Badara Ndiaye (born 31 March 1986[1] in Kaolack) is a Senegalese-born American and French visual artist, journalist, fashion designer, photographer, filmmaker, model, and former NCAA Division I basketball player.

Badara Ndiaye
Born (1986-03-31) 31 March 1986 (age 38)
Kaolack, Senegal
NationalitySenegalese
EducationFlorida International University (FIU)
Organization(s)Badaraofficial
BSMLifestyle
Known forMen's fashion and conceptual visual arts
Basketball career
Personal information
Listed height6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)
Listed weight235 lb (107 kg)
Career information
High schoolFontiyon Tabl
Saint-Louis, Senegal
CollegeFlorida International University (FIU)
PositionCenter
Number31

Personal life edit

Ndiaye was born 31 March 1986[1] in Kaolack, Senegal.[2] to Abdallah Ndiaye and Ndeye Ndiaye. His father is a well-known actor and a feminist. His mother is a women's rights activist. Among his siblings are two brothers. He played volleyball, football (soccer), and basketball, among other sports he enjoyed such as gymnastics. He only began playing basketball at age 17. He describes his personality while growing up as reserved, but he was a member of his school's culture club. Ndiaye was recruited to play college basketball in the United States.[3] He learned to speak English after arriving in the U.S. He studied sociology, anthropology, and psychology at university.[4] He has worked with the United Nations (UN) and was recognized as a cultural ambassador of Senegal by Senegalese ambassador to France, El Hadj Maguette Seye.

Ndiaye is outspoken in support of human rights for all. He particularly works to improve depictions of and the welfare of Africans, and the Senegalese people, as well as diaspora peoples in general. He supports these in his art and statements, and for better treatment of LGBTQIA+ people, especially as it concerns stereotypes and representation of Africa and homosexuality.

Ndiaye resides primarily in Paris, France and maintains a residence in Miami Beach, Florida while traveling extensively worldwide. He learned several languages, being fluent in English, French, and Spanish, and somewhat proficient in Hebrew and some languages of Senegal.

Basketball career edit

Ndiaye attended secondary school at Fontiyon Tabl in Saint-Louis where he was MVP averaging seventeen points and six rebounds per game where he helped the team to a 2003 regional championship. He was discovered by an NBA program where the five best players of scores of dozens of countries are selected with which he attended a camp in South Africa.

Ndiaye emigrated to the United States to play at Southeastern Community College (SECC) in West Burlington, Iowa from 2005 to 2007. As a Blackeye he averaged six points and four rebounds per game as a freshman and about one-and-a-half blocks per game as a sophomore, when he competed at the ICCAC Impact Sports Juco Jamboree and was recognized as a top prospect.[3] He grew another 3 in (8 cm) to 2.11 m (6 ft 11 in) around age 21 and gained about 25 lb (11 kg) of muscle weight in college.

Ndiaye transferred to Florida International University (FIU) in University Park as a junior where he attended from 2007 to 2009 and played as a Panther. A versatile big man, he played the power forward[5] position at SECC and center at FIU. Plying for the Panthers Ndiaye ranked second on the team with twenty-one blocked shots and performed strongly rebounding while posting solid points, steal, and assist statistics.[3] He suffered a knee injury which required microfracture surgery during his senior year, which ended his basketball career.[2] During this time, he transitioned as a creative producer after he was discovered by fashion photographer Prescott McDonald.[2]

Artist and model career edit

A friend introduced Ndiaye to social media and his broader career accelerated after they began working with Anna Dello Russo. He came to represent brands as a photographer, correspondent,[vague] marketer,[vague] and model. These brands included Adidas, then emerging toward luxury brands. His contributions, photography, and modeling have been featured in GQ (Spain, Australia, Italy, and Thailand), Vogue (Italy, Thailand), Elle (South Africa), The Wall Street Journal, and Harper's Bazaar. He contributed to L'Officiel Hommes and was the Men's Editor at New York Style Guide for several years. He worked with[vague] the Parsons School of Design and Istituto Marangoni. Ndiaye evolved to doing independent work as a visual concept developer and a creative director. He is founder and CEO of Badaraofficial and BSMLifestyle since 2014, which concentrate on men's fashion, as well as directing and producing short films. He is assistant global marketing director at BellaGraph Nova Group.

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Badara Ndiaye". RealGM. 2009. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "Badara". The Yak. 31 August 2018. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  3. ^ a b c "Badara Nidaye". 2008–09 Men's Basketball Roster. Florida International University Athletics. 2009. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  4. ^ Pernet, Diane (11 October 2019). "Badara Ndiaye from Senegal went from being a basket ball player to model to visual concept developer". A Shaded View of Fashion. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  5. ^ "Badara Ndiaye". Player Database. ESPN. 2007. Retrieved 30 June 2022.