Audio By Carbonatix
Some members of the diaspora community at the 2023 Chale Wote Art Festival have relished the indigenous display of aesthetic arts works, saying the paintings evoke emotional feeling of black identity.
They said the works offered a bridge between the past and the future of the African culture, values and traditions.
Miss Simone Fields, an Attorney from Maryland, USA, said she loved the different mediums (clay, wood, fabric, charcoal e.t.c) of the art works, which talked about "our ancestral connection and heritage".
"The guy, who used fire to create his piece is absolutely breathtaking and the one, who used mixed medium to create his sculptures is superb. I love the other artist, who created a traditional setting with queen mothers talking about the strength of a black woman," she said.
Miss Fields said: "We do see these art works in America, but a lot of them are European based. You have to go the extra mile to find things that are different, things that actually speak to your own people. It is hard to find. So, coming here and being surrounded by the beauty of blackness is amazing."
She told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that there was nothing like being in Accra to experience Chale Wote, adding that she was fond of the Ghanaian culture of hard work and respect for one another.
"There's a level of respect and love that you see. They take pride in what they do and those are the things that I feel like we are losing in America. We don't have the work ethic, we don't have that respect for ourselves in that large scale," the Maryland Attorney said.
Mr Carlton Wilkinson, a visual artist from Nashville, Tennessee, USA, who brought his works to inspire and collaborate with the local artists was full of praise for the volume of indigenous art works exhibited and the artistry skills put into the works.
As a Pan-Africanist and a lecturer, he called for regular exhibitions of arts to promote local tourism, saying: "I painted a Christ-like black figure, a revolutionary, who laboured for black people, fought against oppression and injustice. Let's all pay homage to our ancestors though the art works." Madman Alexcia Plumber, a resident of Louisiana, USA, told the GNA that the colour black resonated with her and was happy that the art works talked about the diverse characteristics of the black race with qualities that made them one people.
Latest Stories
-
African nations slam U.S. military strikes in Venezuela as threat to global sovereignty
2 minutes -
President Mahama’s First Year: Cautious reform or dangerous complacency?
9 minutes -
Prof. Bokpin calls on gov’t to apologise over NaCCA SHS teacher manual response
11 minutes -
UN Security Council weighs dangerous precedent set by US military operation in Venezuela
13 minutes -
‘Semenyo’s personality fits right with Man City team’ – Bernardo Silva
18 minutes -
One killed in road crash at Anyaa Market
23 minutes -
China announces record $1tn trade surplus despite Trump tariffs
26 minutes -
Global temperatures dipped in 2025 but more heat records on way, scientists warn
26 minutes -
Police arrest man over alleged sale of 3-year-old son for GH¢1m
30 minutes -
Asiedu Nketia calls for investigation into cocoa sack procurement under ex-government
34 minutes -
Ghanaians divided over DStv upgrades as government ramps up anti-piracy war
38 minutes -
African exporters face tariff shock as U.S. eyes AGOA Extension Bill
47 minutes -
Vanity, Power, Greed, and the People We Forgot to empower
51 minutes -
Economic recovery puts Ghana on track to end IMF oversight
53 minutes -
Health Minister directs teaching hospitals to operate 24-hour OPD and lab services
1 hour
