Ibrahim Mahama has made some curious purchases over the past three years: a grain silo, and several aeroplanes meant for the scrapyard. In 2020, the Ghanaian artist acquired the silo, which had lain unused since the 1960s, in the town of Tamale in the country’s north. Mahama renovated the decrepit building, and opened the space as Nkrumah Volini, a cultural institution featuring exhibitions and programming for locals and that he hopes will inspire younger generations.
It’s this same drive for fostering young minds that motivated the artist to open the Savannah Centre for Contemporary Art (SCCA) and Red Clay Studio in Tamale, the latter of which also serves as the artist’s studio space.
The artist offers to give Tatler a mini-tour of Red Clay Studio over video chat. A far cry from the stereotype of an artist’s studio—the conventional, cluttered, high-ceilinged, paint-filled room where the temperamental artist works in tortured solitude—Mahama’s is almost always packed with visitors. As he takes us around, hordes of uniformed children are seen spilling out of school buses; the artist says they are expecting at least 2,000 visitors that week alone.
In addition to children, members of the local community frequent his spaces; Mahama hopes to get people of all backgrounds to engage with and think about art and local history in unconventional ways. “I’m building an institution within an environment which has not had this level of justice in terms of thinking about art or contemporary art in its history.”
This story is from the May 2022 edition of Tatler Hong Kong.
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This story is from the May 2022 edition of Tatler Hong Kong.
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