Black Arts & Culture Feature:
Born in Libreville, Gabon and now based in Montreal, Guibinga is part of a generation of African visual storytellers reimagining what it means to portray the continent and its diaspora in a globalized, digital era. At just 28, he has cultivated a formidable body of work that effortlessly fuses mythology, speculative fiction, and cultural symbolism โ all while centering the fluid, multifaceted identities of Black people across space and time.
His portraits are unmistakable: lush with color, precise in composition, and emotionally resonant. Each frame carries an undercurrent of narrative โ a whisper of folklore, a reference to history, a glimpse into a parallel world not yet imagined. Whether commissioned by global powerhouses like Apple, Google, or Adobe, or presented on the walls of Art Basel or the BET Awards, Guibingaโs work retains its authenticity: unapologetically African, insistently futuristic, and defiantly beautiful.
Myth-Making in the Digital Age
Guibingaโs ongoing series, In the Vastness of Space and the Immensity of Time, exemplifies his expansive artistic vision. Inspired by African mythologies, science fiction, and traditional cosmologies, the project reframes portraiture as a medium for cosmic storytelling. In these works, bodies are not just subjects โ they are symbols. They float, merge, transform. They hold the weight of ancestral knowledge and the lightness of imagined futures.
โIn a world where African narratives are often confined to realism or documentary tropes,โ says Guibinga, โI wanted to explore a different terrain โ one where invention, abstraction, and myth are tools of liberation.โ
In this series, storytelling becomes an act of reclamation. Drawing from West and Central African aesthetics, he constructs a visual language where space is sacred, and identity is layered like the textiles, colors, and gestures he photographs. By doing so, Guibinga invites viewers to question dominant visual regimes and to reconsider what African futures might look like when unburdened by Western expectation.
A Global Voice With African Roots
Guibingaโs meteoric rise has not gone unnoticed. From delivering a TED Talk in 2017 to having his images featured on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, he continues to shape the global visual conversation around African identity. His work serves not only as artistic expression but also as cultural intervention โ a challenge to reductive narratives and a celebration of nuance.
In recent years, he has been invited to serve as a juror for some of the worldโs most respected photography competitions, including the American Scholastic Art Awards and the Indigenous Innovative Solutions Photo Contest. These roles reflect his growing influence not just as an artist, but as a thought leader in the evolving discourse around visual representation.
The Infinite Within Us
To engage with Guibingaโs work is to be reminded that African creativity knows no bounds. It stretches across continents and timelines, traverses galaxies, and burrows deep into myth and memory. Through his photography, Yannis Davy Guibinga invites us to dream wider โ to see ourselves beyond the limitations imposed by geography, history, or genre.
And in doing so, he affirms what many of us have always known: that the African imagination is infinite โ and it is only just beginning to show its face.
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