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Nii Amon Kotei (24 May 1915 – 17 October 2011) was a Ghanaian sculptor, painter, musician, surveyor, and graphic artist. He is mostly remembered and celebrated as the designer of the coat of arms of Ghana . [ 1 ]
Coat of arms of Ghana; Armiger: Republic of Ghana: Adopted: 4 March 1957: Crest: A black star bordered in gold: Torse: Gold, green and red: Shield: Azure on a cross vert fimbriated Or a lion passant guardant Or, in the first quarter a linguist's staff and ceremonial sword crossed in saltire Or, in the second quarter issuant from five bars wavy Argent and Azure a castle Argent upon a mount Or ...
Theophilus Tagoe (born 1 May 1982, disappeared 6 July 2014), popularly known as Castro or Castro Under Fire is a hiplife recording artist and musician. Nii Kwate Owoo, (born 1944) is an academic and filmmaker, described by Variety as "one of the first Ghanaians to make a 35mm film". His name has also appeared in film credits as Kwate Nee-Owoo.
Amon Kotei, artist, designer of Ghana’s Coat of Arms; Architecture. David Adjaye, architect; Theodore S. Clerk, urban planner and first Ghanaian professionally ...
Kotei is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Amon Kotei (1915–2011), Ghanaian artist and surveyor; David Kotei (born 1950), Ghanaian boxer; James Kotei (born 1993), Ghanaian footballer; J. E. A. Kotei, military pilot and diplomat; Robert Kotei (1935–1979), Ghanaian soldier, athlete, and politician
Kenturah Davis (born 1980), drawer, sculptor, performance artist, installation artist; she has lived in the US and Ghana; Godfried Donkor (born 1964), painter, collagist, and mixed-media artist; lives in London, of Ghanaian ancestry
On Nov. 8, incumbent Gov. Brad Little, who won the Republican nomination in the primary, faces an insurgent candidate with national name recognition.. Ammon Bundy, a Nevada native, switched to ...
The crest was designed by Nii Amon Kotei, [citation needed] a senior citizen and national award winner who also designed the national coat of arms. [3] The crest is a shield divided into four quarters by fishing rope running horizontally and vertically. Each quarter carries an appropriate motive: