Arts and GH Heritage
Ibrahim Mahama Makes History as First African to Top Global Art Power Ranking
Ghanaian artist Ibrahim Mahama has become the first African to claim the No. 1 spot on ArtReview’s prestigious annual Power 100 list.
The Power 100 list is an annual ranking published by ArtReview magazine that identifies the most influential people and organisations in the global contemporary art world.
Mahama’s achievement marks a landmark moment for Africa’s contemporary art movement and the global creative industry.

ArtReview, regarded as one of the most influential voices in contemporary art, named Mahama the world’s most powerful figure in the field for 2024, an achievement that signals what many experts describe as a significant shift in global cultural influence.
“Quite humbling,” Mahama says of historic milestone
Speaking to The Guardian, Mahama said he first learned about the power list in 2011 while studying at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST). That year, Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was ranked first.
“For me to be part of this, especially coming from a place like Ghana—where for many years it felt like we were not even part of the discourse—is quite humbling,” he said.
Based in Tamale in northern Ghana, Mahama said he hopes his rise encourages young Ghanaian and African artists to “realise that they are part of the contemporary discourse and not just on the sideline.”
A power shift in the global art world
ArtReview’s editor-in-chief, Mark Rappolt, described Mahama’s selection as emblematic of a broader realignment in the art world—one that mirrors shifts in global finance, culture, and influence.
“I think you could also look at that as saying there’s a realignment of where global finance sits,” Rappolt noted, adding that the art world is deeply intertwined with these global changes.
This year’s ranking places multiple African and Middle Eastern creatives in the top 10, signalling growing visibility and institutional influence for artists from regions previously marginalised in the global arts ecosystem.

African and MENA artists dominate top slots
Following Mahama, Qatar’s Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani ranks second, backed by her significant cultural investments and acquisitions. Last year’s No. 1, Sheikha Hoor al-Qasimi of the UAE’s Sharjah Art Foundation, takes the No. 3 spot.
Egyptian artist Wael Shawky appears at No. 4, while the rest of the top 10 includes Singaporean artist Ho Tzu Nyen, American artists Amy Sherald and Kerry James Marshall, writer Saidiya Hartman, UK-based Forensic Architecture, and German photographer Wolfgang Tillmans.
Mahama’s global rise
Mahama’s work, known for transforming found materials—such as train carriages, jute sacks, old hospital beds, and industrial remnants—has attracted major global attention.
Some of his standout recent projects include:
- “Songs About Roses” at Edinburgh’s Fruitmarket Gallery, praised as “extraordinary as a great magic-realist novel.”
- His dramatic 2,000-square-metre pink fabric installation at London’s Barbican Centre, produced in Ghana.
- The opening of the Savannah Centre for Contemporary Art (SCCA) in Tamale (2019), a major arts hub featuring galleries, libraries, archives, and studios.
Critics have placed Mahama in the same league as global heavyweights like William Kentridge and Anselm Kiefer for his ability to confront history, memory, and postcolonial narratives through large-scale installations.
Rappolt notes that Mahama’s community-focused approach reflects a new generation of artists redefining what artistic influence means today: not only producing works of genius but investing in their creative ecosystems.
A global panel decides the ranking
Thirty anonymous art experts worldwide contributed to this year’s Power 100, which has been published annually for 24 years.
Mahama’s rise to the top—powered by both creativity and community impact—cements Ghana’s growing reputation as an emerging force in contemporary art.
Arts and GH Heritage
Digital Ancestry: Why Synaptic Resonances is the Future of African Performance
The air inside Lomé’s Maison des Arts et du Social didn’t just vibrate with sound; it hummed with the electricity of a shared nervous system.
As the final notes of Synaptic Resonances faded, the audience remained “glued to their seats,” a rare moment of collective paralysis in an era of digital distraction.
Choreographed by the visionary Tréma Michaël Rakotonjatovo, the performance served as more than a closing act for the Off Biennial 2026—it was a glimpse into a borderless, Pan-African future where the body serves as a living hard drive for ancestral data.
The most arresting image was a solitary dancer, her face obscured by a sculptural mask, moving through a digital rain of Zafimaniry motifs. These geometric patterns, traditionally carved into the wood of Madagascan homes, were projected onto the stage as flickering code.
It was a poignant metaphor for the modern African condition: carrying the rigid weight of heritage while navigating the fluid, often chaotic “architecture of flows” of the 21st century.
As performers Adjaratou Yerima, Kafui Dogbe, Farouze Gneni, and Keziah Bagna merged into a quartet, the stage became a responsive organism. Real-time video mapping tracked their limbs, turning muscle and bone into transmitters of light.
For the Ghanaian spectator, the resonance is clear. Much like our own contemporary artists who are reimagining kente weaving through digital pixels, Rakotonjatovo isn’t interested in a static past. He treats tradition as an “invisible current”—a source of energy that must be channeled into new, improvised forms to stay alive.
By the time the dancers collapsed the boundary between performer and observer, we weren’t just watching a show; we were the synapses, firing in unison.
Arts and GH Heritage
Roots and Radicals: The Solo Performance Bridging Malagasy Craft and Digital Art
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 the Way You Fold Your Fugu Hat Sends a Powerful Message
In Ghana’s Upper East Region, a seemingly simple fold of fabric can speak louder than words. Wear your fugu hat the wrong way, and you might just find yourself paying a fine — in goats, sheep, or even a cow.
The fugu, also known as batakari, is a handwoven smock beloved across Ghana. But it’s the matching hat — soft, flexible, and worn like a beanie — that carries a traditional code many outsiders overlook.
Depending on how you fold its topmost part, you could be signalling loyalty to a chief, declaring friendship with all, or, dangerously, claiming spiritual power you don’t possess.
Isaaka Munkaila, a smock dealer with 25 years of experience in Bolgatanga’s fugu market, knows the rules well. He demonstrates the styles one by one.
First, fold the hat’s tip to the back. “That is how chiefs wear it,” he says. “It says: ‘I have many followers. I am a head of community.’” An ordinary person wearing it that way in a chief’s palace risks being seen as a rival. The penalty? Depending on the traditional area, a goat, sheep, or cow.
But not all chiefs are quick to punish. Naab Sierig Soore Sobil IV, divisional chief of Pelungu in the Nabdam district, says ignorance can be a defence.
“If someone from the south comes to my palace wearing it like that, I will correct him and teach him. But if a local does it, the elders will demand a fine — to deter others.”
Fold the tip to point skyward, and you’re safe. That’s the everyday style for ordinary people. “It simply acknowledges God’s presence everywhere,” Munkaila says. Fold it to the left or right, and you’re saying: “I belong with everyone — young and old.”

The most dangerous fold? Flat onto the forehead. That style is reserved for spiritually powerful individuals — those with “juju.”
Wear it without the backing of traditional spiritual strength, Munkaila warns, and someone stronger might test you. “You don’t wear it that way if you don’t have the powers.”
While no recorded harm has come from a wrong fold, chiefs have scolded and sanctioned offenders. In the Upper East Region, fines remain small, chiefs acknowledging poverty and changing times. Further north, in the Northern Region, customs are stricter.
For most Ghanaians who grow up with these traditions, the code is second nature. But for visitors, the fugu hat is a quiet reminder: in the north, fashion carries meaning — and sometimes consequences.
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