Gulf Times

‘Black Lives Matter’ movement stirs Ghanaian artist in Covid-19 limbo

- Reuters

Atear slipped down the cheek of Ghanaian-German artist Zohra Opoku as she recalled how the global Black Lives Matter had kindled her pain and anger while she was stranded away from home due to coronaviru­s lockdowns.

After Senegal closed its borders in March, the internatio­nally renowned visual artist had no option but to remain at a residency in Dakar, where she had been creating large textile collages to explore her self-image after a cancer diagnosis.

When the death of George Floyd in US police custody sparked a global reckoning over racial injustice and oppression, the 44-year-old stitched a new piece in tribute to the movement.

‘Say Their Names’ is a white and indigo-dyed canvas onto which Opoku has sewn dozens of images of an unidentifi­ed face from ancient Egyptian art.

Some are printed in red and tumble from a screenprin­t of Opoku’s face like teardrops.

The protests “have shaken us and awakened us and sharpened our senses about what kind of world we want to live in,” she said, standing in front of the work-in-progress in her studio at the Black Rock Senegal residency.

She has a rare perspectiv­e on the Black experience after growing up surrounded by White people in communist East Germany, the daughter of a Ghanaian father and German mother.

“I was always standing out too much,” recalled Opoku, who now calls Accra home. “I learned to resist the racist energy and hate against coloured people in East Germany, especially after the wall came down.”

The quest for identity is a central theme in her work.

In earlier self-portraits, Opoku obscured her face with plants. In her latest series, she combines images of bare tree branches from her native Germany with dissected photos of herself.

“I’ve always been interested in disappeari­ng in an environmen­t because of my upbringing,” she said.

 ??  ?? German-Ghanaian artist Zohra Opoku sits in front of her project at the studio in Kehinde Wiley’s artist residence during the interview in Dakar, Senegal.
German-Ghanaian artist Zohra Opoku sits in front of her project at the studio in Kehinde Wiley’s artist residence during the interview in Dakar, Senegal.

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