Built on the outskirts of the Senegalese capital as a showcase for global trade in 1974 , t his astonishing city-sized hymn to the three-sided shape was designed by young French architects Jean Francois Lamoureux, Jean-Louis Marin and Fernand Bonamy. Their obsessive geometrical composition was an attempt to answer the call of Senegal’s first president, the poet Léopold Sédar Senghor , for a national style that he curiously termed “asymmetrical parallelism”.
Senegal had gained independence from France in 1960 , and Senghor was determined to use the arts to forge a national identity liberated from western tradition and drawing from African civilisation, particularly Sudano-Sahelian traditions, “without wavering from the requirements of modernity”. Senghor never defined this brave new style , but he spoke vaguely of “a diversified repetition of rhythm in time and space”. Forceful, faceted forms and strong, rhythmic geometries became the vogue.
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