Sunday, 18 November 2012

Gold.....

Gold (pronounced /ˈɡoʊld/) is a chemical element with the symbol Au (from Latin: aurum, "shining dawn", hence adjective, aureate)



A selection of slides by Photographer Eliot Elisofon. This series of photographs were taken when Eliot Elisofon traveled to Africa from March 17, 1970 to July 17, 1970. (Photos taken from the Smithsonian Archive. For more information on each photo: I, II, III, IV.

eepa_01503
Paramount Chief Nana Akyanfuo Akowuah Dateh II and regional chiefs, Kumasi, Ghana, 1970. This photograph depicts Asante Paramount Chief Nana Akyanfuo Akowuah Dateh II, regional chief Kwaku Addai (R) and the heir to Asafo stool (L). He was both Akwamuhene (chief of Akwamu, one of the early Akan kingdoms) and Asafohene (captain of an Asafo company, or a ceremonial head of a group of kinsmen).

eepa_01494

eepa_01490

eepa_01478

eepa_01544
eepa_01548
Kyaman chiefs and notables, Anna village, Ivory Coast, 1972
The photograph depicts Ebrie (now Kyaman) dignitaries wearing prestige clothes and regalias. From left to right, seated: Alphonse Akre, sub-chief, Anna village. Blaise Ake Djoble, Anna village notable and party member. Jean-Baptiste Mobio, Adiopodoume village notable and party member. Standing: Maxime Ake Akossi, Anna village notable. Michel Afram, party representative, Anna. Marc Akouman, party delegate, Akouedo village. Barthelemy Akre, Chief of the Catholics, Anna. Katherine Ake Agouabe, daughter of notable, Anna. Francoise Dao Alouette, niece of Michel Afram. Alphonse Adja, Akouedo notable. Nicolas Tchapa Gouedan, Abatta village chief. "During the colonial period the French sought to consolidate their authority over the peoples of the south-eastern region by creating district and cantonal chiefs. Though untraditional, these offices have survived, and their occupants have increasingly sought to gain status by adopting Akan-style regalia (as have the few traditional paramount chiefs in the region)." [Timothy F. Garrard, 1989: Gold of Africa, Prestel]. This photograph was taken when Eliot Elisofon was on assignment for National Geographic and traveled to Africa from January 19, 1972 to mid April 1972.


eepa_01441
Ornaments of a royal attendant at the Asantehene's court, Kumasi, Ghana. 1971

eepa_02731

History: Richard Wright’s Photographs of Ghana -1953





 












 































Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: I can’t stop looking at the incredible collection of black & white photographs by Richard Wright -taken on a trip to Ghana in 1953, a few years before Ghana’s independence on the 6th March 1957 and way before the Akosumbo dam…

The thing is, -come closer I’m going to have to whisper this!!!! Looking at the above photographs, I’m wondering ….was the Gold Coast as Ghana was called back then, - really ready for independence??? -Taboo? I know!!!!

Not that we shouldn’t have gone in for independence folks. -Only that the Living [back then] wasn’t easy at all… -And whilst some would argue that the living isn’t easy today -I can for the first time…put my hand on my heart and say that there has been ‘some’ progress in Ghana -Amen (laughter)..

I remember some of the stories my father used to tell me about how tough Ghana was when he was growing up. And how they used to cherish the ‘common’ egg -which they only ate on Sundays because the rest of the time -they sold it to make money… And looking at some of these photographs; I can really see it!!! -I can see how an egg for breakfast on a Sunday morning or in the afternoon as part of their lunch -would have been a real treat -back then!!!

Basic amenities, basic housing, basic everything, -its amazing to see that even some of the well dressed [especially those in European garb] like the students with their books on their head -aren’t shod at all.

Still,….. I can’t see any plastic bags…which must mean that the gutters did what they were supposed to do -back then!!!

Gosh my people are strong!!!! I’m sooo proud to have come from such a strong race of people.. These photographs are very important. They have truly transported me to 1953 -and made 50’s Ghana , very, very real….

There are many more photographs in this collection -and they are well worth having a look through at:
http://digitalcollections.library.yale.edu/RelatedInterest.aspx?qid=1917628
http://digitalcollections.library.yale.edu/RelatedInterest.aspx?qid=1917628&qs=73

 

Credit: All photos taken by Richard Wright on a trip to Ghana in 1953...

Source:
http://digitalcollections.library.yale.edu/1918159.jpo