africanah.org

Arena for Contemporary African, African-American and Caribbean Art

Author: Rob Perrée

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Renzo Martens: White Cube

Renzo MartensWhiteCube

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Artsoul Kojo

Artsoul Kojo
Danso Awuah-Asante best known as Artsoul Kojo, is a Ghanaian contemporary artist whose art has gained recognition thanks to his endless cast of characters and personalities; these address a broad spectrum of universal and existential philosophies with childlike appeal. His childlike strokes and elementary shapes recall the simple yet complex imaginations of the human psyche, laying bare the limitless possibilities of how one can perceive the world.
Self-taught, Artsoul Kojo began painting and creating art extensively as a way of coping with his introverted mind. His work fuses aspects of storytelling, abstract poetry combined with an impressionist and pop-art visual look.

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Artist Statement
I am interested in exploring philosophies that bound the universe, the human nature and the existentialism of society.
Contrasting that with my immediate encounters and past reflection on my life, i most often find myself coming up with various alternate narratives that are primarily questioning in their intent.
In order to investigate these concepts visually, I developed a signature character called “the eye witness” – A representative of story tellers that observe and recount these alternate realities.

Gopal Dagnogo: New Work

DAGHYBRID PEOPLE n°3

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Claude McKay & Charles Ashleigh

ClaudeMcKayLong-Way-from-Home-Aaron

This is the last article in a series of articles on the friendship between ‘two’ African American artists, a “friendship beyond understanding”. In every article The Harlem Renaissance is the context of the story. This article is about the friendship between the poet and novelist Claude McKay and the activist poet Charles Ashleigh.

Rob Perrée tries to answer the questions the friendship evokes.

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Marc Padeu Melong

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