Stylistically direct and wide-ranging, Sanago's paintings are immediately recognisable: a figure - occasionally two - is set against a monochrome background, on which is overlaid a square or rectangle often bearing repetitive patterns. The dark, sometimes fractured bodies are complemented by highly symbolic items including flowers (the importance of harmony between people) and gloves (the need to stand up and resist).
Sanago's characters seem in a state either of suspension or precarious balance. The misgivings, not to say disquiet, they convey are counterbalanced by the strong background colours, the touches of white, red and yellow, and the vibrancy of the repeated motifs - mostly circles and dots. Almost all based on Bambara proverbs, the paintings on display at La Criée are echoings of the artist's daily life: conjecture, personal incidents and the social, political and economic contexts. To cite one example, Ka kun kolo di mama nika nɛkun minɛna (They left him his head but tore out his tongue), which shows a figure sitting at a table on which lies a tongue, illustrates both a Bambara proverb and a recent event: at the opening ceremony of the last Rencontres Photographiques de Bamako the biennial's director was literally deprived of the right to speak. The same goes for Mes observations face à la situation (My Observations on the Current Situation), painted in Rennes last March, a few days before the opening of the exhibition - which in fact was pushed back two months. The artist portrays himself as a venerable sage observing Rennes residents' fear as the Coronavirus arrives.
For Amadou Sanago education and transmission are fundamental human and artistic values. This is why he is devoting the art centre's second exhibition room to drawings he made with children from the Tregain primary school in Rennes during his residency there in March 2020.
Rooted in the ups and downs of everyday existence, Amadou Sanago's works have a critical and humanist reach made even more striking by their philosophical detachment. This is wisdom in paint.