(CNN) -- It is one of the iconic modern cinema
scenes: Mena Suvari, as Angela in Oscar-winning "American Beauty,"
stretches her arms wide as she basks in a sea of floating rose petals
during one of Lester's (Kevin Spacey) frequent fantasies.
Omar Victor Diop's eclectic images
But when Senegalese photographer Omar Victor Diop
set out to recreate the provocative sequence for his latest project,
finding a bed of red roses proved difficult. Undeterred, Diop found the
solution by using a plant wall inside the hotel where the shoot was
taking place.
"The creative process of
this series itself is very similar to the way African contemporary
creation often takes place," says Diop. "We often have to tweak concepts
and styles from around the world and adapt them to our context, while
preserving their original feel."
That series is "Onomolliwood," a dazzling collection of images in which Diop and Antoine Tempe,
a Senegal-based French-American photographer, revisited several
Hollywood classics to give an African take on some of cinema's most
iconic moments.
The two artists merged
their passion for aesthetics and performance art to offer a collection
of striking images infused with flowing swirls of color, vivacious
textures and dynamic characters.
"I wanted to imagine what these movies would look like if they were conceived and shot in Africa," explains Diop.
Completely self-taught,
the 33-year-old is a newcomer to Senegal's creative scene. He started
experimenting with cameras on the streets of Dakar in 2010, at a time
when he was still working in corporate communications for a
multinational.
But much to his surprise,
Diop's first conceptual project, the futuristic "Fashion 2112," was
selected the following year to be showcased at Bamako Encounters,
Africa's premier photo exhibition.
After that, Diop decided
to fully pursue his passion for photography. He quit his job last year
and quickly started building an eclectic body of work that spreads from
conceptual art to fashion photography and portraits.
CNN's African Voices spoke to Diop about revisiting cinema classics and the transition from the corporate world to art.
CNN:
"The Matrix," "American Beauty" and "Frida" are just some of the famous
films featured in the Onomoliwood series. What was the inspiration
behind the project?
Omar Victor Diop:
I worked on this project with French-born American photographer Antoine
Tempe after an invitation by the Onomo Hotel Group. We thought that
actually using cinema as a general theme would be a way for our
respective creative universes to meet because cinema involves fashion
and aesthetics, but it also involves an important performance dimension.
We started working with
the movies we liked, the movies that had influenced us. I remember
watching in the 1980s the same movies as the young people of Paris and
New York and maybe Bangkok. At the end of the day we're all the same
young people regardless of where you were born and where you were raised
and somehow I wanted to show this also through the choice of movies in
the series.
CNN: Is part of your artistic goal to show the modern side of Dakar and Senegal?
OVD:
Yes, and it's not even about the new Africa, it's just that because of
globalization and the internet the modernity of Africa has sort of
accelerated. But even back in the 1980s, when I was just a kid, I can
tell you that Dakar was very modernized and international.
Another advantage we had
was that we were open to not only the Western world but the entire
world -- we had African cultural content, Asian content, Chinese or
Indian movies. It's just a shame that all of this, especially the urban
life of the 1980s, is not documented.
CNN:
"The Matrix," "American Beauty" and "Frida" are just some of the famous
films featured in the Onomoliwood series. What was the inspiration
behind the project?
Omar Victor Diop:
I worked on this project with French-born American photographer Antoine
Tempe after an invitation by the Onomo Hotel Group. We thought that
actually using cinema as a general theme would be a way for our
respective creative universes to meet because cinema involves fashion
and aesthetics, but it also involves an important performance dimension.
We started working with
the movies we liked, the movies that had influenced us. I remember
watching in the 1980s the same movies as the young people of Paris and
New York and maybe Bangkok. At the end of the day we're all the same
young people regardless of where you were born and where you were raised
and somehow I wanted to show this also through the choice of movies in
the series.
CNN: Is part of your artistic goal to show the modern side of Dakar and Senegal?
OVD:
Yes, and it's not even about the new Africa, it's just that because of
globalization and the internet the modernity of Africa has sort of
accelerated. But even back in the 1980s, when I was just a kid, I can
tell you that Dakar was very modernized and international.
Another advantage we had
was that we were open to not only the Western world but the entire
world -- we had African cultural content, Asian content, Chinese or
Indian movies. It's just a shame that all of this, especially the urban
life of the 1980s, is not documented.
And I'm also interested in personalities; that's why I've started a series of portraits called "The Studio of Vanities."
The reason behind it was that I wanted to somehow pay homage and also
document the youngest generation of Dakar's cultural entrepreneurs --
I'm convinced that many of these people are going to be very successful
and are going to bring a lot of great things to the cultural sector in
the next few years.
CNN: How was the transition from the corporate world to becoming artist?
OVD: I
quit my job a year ago; it was a quite bold decision that scared many
people around me because being an artist was not considered as a valid
option. I come from a family where my mum is a lawyer and my dad is a
chartered accountant -- both of them having very senior jobs throughout
their careers -- and I attended top schools that were very advanced and
quite expensive. With the money my family invested in me, of course you
can imagine my mum being quite devastated, but I now have their full
support.
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