Connect with us

Arts and GH Heritage

Between the Clock and Community: The Real Story Behind African Time

Published

on

At a wedding in Accra, the invitation may boldly announce “2 p.m. sharp,” yet seasoned guests know the real action often begins hours later.

Plastic chairs remain half-empty, highlife drifts through the speakers, and no one seems particularly alarmed.

Outside Africa, this scene is usually reduced to a punchline called “African time.” But behind the joke sits a much deeper conversation about history, identity, and the meaning of time itself.

For many African societies, time was traditionally tied less to numbers and more to human activity. A gathering began when people arrived. A meeting unfolded when everyone important was present.

Life moved according to relationships, seasons, storytelling, and communal rhythm rather than the hard authority of a clock.

That worldview collided sharply with colonial systems. Mission schools, railways, factories and government offices introduced rigid schedules where lateness became linked to punishment, productivity, and discipline.

Time stopped being communal and became transactional. In many ways, modern African cities now operate inside two competing philosophies at once.

In Ghana, this tension shows up everywhere. Corporate workers rush through traffic to reach 8 a.m. meetings while family funerals comfortably stretch far beyond their printed programmes.

Musicians may arrive late to performances yet stay long after midnight, creating experiences audiences remember for years. Social life often prioritizes presence over precision.

Still, the debate around African time has become more urgent in a global economy built on deadlines and digital coordination.

Younger professionals increasingly question whether chronic lateness should continue to hide behind culture, especially when it affects business, trust, and opportunity.

Yet reducing African time to laziness misses the bigger story. It reflects a society still negotiating how to balance efficiency with humanity, structure with flexibility, and imported systems with older communal values.

The clock may measure minutes, but culture determines what those minutes mean.

Arts and GH Heritage

At Tiga Gallery, Accra’s Art Scene Finds Its Voice Through Conversation

Published

on

By

“A curated space where art meets conversation.”

That single line, tucked quietly beneath the description of Tiga African Art Gallery in Cantonments, says something larger about the direction of Ghana’s contemporary art scene. In Accra today, galleries are no longer simply rooms for displaying paintings.

Increasingly, they are becoming places where stories are exchanged, identities negotiated, and younger generations invited into creative life without intimidation.

Inside Tiga African Art Gallery, the atmosphere resists the stiffness that often shadows fine art spaces. Visitors arrive by appointment, not into silence, but into discussion. Paintings lean into conversations about memory, heritage, urban life, and African self-expression.

Children cut shapes for collage workshops while emerging artists search for visibility in a competitive cultural economy. The gallery functions less like a showroom and more like a living studio woven into the rhythm of the city.

That shift matters in Ghana, where artistic traditions have long existed beyond formal institutions. From Adinkra symbolism to Asafo flags and hand-painted cinema posters, Ghanaian art has historically lived in marketplaces, compounds, festivals, and everyday public life.

Contemporary galleries such as Tiga are rediscovering that social dimension, creating spaces where art feels participatory rather than distant.

Perhaps most striking is the gallery’s investment in children through drawing, painting, and summer programmes. In a country where creative education is often treated as secondary to more “practical” disciplines, these workshops quietly challenge old assumptions.

They suggest that art is not a luxury, but a language through which young people learn confidence, observation, and cultural belonging.

For visitors to Accra, Tiga offers more than an exhibition stop. It offers entry into a wider cultural conversation unfolding across the city — one where African art is not waiting for validation abroad, but confidently shaping its own audience at home.

Continue Reading

Arts and GH Heritage

The Festival That Began With a Lion: The Untold History Behind Aboakyer

Published

on

By

“Imagine catching a lion every year.”

That sentence alone changes the way many people understand Ghana’s famous Aboakyer Festival. Behind the colourful processions, dancing Asafo companies, and crowds lining the streets of Winneba lies a much older story — one shaped by fear, negotiation, survival, and faith.

For the Effutu people of Ghana’s Central Region, Aboakyer is not simply a cultural performance staged for tourists with cameras.

It is the memory of a difficult migration carried across generations. Oral history says their ancestors, struggling with hardship and death after settling along the coast, turned to their deity, Penkye Otu, for protection. The answer came with terrifying demands.

First, human sacrifice. Later, a live wildcat — described in some accounts as a lion, in others a leopard. But hunting such creatures reportedly claimed even more lives. Eventually, after repeated pleas for mercy, the sacrifice changed once again: a live antelope.

That compromise survives today in one of Ghana’s most visually striking festivals.

Every first Saturday in May, Winneba erupts with drumming, chanting, and fierce community pride as the Asafo companies Tuafo No. 1 and Dentsifo No. 2 race into the forest in search of a live antelope.

The competition feels festive, but beneath the celebration sits something deeper: a centuries-old covenant remembered through ritual.

The Asafo groups themselves were once military organisations formed to defend the Effutu state. Though warfare faded long ago, the companies remain powerful custodians of identity and tradition, especially for younger generations growing up between modern life and ancestral history.

What makes Aboakyer remarkable is not only the spectacle of the hunt, but what it represents — a people who refused to surrender to suffering without seeking another path.

The festival stands as proof that traditions can evolve while still holding tightly to memory, spirituality, and communal pride.

Continue Reading

Arts and GH Heritage

Mirrors, Shadows, and Uncertainty: Inside Eric Gyamfi’s “Stomata” Exhibition

Published

on

By

In Eric Gyamfi’s latest exhibition in Accra, the camera behaves less like an eye and more like a restless spirit.

Mirrors split bodies into fragments, corridors fold endlessly into themselves, and shadows interrupt the frame with the uncertainty of memory.

Standing before these photographs, viewers are not asked to simply look; they are asked to linger, doubt, and listen.

Hosted at the Foundation for Contemporary Art in Accra, “Stomata: Dr. Mahashe’s Open Frames” arrives at a moment when photography has become almost frictionless.

Millions of images pass across screens every minute, consumed and forgotten with alarming speed.

Gyamfi pushes in the opposite direction. His photographs resist immediacy. They slow the viewer down.

The exhibition’s most arresting works are built through deliberate interference. In Mirrored Interior – 9, reflected passageways collapse into one another like a maze without an exit, creating the sensation of walking through architecture shaped by memory rather than concrete.

Elsewhere, layered exposures produce ghostlike figures that appear trapped between disappearance and return.

What makes the exhibition resonate beyond technical experimentation is its grounding in process.

Purpose-built pinhole cameras, handwritten annotations, and production notes sit alongside the final images, exposing photography not as polished perfection but as an act of searching.

In Ghana, where contemporary photography has increasingly become a tool for documenting identity, politics, and social change, Gyamfi’s work shifts the conversation toward interiority and perception itself.

The result is deeply meditative. “Stomata” reminds audiences that images can still carry mystery, even in an age oversaturated with visibility.

Continue Reading

Trending