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Exhibition – (De)colonisations: African Artists Question History

© Omar Victor Diop Thiaroye, 1944, série Liberty, 2016. Galerie MAGNIN-A, Paris.

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For the first time, the Caen Memorial Museum is presenting an exhibition devoted to sub-Saharan Africa, its necessarily diverse history, and its artists. Through around sixty remarkable works, notable both for their aesthetics and their messages, the museum seeks to explore colonial and postcolonial history as seen by African artists. These paintings, photographs, sculptures, textiles, and films explore a process of remembrance and historical redefinition carried out with respect for geographical, political, cultural, religious, and linguistic differences.
Omar Victor Diop Thiaroye, 1944, 2016. Courtesy Galerie Magnin-A, Paris. © Adagp, Paris, 2026
Roméo Mivekannin, Tirailleurs sénégalais à Paris, 2021. Courtesy Galerie Cécile Fakhoury, Abidjan, Dakar, Paris. Photographe : Grégory Copitet. © Adagp, Paris, 2026

AFRICAN SOLDIERS IN THE WARS 

 

“You, Senegalese Tirailleurs, my black brothers with your warm hands under ice and death, Who shall sing of you if not your brother-in-arms, your brother in blood?
Léopold Sédar Senghor, Hosties noires

They are unsung heroes. Those know as “Senegalese Tirailleurs” were soldiers in the French colonial army, recruited from the sub-Saharan territories of the Empire.

Willingly or by force, they were enlisted to fight in many wars. Two hundred thousand defended France during the First Wold War. Then, when the Second World War broke out, 179,000 left their countries to fight Nazi Germany alongside the Allied forces, defending freedom in Europe. They took part in decisive battles and perished by the tens of thousands in both wars.

But who knows of their existence, of their feats of arms? Their story carries the bitter taste of oblivion and racism. Unequal treatment, pay, and pensions – the “Senegalese Tirailleurs” endured painful discrimination at the hands of France.

By representing and paying homage to them, artists confront us with their memory and the injustices they endured.

 

Steve Bandoma, Emprise, séries Opium 2023. Courtesy Galerie Angalia, Paris. © Adagp, Paris, 2026

“THE ORDER OF INJUSTICE”

 

“My mouth will be the mouth of those misfortunes which have no mouth. My voice, the freedom of those who sag in the dungeon of despair.
Aimé Césaire, Memorandum on My Martinique (1947)

“The order of injustice” – thus did the Senegalese poet and president Léopold Sédar Senghor describe the colonial relationship between North and South. To this, one could add the paradigms of domination, violence, race, destruction, and exploitation.

A traumatic historical sequence following the transatlantic slave trade, colonisation is a major question and theme for artists from the African continent. How does one reclaim one’s narrative and break with imperial history? Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe often recalled a proverb: “Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter”.

Africain intellectuals and artists of postcolonial states have made this proverb their own. Through research, writing and art, they have sought to recover and transmit their history – long denied and despised by colonisers.

The aim is not only to deconstruct and correct imperial history, but also to rebuild African historical consciousness and imagination. However diverse in style and intention, the works presented here contribute to this vast endeavour so thaht, one day perhaps, the order of justice may prevail.

Samuel Fosso, Patrice Lumumba, série African Spirits (2008). Courtesy Jean-Marc Patras, Paris. © Adagp, Paris, 2026

RESISTING

 

“Would you not resist if you were denied all rights in your own country just because the colour of your skin is different from that of the rules?
Miriam Makeba, speech to the United Nations, 9 March 1964

For centuries, the history written by Europeans has focused on their conquests and colonial victories. Few accounts have given space to the figures of resistance that have always existed in Africa and elsewhere. Rebuilding historical consciousness from an African perspective therefore means shedding light on and reintegrating the forms of resistance to colonial and neo-colonial oppression that have arisen from the first conquests to the present day.

Artists help reactive the memory of these struggles in many ways – literary visual, theatrical, photographic and cinematic. They pay vibrant tributes to both famous and forgotten historical figures who opposed the enslavement of peoples, the negation of cultures, and the violence of injustice. They also explore the networks of resistance and exchange that developped during the nineteenth century between Africa, the Americas, Europe and the Caribbean, working towards the liberation of Black people.

Their works do mora than creat counter-narratives: they also help to decolonis the imagination.

Aboudia (Abdoulaye Diarrassouba) UN, 2011. Galerie Cécile Fakhoury, Abidjan, Dakar, Paris. © Adagp, Paris, 2026

AMBIGUOUS ADVENTURE

 

“Colonisation sows in the colonised desolation, death, and chaos. But it also sows in them – and that is its most diabolical success – the desire to become what destroys them.
Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, The Most Secret Memory of Men

“I am not a land of the Diallobé facing a distinct West, cool-headedly weighing what I can take from it and what I must give back in return. I have  become both. There is no lucid mind between two poles of a choice. There is a strange nature, in distress for not being two”

Cheikh Hamidou Kane, Ambiguous Adventure (1961)

Thus speaks Samba Diallo, the main character of Cheikh Hamidou Kane’s celebrated 1961 novel Ambiguous Adventure. The young man embodies the identity and cultural rift experienced by generations of Africans during the colonial and postcolonial eras.

For in the wake of independance, African societies – acculturated and hybrid – faced numerous challenges: political, economic, social and cultural. After decades of struggle, power seemed to have officially changed hands… but has the colonial system of domination and exploitation truly ended? Nothing could be less certain. Neo-colonialism, conflict, corruption – the ills of contemporary Africa are many.

Artists are often among the first to depict and denounce them, sometimes at the risk if their lives .Yet the continent’s story is not only one of pain; it also contains against all odds, countless material and immaterial, human and symbolic riches – treasures that artists probe and invite us to discover.

© Thandiwe Muriu, Camo 27, 2021. Collection d’art CBH

A WORLD TO REBUILD 

 

“Each generation must, in relative opacity, discover its mission, fulfil it or betray it.
Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth 

What should we do today with the colonial legacy – often unjust – that profoundly shapes our lives in Africa, in Europe, and across the world? The history of colonisation and decolonisation is still taught too partially and superficially in most countries. Yet it is urgent to continue and accelerate the decolonisation of European and African societies – and more broadly, of international relations – if we are to work towards a fairer and more sustainable world.

The challenges we face are immense: climate emergency, respect for human rights, the fight for gender equality and against racism, the restitution of looted cultural heritage… As the world seems to enter a new era of disruption and uncertainty, many public and private, peoples who continue to suffer the consequences of (de)colonisations.

In this immense and essential task, artists play a vital role, engaging with these pressing issues and opening new horizons. The world must be rebuilt – and they are its indispensable architects.

“The world today can no longer tolerate the forgetting of a crime or even the faintest shadow cast. The unspoken parts of history must be exorcised so that all may enter the world together, and free.”

Édouard Glissant, A New Region of the World

Curators

Mémorial de Caen
Ayoko Mensah

Ayoko Mensah

Ayoko Mensah is a curator and cultural expert who has spent more than twenty years working on and with African and Afro-descendant art scenes. She is currently a curator at the House of European History in Brussels.
Mémorial de Caen
Jean-Yves Marin

Jean-Yves Marin

An archaeologist by training, Jean-Yves Marin was curator and then director of the Musée de Normandie until 2009, before serving as director of the Musées d'art et d'histoire in Geneva from 2009 to 2019. He now works as a museum and heritage consultant, exhibition curator and art adviser to the Compagnie Bancaire Helvétique in Geneva.

Fondation Gandur pour l'Art

Mémorial de Caen

Olivia Fahmy

Olivia Alexandra Fahmy is curator of the African and diaspora contemporary art collection at the Fondation Gandur pour l'Art. An art historian specialising in critical approaches and cultural studies relating to the African diasporas, she works with art schools and has been publishing articles in scholarly and exhibition catalogues for nearly fifteen years.

Exhibition catalogue

Mémorial de Caen
(Dé)colonisations

(Dé)colonisations

Published to accompany the temporary exhibition (De)colonisations: African Artists Question History, on show at the Mémorial de Caen from 20 May to 11 November 2026, the catalogue brings together all the works on display, each with an accompanying note, along with biographies of the artists and the exhibition curators.
An illustrated volume that keeps a record of the exhibition and allows visitors to continue exploring the artists' work long after their visit.
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A must see

A MUST see for every person alive on this planet so this will never be forgotten and will be remembered.

Five stars, epic day!

Visited the awesome museum the first day and then the second day, I signed up to take the Omaha/Utah full day tour.
I loved it! The van was comfortable, the driver polite and skilled and my guide, Andrea was an absolute delight! She made all of the sites come alive with stories of the people who lived the actual events. There was a wealth of information and I feel that I got to see so much. Everything I wanted to see!
The lunch was also very tasty. Timing on all the stops was good, pace was excellent.
I looked all over for a tour and was baffled because there are a ton of options. This one had a great price for a full day tour and I figure who better to show me this than affiliates of the museum.
Five stars, epic day!

We highly recommend - Legacy Roads

Alexandra was awesome. She was incredibly knowledgeable and answered all our questions. She shared insights and stories we had not heard before. We highly recommend booking a tour of Caen with Legacy-Roads Guided Tours

It was a very special day - Legacy Roads

Oliver did a outstanding job. An unplanned incident where a little girl ran up to us in the middle of the beach, asked if I was a veteran and presented me with a veterans medal, left all of us in tears. Later, Oliver asked if I could be part of the Taps lowering of the flag, the request was granted on this Memorial Day. It was a very special day for this US Army veteran. I’m glad I followed my American Legion Commander’s advice and wore my Legion hat. The beach and cemetery tour was sobering, reflective and meaningful. Thank you.

wonderful D-Day tour - Legacy Roads

I had a wonderful D-Day tour with Andrea and Allan. They were friendly, knowledgeable, prompt and accommodating. Great full day tour of all the main D-Day sites. And the Memorial the next day was really good as well.

What a great experience - Legacy Roads

Having a small group to tour with, is so much better than a large bus. Our guide Oliver was a native English speaker and very knowledgeable about history of the region and World War II. Because our group already had a base knowledge of World War II he quickly adapted and tailored the tour so we get the best experience. Lunch was included and delicious!