Mohamed Keita “Rome 10/20”
"This was all I had, this image represents two points at the same time, coming and going." With simple words and of rare intensity, the Ivorian photographer Mohamed Keita describes the first photo of his Rome 10/20 project, published by Punctum publishing house, which decided to embark on a crowdfunding project to make it happen. Mohamed Keita talks about himself at a distance from the outskirts of Bamako where for a few weeks he has been working in the Kenè photography school (space in Malian language) which he founded in 2017 to allow children to find new expressive keys.When we ask him why he wants to make this book, he tells us that "you can't always take it", quickly overturning our way of thinking, above all of conceiving an artistic product. Knowing even a drop of Mohamed's life gives us goosebumps and reminds us of the stories that as children we may have read in epic books with the knowledge that since then most of the events narrated had been magnified or falsified over time. to build myths and legends. But as Erri De Luca wrote about migrants, the truth is far beyond certain stereotypes: "We will be servants, children you don't make, our lives will be your adventure novels". What Mohamed experienced is real and is well written in his eyes, on his skin, in his way of framing in the viewfinder.