Ghanian Pavilion, Ghana at Venice Biennale of Art - Ghanian Pavilion, Arsenale - City of Venice
(Photo: Diego Araúja, Untitled (from the creative process of Diego Araúja's 1st creollage, QUASEILHAS) 2018, Digital Collage © Diego Araúja)
Exhibition in progress from April 23rd to November 27th 2022
The 59th Biennale Arte will open to the public on 23 April. But on the 20th, 21st and 22nd there will be the various openings and collateral events that always suddenly animate the Venetian artistic life. The awards ceremony will take place on the day of the opening to the public.
The title of the 59th edition of the Biennale d'Arte is Il Latte dei Sogni that means The Milk of Dreams.
The invited artists are 213 from 58 countries. There are 26 Italian artists, 180 the first participations in the International Exhibition, 1433 the works and objects on display, 80 new productions.
In all, 80 nations will participate in the Venice Biennale in the pavilions at the Giardini, the Arsenale and in the historic center of Venice.
Go to the page of the 59th Venice Art Biennale
Ghanian Pavilion, Ghana at 59th Biennale Arte of Venice
The title of the exhibition at the Ghanian Pavilion is Black Star — The Museum as Freedom.
Artists: Na Chainkua Reindorf, Afroscope, Diego Araúja.
Architect: Dk Osseo Asare.
Curators: Nana Oforiatta Ayim.
Commissioner: Akwasi Agyeman, Ceo, Ghana Tourism Authority Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture.
Seat: Ghanian Pavilion, Arsenale, Castello - Venice.
Press Release of Ghanian Pavilion
The Ghana Pavilion at the 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, under the
patronage of Ghana�s President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, will be on show to the public
from April 23 through November 27, 2022.
Following its highly acclaimed inaugural participation at the 2019 Biennale Arte, Ghana will
present the exhibition Black Starè The Museum as Freedom. Titled after the Black Star that
symbolises Ghana through its flag, and most important monument; connecting Africa with its
diasporas through Marcus Garvey�s Black Star Line and his Back-to-Africa movement.
Revived
now in Ghana as Beyond the Return; as well as for Pan-Africanism and anti-colonialism with the
symbol described as the Lodestar of African Freedom. The 2022 Ghana pavilion examines new
constellations of this freedom across time, technology and borders.
Designed by architect
DK Osseo Asare, and curated by Nana Oforiatta Ayim, Director of ANO Institute of Arts &
Knowledge in Accra and Director at Large of Ghana�s Museums and Cultural Heritage, the
exhibition features large-scale installations by Na Chainkua Reindorf, Afroscope and Diego
Ara�ja.
Na Chainkua Reindorf takes masquerade and secret society traditions that historically were
largely male, and creates her own mythology of Mawu Nyonu, a fictional secret society made of
seven women, at one with the elements around them.
This notion of oneness is taken further by Afroscope�s work Ashe, which explores the spirit that
runs through all the elements, using technology as a translator of the flow of life, as exemplified
by water.
The theme also underpins Diego Ara�ja�s work, A Salt Congress, in which the Atlantic Ocean that
served to separate those taken from the shores of West Africa to its diasporas, now acts as a
unifier, the birthplace of a new creole.
The installation in Venice will be created by architect DK Osseo-Asare, co-founding principal of
Low Design Office (LOWDO), a trans-Atlantic architecture and integrated design studio based in
Ghana and Texas.
The Venice exhibition is framed by Nana Oforiatta Ayim�s concept of the Mobile Museum, which
travels into communities across Ghana in co-curation and exchange, with the aim of creating
accessible, contextual, inclusive spaces. In Venice, the Mobile Museum programme will be
presented during the Biennale Arte season with events and workshops created in collaboration
with diverse communities across the city.
Nana Oforiatta Ayim states: �Ghana in its 65th year still grapples with political, economic, cultural,
social and knowledge systems not made of or for its contexts. Systems created within its
communities over thousands of years were deemed inferior to ones termed �universal� by
dominant powers. As we outgrow and move beyond ill-fitting systems; new ones, not yet defined,
that draw on rich histories, not with nostalgia but with discernment of hindsight and experience;
are forming.�
�Each of the artists� work is connected to the theme of the main exhibition Milk of Dreams, they
are each of them future builders, creating new possibilities and worlds even and especially in
this time of chaos: by exploring our spiritual connections with technology; by centering and
expanding representations of womenùs bodies and beings; by looking into how we rebuild
relationships with our environment and each other.�
Nana Oforiatta Ayim
Curator Nana Oforiatta Ayim is a Writer, Filmmaker, and Art Historian who lives and works in
Accra, Ghana. She is Founder of the ANO Institute of Arts and Knowledge, through which she
has pioneered a Pan-African Cultural Encyclopaedia, a Mobile Museums Project, and curated
Ghana�s first pavilion at the 58th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia. She
published her first novel The God Child with Bloomsbury in 2019, and with Penguin in German
in 2021. She has made award winning films for museums such as Tate Modern, LACMA and The
New Museum, and lectures a course on History and Theory at the Architectural Association in
London. She is the recipient of various awards and honours, having been named one of the
Apollo �40 under 40�; one of 50 African Trailblazers by The Africa Report; a Quartz Africa Innovator
in 2017; one of 12 African women making history in2016 and one of 100 women of 2020 by
Okayafrica. She received the 2015 the Art + Technology Award from LACMA; the 2016 AIR
Award, which �seeks to honour and celebrate extraordinary African artists who are committed to
producing provocative, innovative and socially-engaging work�; a 2018 Soros Arts Fellowship,
was a 2018 Global South Visiting Fellow at Oxford University, was appointed to the Advisory
Council of Oxford University�s Cultural Programme in 2020, was a Principal Investigator on the
Action for Restitution to Africa programme, and is currently Special Advisor to the Ghanaian
Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture on Museums and Cultural Heritage.
Fellowship, was a 2018 Global South Visiting Fellow at Oxford University, was appointed to the
Advisory Council of Oxford University�s Cultural Programme in 2020, was a Principal Investigator
on the Action for Restitution to Africa programme, and is currently Special Advisor to the Ghanaian
Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture on Museums and Cultural Heritage.
DK Osseo-Asare, Architect
DK Osseo-Asare is co-founding principal of Low Design Office (LOWDO), a trans-Atlantic
architecture and integrated design studio based in Ghana and Texas. He co-founded the
Ashesi Design Lab as Chief Maker and is Assistant Professor of Architecture and Engineering
Design at Penn State University, where he runs the Humanitarian Materials Lab (HuMatLab)
and serves as Associate Director of Penn State�s Alliance for Education, Science, Engineering
and Design with Africa (AESEDA). DK Osseo-Asare creates architecture with and for the people
that design overlooks.
Na Chainkua Reindorf, Artist
Na Chainkua Reindorf is a mixed media artist and mythmaker. Her work, which ranges from largescale tapestries to immersive sculptural installations, is an exploration of and an ode to the rich
cultural history of West African textiles, focusing largely on the complexities and visual culture
surrounding masquerades and ceremonial costumes. She incorporates contemporary materials
into her work, using these historical textiles and costumes as inspiration to investigate ongoing
social topics centered on the politics of dress, identity and gender and their close relation to
culture and tradition. Na Chainkua has exhibited internationally in institutions across
the United States, as well as in France, Nigeria and Ghana.
Afroscope, Artist
Afroscope (Isaac Nana Akasi Opoku) is a speculative artist and designer for whom art-making is
an attempt to deconstruct normative reality and challenge popular tropes by imagining
transcendental visual narratives that comprise otherworldly beings, speculative dreamscapes and
peculiar forms. He straddles the worlds of myth, mystery and automatism in his work, and sees
art as portals into a multiverse of realities. He has exhibited widely in Ghana and Europe and was
winner of the 2017 Kuenyehia Prize for Contemporary Ghanaian Art, Ghana�s foremost art award.
Diego Ara�ja, Artist
Diego Ara�ja is an artist born in Salvador-BA, Brazil, where he lives and works as an artist, director,
and writer. He has directed the Creole Time process since 2015, considering the ongoing
traumatic experience of Afro-Diasporic peoples and their descendants, He was director,
playwright, and producer at Teatro Base from 2010 to 2017. In 2017, Diego Ara�ja and artist La�s
Machado founded �R�K� Platform, a space of creation and connection between Afro-Atlantic
artists. He conceived a choreographic performance for the video installation A Marvelous
Entanglement by artist Isaac Julien in 2018, was invited to artist residencies at Atlantic Center
For The Arts in 2018 and SAVVY Contemporary in 2020. In 2019, he was invited by the German
Ministry of Foreign Affairs to represent Brazil for the 56th Theatertreffen. In 2020, he participated
in the Iberoamerikanisches Theaterfestival with his work QUASEILHAS. And in 2021 created an
ephemeral architecture with the name Lands Giving Birth Gold connecting Brazil and Ghana
through their respective work songs.
Useful information for the visit.
Hours:
Gardens from 10.00 to 19.00. Arsenale from 10.00 to 19.00 (from 10.00 to 20.00 on Friday and Saturday until September 30th). Closed on Mondays (except May 13, September 2, November 18).
Tickets: please visit the official website.
Phone: +39.041.5218711; fax +39.041.5218704
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: Biennale
of Venice |