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A Matter of Record: Black Photography in Ghana
American Visions, Dec, 1998 by Kevin Joseph Hales
Historians did not write the early histories of Africa; missionaries, adventurers, explorers and conquerors defined Africa first. By 1900 the "Conradization" and the "Kiplingization" of Africa were well under way. The imagery of the "Dark Continent," so pervasive even in today's literature, was crystallized long ago, and the literature of that era mirrors the early photographs that emerged from Africa.
European photographic depictions of Africa generally fell along four lines of representation: subjects that were half-naked (especially women), fierce warriors, blank-faced chiefs or posed in submissive positions. Photographs depicting Africans in any other light were anomalies, even though there was another whole world of African depictions. There always has been.
When Africans began photographing themselves in the mid- to late 1800s, the imagery changed. Subjects were not required to be naked, submissive or royal. Africans focused on family, on village firsts, on watershed events. In Ghana--a country where ancestral veneration brings a sense of equilibrium to the living and helps them stay healthy--photography touched on an extremely important aspect of Ghanaian culture by allowing for the "ultimate" in ancestor worship. It also served another vital social component in Ghanaian life: It gave opposing parties a means by which to settle chieftaincy disputes. In villages where there are no written records of who was or was not a chief decades ago, a photograph can be proof positive of a family's claim to a "stool," or throne. A photograph of someone's grandfather sitting on a stool or wearing a certain type of kente cloth can serve as evidence to villagers that a claim to a throne is legitimate.
No one knows who was the first African photographer in Ghana. In all likelihood, there were various adventurers and missionaries running around the Gold Coast (which is what Ghana was called before its independence from Britain in 1957) with cameras as early as the 1850s. The Basel Mission, whose ties to the Gold Coast date back to 1821, claims that some of its missionaries were using cameras there as early as 1856.
European traders came to the shores of what is now Ghana at the end of the 15th century to compete in the gold and slave trades. The Fanti, one of the best known and most important West African ethnic groups, had already established a centralized government there. They traded their gold for European goods, such as guns, spices, iron and copper products, alcohol, fine china, and cloth.
After the advent of British colonial rule in 1844, African merchants exerted considerable influence over the commercial affairs of the Gold Coast, and in 1865 they began trying their hands at new commercial ventures, such as baking, printing and photography. There was no intention that these new businesses would supplant the traditional economy already in place. Instead, the new businesses would create a "modern economy" that would operate alongside the traditional indigenous economy.
One of the first black newspapers in the Gold Coast, the African Times, started a campaign in the spring of 1868 aimed at helping Africans establish new commercial occupations. Photography was one of the new occupations encouraged. From the 1870s to the end of the 1930s, black photographers in the Gold Coast made great strides in spreading the use of cameras.
Evidence suggests that the Fanti were the first Africans in the Gold Coast to learn photography and to use their cameras to earn incomes. The Basel Mission has in its collection several photographs taken by a Fanti photographer named Fred Grant, who is reputed to have been taking photographs in the Cape Coast area as early as 1873 or 1874.
How Grant got his camera is hard to say. The Fanti had long been involved in adopting Western ways. For instance, speaking "proper" English and achieving a Western-style education are long-standing hallmarks of Fanti life; hence, such common Fanti names as Grant, Smith, Jones, Clark(e), Williams and Bannerman. Cape Coast was still the colonial seat of power of the Gold Coast during Grant's heyday (the British did not move the capital to Accra until 1877), and the range of goods that flowed through the port was tremendous.
Grant and other photographers like Grant could have acquired their cameras by a variety of means. A few Fanti shopkeepers could have ordered cameras from British shipping centers, such as Liverpool. African merchants who visited family and friends in Europe could have purchased cameras and brought them or shipped them to the Gold Coast. Perhaps a handful of Africans purchased cameras from visitors to Cape Coast.
Several modern-day Ghanaian photographers believe that Fanti workers hired to assist British colonial administrators sometimes received cameras as gifts. When British visitors departed, they would leave their cameras with their workers.
By 1891, visitors to the Gold Coast were noting the existence of black commercial photographers operating in various coastal cities. Historian Robert Szerecezwksi, in Structural Changes in the Economy of Ghana, 1891/1911 (Oxford Press, 1915) acknowledged and documented the existence of these photographers. Although their numbers were still small, black photographers were beginning to make an impact in the Gold Coast.