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• A painting by the 97-year-old Araba Kromantin.

10 Women with touch of art

An exhibition of works by 10 women artists spanning three generations with influences from international styles and regional traditions has ended  at the Loom Gallery in Accra.

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Undoubtedly, a landmark exhibition featuring highly creative women with ages ranging from 34 to 97, it equally signified the contributions of Ghanaian women to fine art since the struggles of the feminist art movements in the late 1960s and 1970s.

Artists with works on display were Araba Kromantin, Theodosia Okoh, Kati Torda, Marigold Akufo Addo, Kate Badoe, Betty Acquah, Constance Swaniker, Nana Amu, Adwoa Amoah and Fatric Bewong.

A graduate of the Slade School of Art (UK), Marigold Akufo Addo’s coarse squares tend to sparkle like trimmings while recalling the ever-changing nature of our landscapes. Her thin lines, which are often realised in gold, stand side by side with transcultural ideographs.

Trained at the College of Art, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Fatric Bewong’s acrylic paintings on canvas are fiery and quite energetic. Alongside textured colours, she freely condenses the passions and energies that she effectively captures on her canvas. 

Currently the President of Foundation for Contemporary Art Ghana, works by Adwoa Amoah make successful forays into explorations of the human eye. Indeed, the eye becomes the centre of attraction despite the presence of other facial features. 

Now based in the United States, Kate Badoe’s work is definitely on the contemporary tip – but with its heart firmly embedded in the rich traditions of Africa. Indeed her lines, curves and dots alongside representational combs create harmony with ancient and current practices. 

Educated at Reading (UK) and Columbia (USA) Universities, works by Kromantin, who is originally from Jamaica, evoke fond memories of market scenes and erotic flowers that suggest mankind’s lost intimacy with nature.

Best known for designing the Ghanaian flag, Theodosia Okoh appears to have talent to spare. Undeniably, her works make an interesting foray into delicate collages that employ corn stalks to create replicas of huge public buildings and castles. 

The exhibition, which also marked the 45th anniversary of the Loom Gallery, without doubt brought some joy to art lovers in the city. 

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