Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Barry Hilton (born 1956), South African comedian and actor who was born in Harare; Kudzanai-Violet Hwami (born 1993), Zimbabwean painter who lives in London, England; Masimba Hwati, sculptor, performance artist, sound artist, and three-dimensional mixed media sculptor
One of their key innovations was the introduction of "nodes", which organized content thematically rather than formally. This approach allowed the journal to include a broader range of material, from traditional academic articles to visual art and fiction, and sought to break down distinctions between peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed content.
Bright Tetteh Ackwerh is a Ghanaian satirical artist who employs the domains of popular art, street art, painting, and illustration to voice and document his persuasions. He has exhibited widely in Ghana and West Africa, building a niche as an emerging contemporary Ghanaian artist on the West African art scene. [1]
Sue Williamson and Ashraf Jamal, Art in South Africa: the future present, Publisher David Philip (Cape Town), 1996. Frank Herreman and Mark D'Amato, Liberated voices: contemporary art from South Africa, The Museum for African Art, 1999. Emma Bedford and Sophie Perryer, 10 Years 100 Artists: Art In A Democratic South Africa, Struik, 2004.
This is a list of notable Kenyan artists, includes artists of various genres, who are notable and are either born in Kenya, of Kenyan descent or who produce works that are primarily about Kenya. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Cephas Yao Agbemenu (born 1951), sculptor and a traditional African wood carver, educator; Joseph Kossivi Ahiator (born 1956), painter and voodoo artist; Bernard Akoi-Jackson (born 1979), installation artist, performance artist, video artist, photographer, dancer, poet, and academic; Kwame Akoto (born 1950), painter
Wole Lagunju (born 1966), visual artist; Ken Nwadiogbu (born 1994), Nigerian-born painter, and sculptor, based in London; Tony Nsofor (born 1973), painter; Nkiru Nzegwu (born 1954), painter, philosopher, author, curator, and art historian; Gani Odutokun (1946–1995), painter and illustrator; Chris Ofili (born 1968), British painter of Nigerian ...
Olugebefola joined the Twentieth-Century Creators group in 1964; and was a founder of Weusi Artist Collective in 1965 and subsequently the Weusi Gallery in New York City. [2] These three organizations supported African American artists, made work for a Black audience, and their work often featured pan-African aesthetics, themes and symbols.