27 December 2020 – 15 February 2021

Stations of Protest

Joseph Abbey-Mensah
Arinzechukwu Patrick
Nana Danso
Bright Ackwerh
Hamzah Moshood
Latifah Iddriss
Keren Lasme
Nana Yaw Oduro
Samira Saidi
Yasmine Iddriss
Kwasi Darko

Installation


An exhibition of Film posters, Barbering and Salon Signages from the collection of Dr. Joseph Oduro-Frimpong

In Lagos last October, the Nigerian Army murdered protesters denouncing police brutality and the killing of young men and women accused of criminal activity or just suspected of elitism: Did we talk too slick, think or carry ourselves better than the poorly paid policemen, who were equally oppressed but saddled with guns and eager to unload their discontent? Were we carrying fancy gadgets; did we have foreign numbers in our contacts? Then we must be internet fraudsters. Or sometimes the reason was simpler: the refusal to pay a bribe.

And so, in response, we peacefully protested for the right to live. For two weeks, all across the country, we shut down highways, blocked routes to airports, organized, crowdsourced funding, and endured further brutality. On October 20, the government decided it had had enough and sent armed soldiers and tanks to the most visible site of protest. At least twelve people were killed, though the exact number is thought to be much higher. To date, no one has been held responsible, but it feels like we are on the cusp of something. We have tasted what resistance looks like, and we want more.

Things are not much better a few hundred miles away in Ghana, in whose capital the group exhibition “Stations of Protest,” curated by the art, architecture, and design studio Cult Meraki, took place. There, the LGBTQIA+ community is oppressed daily by the state and by the religious leadership of various faiths. The country’s positive economic outlook is hardly felt on the streets, where the gap between rich and poor widens every day. Last year, the government demolished a fishing community in Accra, rendering hundreds homeless.

And so the artists protest. The predominantly young, mostly Ghanaian artists in “Stations of Protest” work across media to highlight dissent on a granular, everyday scale. The Nubuke Foundation’s sprawling courtyard, typically green and lush, had been painted completely red for an installation by Latifah Iddriss, The greener grass on the other side of the fence [seems rather red], 2020. Not a blade of grass was spared. As Iddriss said to me, “There’s always blood on the ground here; there’s always violence. When do we stop paying with blood for just existing?”

Bright Ackwerh’s illustrations are created digitally, but at first glance display the finished surface of oil paintings. His canvases here showed caricatures of presidents across the African continent, mostly in embarrassing situations. In the digital print WAP, 2020, originally released online the same week Ghana had its presidential elections last December, President Nana Akufo-Addo and his opponent, John Mahama, are dressed up in pink and yellow dresses with big hoop earrings, their hair richly greased and in updos, luridly grinning with their tongues sticking out. The odd styling borrows from the viral 2020 music video “WAP” by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion, who don similar getups to revel in their sexual prowess. On Ackwerh’s canvas, these two opponents are not so different at all. They have the same thing to offer the people, and presumably it’s not good. They are laughing at something we cannot see. Likely the viewer, the voter, the citizen is the butt of their joke.

Other artists in the exhibition engage in more oblique forms of protest. Joseph Abbey-Mensah’s photographs survey the male body. Men of various ages played with and cared for one another, always in close proximity. Dark, glistening backs appeared bent or stiffened. Mounds of muscle jutted out; bare arms were outstretched. The architecture of these images—the body parts and poses—seemed very organic, implying an eroticism that is meant to be understated but not missed. Barely shown their faces, we were invited to wonder: These men who have surrendered to the camera, are they free, are they themselves? In Ghana, masculinity does not typically look like the images here. This protest was personal.

Contemplating the show as a whole, it was hard not to be filled with resignation, particularly when confronted by Iddriss’s sprawling installation. One got the sense that the artists feared the things they were protesting would not change. Police brutality continues. What it means to be a man is still ringed with limitations. Corrupt old men will still present themselves for elections. These works bore witness not only to these inevitabilities, but also to the feeling of being powerless to do anything about them.
Joseph Abbey-MensahI am Joseph Abbey-Mensah from Ghana and a graduate from the University of Ghana. Sarf Bort is a pseudonym for my art. I am from a community that consists of rich tradition and culture, so art has always been a part of upbringing. I grew a fond interest in expressing my imaginations through pictures and it has been one of my channels ever since. I view each picture I create like a manifestation. It is like seeing magic occur in real time because it first begins as a thought that gathers several ideas and presents itself in my mind’s eye and then after, I am able to see it manifest in real life through photography.

Every image is a representation of how I think. Being a creative fascinates me even at the end of the day, one unique thing about me is that I do not view my art as the artist, I view it like everyone else, every admiration and every critique I do well to contribute to also. I am flooded with some many ideas every day and to see most of them come to life is simply fascinating. It is hard to put a technique to it because it all takes place in my mind. I like to style my subjects and place them in such a way to bring out the exact replica of my ideas. I am deeply inspired by nature and the culture that surrounds me.



Arinzechukwu PatrickArinzechukwu Patrick is the Founder and Editor-in-chief of Random Photo Journal in print and online. He is a writer and photojournalist studying the social ecology of neighbourhoods, living conditions, colour theory, visual storytelling and curation of photography focused on African unification through collective memories. He shares in Pan-Africanist morals inspired by the different spaces in West Africa he has been to. Currently, he is based between Ghana and Nigeria.


Nana DansoDanso 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 dealing with his introverted mind. His work fuses aspects of storytelling and abstract poetry with impressionist and pop-art visual references. With vastly diverse approaches he examines his imaginations applying elements of fine art, sound and poetry.



Bright AckwerhBright Ackwerh, (born 1989) is an artist from Ghana. He is a product of the Art Faculty at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology where he earned a BFA and MFA in Painting and Sculpture.

Bright’s art stands as commentary on critical social issues and he has contributed to many conversations on various platforms including guest lecturing in classes home and abroad.

His current practice is situated in the fields of painting, illustration and street art and is inspired by popular culture while creating works that challenge the often misplaced power of diverse geopolitical events



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Nubuke Foundation, Accra 2024