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The Kuenyehia Trust for Contemporary Art launches its new space with pop-up exhibition

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The Kuenyehia Trust for Contemporary Art launches its new space with pop-up exhibition

 



In 2019, The Kuenyehia Trust for Contemporary Art, supported by the MTN Foundation Ghana, wishes to continue its efforts in supporting the shortlisted artists of the 2018 Kuenyehia Prize for Contemporary Arts through 4 exhibitions dubbed “Carthasis”.

Ofoe Amegavie and Caleb Aryee will inaugurate this cycle of exhibitions with “Carthasis I” – a photo exhibition. The selected works by the two Accra based photographers tackle four deeply intertwined topics: spirituality, mental health, domestic violence and identity.

Ofoe’s oeuvre explores spirituality as a way to reconcile his mother’s past struggle with mental health with his present self in the hope of building his own independent identity. His black and white series portray women, with the absence of colours used as an analogy to his state of mind at the time.

While the very topical issues of violence and more specifically domestic abuse are the central themes of Caleb Aryee’s body of work. His graphic pictures are meant to trigger discomfort and question the viewers and everyone who contributes to the perpetuation of this despicable behaviour.

This exhibition will also be the opportunity to inaugurate the new Kuenyehia Trust’s headquarters and officially introduce the Trust’s Managing Trustee.

Exhibition Details

Artists: Caleb Aryee Odartey, Daniel Ofoe Amegavie

Title: Catharsis 1

Dates: 23 May – 20 July 2019

Address: No.20 Mukose Link, South Tesano.

Google Maps: https://tinyurl.com/y2g82m8n

Opening Times: Mon-Fri 9am – 5pm

Admission: Free

Contact Details

Alvin Ashiatery:

020 9062461

alvin@kuenyehia.com

www.kuenyheiaprize.org 

Social media: @kuenyehiaprize

Note to Editors

Supported by: The MTN Foundation

The Kuenyehia Trust for Contemporary Art.

A not-for profit organization established by Elikem Nutifafa Kuenyehia in 2013 to support emerging and mid-career Ghanaian and African artists, advance contemporary Ghanaian art locally and internationally, promote a vibrant market for art locally and encourage art literacy in Ghanaian society.

The flagship of the Trust, the Prize identifies, rewards and helps develop Ghana’s most outstanding artists between the ages of 25 and 40. Winners and runners-up benefit from prize money and materials totalling thirty-five thousand cedis (GHS 35,000) each season. The Prize contributes to the Ghanaian art ecosystem by inspiring Ghanaian and African artists to produce work that will attract both local and international audiences.

Caleb Aryee

Capturing societal concerns with his poignant tableaux. Caleb Aryee sparks dialogue with his staged images that plague the very fabric of our society. In his work, chalk and rocks, he staged school children engaged in child labour within a school setting. Framing such situations to shed more light on society’s’ ills.

Daniel Cole Ofoe Amegavie

Daniel Cole Ofoe Amegavie is a Ghanaian-born photographer,  whose practice revolves around the documenting of traditional happenings within his culture.  Archiving his cultural traditions, Ofoe is confronted with the spirituality that exists within his culture and that sets him on a personal spiritual journey to define himself.

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