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Arts and GH Heritage

Roots and Radicals: The Solo Performance Bridging Malagasy Craft and Digital Art

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In the dim, hallowed silence of the Maison des Arts et du Social, the air didn’t just carry the scent of the stage—it carried the weight of a geometric haunting.

As the performance Racine Carrée began, thin digital lines of light sketched a rigid, neon architecture across the darkness.

Into this grid stepped Tréma Michaël Rakotonjatovo, a dancer whose body appeared not just to perform, but to negotiate a truce between the binary code of the future and the ancestral breath of Madagascar.

The brilliance of Rakotonjatovo’s solo lies in its refusal to treat technology and heritage as warring factions. Instead, he presents a “root” that is also a “square.”

We often frame African tradition as something static, a museum piece to be preserved in amber. But on this stage, as part of the OFF Biennial 2026, tradition was seen as a living, breathing software.

The most arresting moment occurred when the rigid, digital geometry began to dissolve. In its place, Zafimaniry-inspired motifs—the intricate, UNESCO-recognized woodcraft patterns of Madagascar—began to bloom across Rakotonjatovo’s skin through projection mapping.

It was a digital skin-graft of memory. His movements shifted from the sharp, mechanical resistance of a body trapped in a system to the fluid, liberated grace of a man who has found his rhythm within it.

For the Ghanaian observer, there is a familiar resonance here. Much like our own efforts to digitize Adinkra symbols or preserve highlife through electronic fusion, Racine Carrée argues that identity isn’t a choice between the village and the motherboard. It is a synchronization of both.

Rakotonjatovo didn’t just dance; he proved that our roots are deep enough to anchor us, even when the world around us is made of light and pixels.

Arts and GH Heritage

Why Ghanaians Still Pour Drinks for the Dead And Why the Tradition Never Disappeared

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Before the first sip is taken at many Ghanaian gatherings, a small portion of the drink belongs to someone unseen.

A splash of schnapps hits the earth. A few quiet words follow. Heads bow slightly. Then the living continue.

Across Ghana, libation remains one of the most enduring acts of cultural memory — a ritual that turns ordinary moments into conversations between generations.

Whether at naming ceremonies in Accra, funerals in Kumasi, or family gatherings in northern compounds, the act carries the same message: the dead are not absent; they are listening.

For outsiders, the ritual can seem mystical or symbolic. For many Ghanaians, it is deeply practical. Ancestors are viewed not as distant spirits locked away from daily life, but as guardians with continued responsibility to the family and community.

Pouring drink onto the ground is both an invitation and an acknowledgement. It says: we remember you, walk with us, witness this moment.

What makes the tradition especially fascinating is how it echoes far beyond the continent. In African-American communities, the phrase “pour one out for a homie” survives as an almost instinctive gesture of remembrance.

Though shaped by different histories, the emotional logic feels strikingly familiar. A drink touches the ground, and suddenly grief becomes communal rather than private.

That cultural continuity matters. It reveals how African spiritual practices travelled, adapted, and survived even after displacement and centuries of interruption.

In Ghana, libation still carries ceremonial authority, often performed by elders who recite family lineages and invoke ancestral names with precision and reverence.

At a time when modern life often pushes mourning into silence, libation offers something different: remembrance spoken aloud. It insists that memory deserves ritual, and that the bond between the living and the departed should never be reduced to silence.

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Arts and GH Heritage

The Ghana Experience That Lets You Create Culture

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There’s a moment, somewhere between shaping wet clay with your hands and watching it harden under the sun, when Ghana stops being a destination and starts becoming a conversation.

It’s in that quiet exchange — between visitor and craft, between curiosity and tradition — that the country reveals itself most honestly.

A growing wave of immersive travel experiences is inviting visitors to step beyond sightseeing and into making.

Across a curated seven-day journey, participants move through artisanal spaces where heritage is not displayed behind glass but practiced daily.

In pottery workshops, the rhythm of the wheel echoes techniques preserved over generations. In batik studios, fabric becomes storytelling — each motif layered with symbolism, memory, and identity.

And in black soap making, there’s a return to the basics: ash, oils, patience, and knowledge passed hand to hand.

These experiences unfold alongside excursions that ground the journey in Ghana’s ecological and urban contrasts — from the suspended canopy walkways of Kakum National Park to the kinetic energy of Accra. But it is the time spent with artisans that lingers longest.

In many ways, this is a quiet resistance to the fast pace of modern tourism. It asks visitors to slow down, to listen, and to participate. For Ghanaians, it’s a renewed appreciation of crafts often overlooked in everyday life.

For international travellers, it’s an invitation to understand culture not as performance, but as practice.

By the end of the week, what visitors carry home is more than souvenirs. It’s a tactile memory — shaped, dyed, and stirred by hand — of a place where tradition is still alive, and still evolving.

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Arts and GH Heritage

Poetra Asantewa and the Beautiful Contradictions of Accra

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By the time a trotro rattles from a quiet Accra suburb into the dense energy of Jamestown, an entire theatre of human experience has already unfolded.

Hawkers negotiate through traffic with impossible grace, passengers exchange sharp political commentary between stops, and handwritten slogans on taxis preach survival, faith, and hustle.

For spoken word artist Ama Asantewa Diaka, these fleeting encounters are not background noise; they are raw creative material.

The poet, widely known as Poetra Asantewa, describes Accra as “trying to kill me and save me at the same time” — a line that captures the uneasy rhythm of Ghana’s capital more accurately than any tourism brochure could.

It is a city where frustration and invention exist side by side. The same traffic congestion, unstable electricity, and overcrowded transport systems that exhaust residents also shape one of West Africa’s most vibrant contemporary art scenes.

That contradiction has become central to a generation of Accra’s artists, many of whom transform social pressure into performance, fashion, film, and music.

In neighbourhoods like Jamestown, murals climb colonial-era walls while poets perform beside fishermen’s canoes and experimental musicians rehearse through power cuts. Creativity here is rarely detached from daily struggle.

Poetra’s reflections, shared during conversations around the documentary Accra Power, reveal a city constantly remixing itself. Her inspiration does not emerge from isolation or silence, but from movement — from overheard conversations, crowded buses, and the emotional tension of urban life.

In Accra, art is not merely produced. It is survived, negotiated, and carried home through traffic at dusk.

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