines to come out to see the pictures.”

The 1990s, says Modu, were "crazy but fun." He recalls encounters with intense figures like Tupac and how he did to convince MCs to buy their ideas.

“At the time, Snoop was being charged with murder,” he says, recalling a photo in which the rapper holds a 38 handgun. “I had those photos and I didn't release them. You have to give these characters protection. You can't get close, take the pictures and put people in danger. Only then can you take a picture of that one — because they let you get close enough. ”

While praising today's hip-hop — the genre most heard in the United States — Modu offers “gentle advice” to new generations. “MCs may have risen in their lives, but the people they rhyme have their lives as bad as their parents had,” he says. “Hip hop may have changed, but Heliopolis probably hasn't changed at all.”

By identifying with Brazil, Modu should come back more often. Today, with an established career, he is more concerned with influencing new generations than opening new exhibitions in any museum in Europe.

“In Dubai, a convention is going on with all the major clothing brands, Nike and Adidas and everything. At the same time, there is Art Basel in Miami, with all art buyers. Where am I? In Brazil, in Heliópolis. That is the message I want to convey. ”

UNCATEGORIZED

When from Fri. (6) the gift. (8)

Where CEU Heliópolis, r. Road of Tears, 2385

Price Free

Author Chi Modu

TRT World Showcase | TURKEY

 

Biggie, Tupac, Snoop Dogg and Nas. Name a musician at the forefront of the hip-hop explosion of the late 80s and early 90s, and you can bet that they have stood in front of Chi Modu's lens. Modu had a front-row seat during what is considered the golden era of rap. His photographs still bring goosebumps to fans, more than two decades later. Showcase's Aadel Haleem was able to get a very rare interview with Modu who shared his stories of hip hop; the glitz, the glamour and the controversy. #ChiModu #HipHop #Photography

View at TRT WORLD

Yes. x Chi Modu x Snowboards

A LIMITED EDITION PROJECT

CHI MODU & YES.

Chi Modu is one of those guys whose Instagram feed is an endless stream of epic throwbacks. Back in the early-to-mid nineties when Hip-hop was making it’s first bull-run, Chi was there as a burgeoning photographer, recording its defining years and legendary characters. This special collaboration celebrates the historical storytelling his images convey and the impact these artists have had on our collective, modern culture.

Chi first picked up a camera while a student at Rutgers. After honing his skills at the International Center of Photography, he landed a job at The Source, which was the definitive magazine of hip hop culture. It was here that Chi developed relationships with the biggest icons of the hip hop movement, including Tupac Shakur, Notorious B.I.G., Mary J. Blige, and L-L Cool J, most of whom were not yet famous.

This work could only be at home in a LTD run, framed in the most advanced design of the YES. collection. The all-new, Asymmetrical MidBite Twin.

PAPER MAGAZINE | UNCATEGORIZED LA

 

Wednesday, August 22, HVW8 Gallery and adidas Originals hosted a first look at UNCATEGORIZED, an exhibition of photographs from hip-hop documentarian Chi Modu. The traveling show first opened in Berlin, but has made several global stops since. Still, this week's Los Angeles preview had special significance for the Nigeria-born, New Jersey-raised Modu, who joked that despite his East Coast childhood, the West Coast had always shown him the most love.

Sitting amidst intimate portraits of Tupac, Notorious B.I.G., Nas and more, Modu was joined by Snoop Dogg, whom he first worked with when the rapper turned business mogul and show host was only 19 years old. "I wasn't there to experience it, I was there to document it. I wasn't there to judge it, I was there to capture it," Modu explained of his approach to photographing the young Doggy Style rapper and his associates.

This dedication to acting as a conduit of experiences and narrator of foreign realities is part of what makes Modu's photos so resonant, even with the passing of decades. His portrait of a languid teenage Nas perched atop a twin bed in a spartan room inside of the imposing Queensbridge Housing projects has the same composition of a Renaissance era reclining nude. However Nas' cuffed denim, collared Polo shirt and Timbs tell a different story — it's the story of the genesis of hip-hop. On a worn wooden dresser centered in the frame sits a television, video game console and stuffed teddy bear. Above the 17-year-old Nas' head, which rests contemplatively against a wall, is a bullet hole. The juxtaposition between the trappings of childhood and the imposed presence of gun violence, which is inescapable even within the sacred walls of a bedroom, is the sort of intentional tension Modu creates...

Click to continue at Paper Magazine

WWD | UNCATEGORIZED LA

 

Chi Modu, the Nigerian-born and New Jersey-raised photojournalist, was the director of photography at The Source magazine during the defining era of hip-hop in the Nineties. In addition to the 30-plus covers he shot, he also captured many candid and unexpected moments of some of the genre’s biggest names, long before they were famous.

Modu began a project called “Uncategorized” in 2013, with large-scale images appearing on the exteriors of buildings in New York as a way to make his work available to everyone. The exhibit has since shifted and toured  the world and on Saturday, a version of it will open in Los Angeles at the HVW8 Gallery, presented by Adidas Originals.

Alongside some iconic images of hip-hop royalty including Tupac, Biggie, Nas and ODB, “Uncategorized” also features previously unseen works from Modu’s photographic archive. The show, which runs through Sept. 23, celebrates hip-hop’s creative energy and raw, unrivaled ambition, showcasing Modu’s documentation of the legends behind the sound.

On the eve of the exhibit’s opening, where Modu and Snoop Dogg were to have a private fireside chat detailing some of the famous images, the photographer and the rapper sat down to talk with WWD in Snoop’s trailer...

Click to continue at WWD

 

GQ BRAZIL : UNCATEGORIZED SAO PAULO

If you're a fan of Tupac, Notorious BIG, NWA or other American hip-hop giants of the 1990s, chances are you've seen a picture taken by Chi Modu are very high. Nigerian naturalized American photographer is known for many of the definitive portraits he has made of some of the most influential rap stars at the height of their careers.

Former director of photography at The Source , a magazine that closely followed the growth of hip-hop culture, the portrait artist opened on Thursday night in São Paulo the exhibition Uncategorized . The curatorship includes photos of rehearsals, recordings, promotions or even recording of artists' scenes during tours or in intimate moments...

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