Arts and GH Heritage
How Music, Art, and History Are Rewriting Ghana’s Story
For decades, travelers viewed Africa through a narrow lens. But today, Ghana is flipping the script.
There is a rhythm to Ghana that you feel before you hear it. It’s in the air—thick and humid, carrying the scent of ocean salt and sizzling kelewele from a roadside bowl. It’s in the explosion of color from a trotro painted with a proverb, and in the echo of drumming that drifts from a ceremonial ground into the concrete corridors of the city.
For decades, travelers viewed Africa through a narrow lens. But today, Ghana is flipping the script. This tiny West African nation, the first in sub-Saharan Africa to shake off colonial rule, isn’t just asking you to visit; it’s inviting you to reconnect. Whether you are a Black American tracing ancestry, a European art collector hunting for the next big name, or a digital nomad seeking vibrant energy, Ghana offers a cultural immersion that hits differently. Here is why the world is paying attention right now.
Read Also: Bigger Than Manhyia: Discover the Grandeur of the Assin Kushea Palace, West Africa’s Largest
The Pilgrimage of Return
You cannot tell Ghana’s story without acknowledging the echoes of the Atlantic. Standing on the ramparts of Cape Coast Castle, the waves crash against the rocks below with a ferocity that mirrors the history held within those white-washed walls . This is not a museum you merely walk through; it is a place where you feel the weight of millions of footsteps heading toward the “Door of No Return.” It is haunting, yes, but for many in the diaspora, it has also become a gateway to healing .
This emotional pull culminated in 2019 with the “Year of Return,” a movement that brought icons like Stevie Wonder to receive citizenship and sent a clear message: the door is now open . Today, that movement has evolved into “The Black Star Experience,” a year-round initiative by the government to position Ghana as the creative and cultural heartbeat of the continent . It’s not just about looking back; it’s about walking forward together.
Where the Art World Tunes In
While the history draws you in, the contemporary art scene makes you stay. Accra is currently having a moment, and the world is taking notice. At the forefront is Gallery 1957.
Founded in 2016, the gallery’s name is a deliberate nod to Ghana’s independence, acknowledging the role that art and culture played in forging a new national identity . Today, with spaces in both Accra and London, it serves as a bridge, introducing the global market to the brilliance of West African artists .
Just a short drive away, the Nubuke Foundation in East Legon offers a serene space to explore everything from contemporary paintings to stunning exhibitions on Ga funerary culture . And if you wander through the colonial-era streets of Jamestown, the city itself becomes the gallery. Murals splash across weathered walls, telling stories of community and resistance, culminating every August in the explosion of creativity that is the Chale Wote Street Art Festival .
The Soundtrack of a Continent
But Ghana doesn’t just show you art—it makes you move to it. The pulse of the nation quickens in December, when the diaspora “returns” for the most vibrant time of the year. The headliner is AfroFuture (formerly Afrochella), a two-day spectacle at the El Wak Stadium that blends music, fashion, and food into a celebration of the continent’s creative excellence .
With the 2025 edition themed “African Nostalgia,” the festival promises to bridge past and present, featuring heavyweights like Nigeria’s Asake and Ghana’s own lyrical powerhouse, King Paluta. It’s a homecoming for the soul, set to a soundtrack of Afrobeats and Hiplife.
And when the main stage goes dark, the city keeps buzzing. You’ll find the party migrating to iconic spots like The Republic Bar on Oxford Street, where DJs spin until dawn and cocktails flow with locally distilled spirits. Here, surrounded by laughing strangers who become friends by morning, you realize that in Ghana, community isn’t just a concept—it’s the national pastime.
So, pack light. Come for the history, stay for the art, and lose yourself in the rhythm. The Black Star is shining brighter than ever, and it is calling your name.
Arts and GH Heritage
Agoro and the Lost Art of Learning Ghanaian Culture on Television
There was a time when a Ghanaian proverb could determine whether you went home with a television set, a fan, or simply the pride of knowing your roots.
On Saturday evenings, families gathered around their television sets as actor and broadcaster David Dontoh stepped onto the stage of Agoro.
Before the questions began, viewers already knew what was coming: laughter, suspense, and a celebration of Ghanaian knowledge that felt both ordinary and extraordinary.
The genius of Agoro was not its prizes. It was its premise.
At a time when game shows across the world rewarded trivia about celebrities, sports, or popular culture, Agoro challenged contestants to navigate the vast landscape of Ghanaian history, folklore, customs, and proverbs.
The questions drew from knowledge often passed down around dinner tables, in marketplaces, and under the shade of family compounds.
A Classroom Disguised as Entertainment
What made the programme remarkable was its ability to teach without appearing educational. Viewers tuned in for entertainment but left with lessons about heritage.
Behind the scenes, journalist Charles Amankwa Ampofo provided much of the research that gave the show its intellectual depth.
Combined with Dontoh’s charisma and quick wit, the result was a programme that transformed cultural literacy into a national pastime.
Contestants who stumbled over a proverb often became the subject of gentle teasing. The audience laughed. The contestants laughed. Yet many viewers silently tested themselves from home, hoping they would have fared better.
What Have We Lost?
The fading of Agoro raises a larger question about cultural transmission in the digital age.
Today, many young Ghanaians can identify international television characters, viral internet trends, and foreign theme songs with ease.
Yet fewer can explain the symbolism behind an Adinkra motif or complete a proverb once commonly heard across generations.
The issue is not nostalgia for a television programme. It is the shrinking number of spaces where cultural knowledge is celebrated publicly and collectively.
Agoro proved that heritage did not have to compete with entertainment. It could be the entertainment.
Perhaps that is the programme’s enduring lesson. Culture survives not only in museums, textbooks, and festivals.
Sometimes, it survives in a game show where knowing the next line of a proverb was enough to make a nation watch.
Arts and GH Heritage
Before Netflix, There Was Mobile Cinema: The Untold Story of Ghana’s Bootleg Movie Posters
Long before streaming platforms and multiplex cinemas reached African audiences, films arrived in many Ghanaian towns by pickup truck. A television is balanced in the back. A VCR carefully wrapped in cloth.
A noisy generator rattling beside plastic chairs under the night sky.
This was Ghana’s mobile cinema era — a travelling film culture that transformed football parks, community centres, and roadside spaces into makeshift movie theatres throughout the late 1980s and 1990s.
But perhaps the most enduring legacy of that era was not the movies themselves. It was the posters.
The Art of Imagining a Film You’ve Never Seen
Hand-painted on flour sacks and recycled canvases, Ghana’s bootleg movie posters became legendary for their wild creativity. Arnold Schwarzenegger might appear with glowing red eyes. Vampires grew extra limbs. Martial arts heroes carried impossible weapons. Horror films looked even more terrifying than the originals.
The reason was simple: many of the artists had never actually watched the films they were hired to promote.
Instead, painters relied on fragments — a title, a short description, sometimes a blurry cassette cover — before filling the gaps with their own imagination. Accuracy mattered less than attention. The posters needed to stop people in their tracks and convince an entire village that tonight’s screening was worth attending.
In the process, Ghanaian artists unknowingly created one of the most distinctive forms of pop art in modern African history.
From Village Walls to Global Galleries
Though mobile cinema faded with the spread of television, DVDs, and digital media, the posters survived.
Collectors around the world began treating them as valuable artworks rather than disposable advertisements.
Today, galleries such as the Chicago-based Deadly Prey Gallery work with original Ghanaian artists and younger painters to preserve the tradition for a growing international audience.
What makes the posters remarkable is not just their humour or exaggeration. They capture a specific Ghanaian moment — a time when cinema was communal, improvised, and deeply local.
Hollywood stories arrived in rural Ghana, but they were reinterpreted through the brushstrokes, humour, fears, and imagination of Ghanaian artists.
The result was not imitation. It was cultural translation — loud, inventive, and impossible to forget.
Arts and GH Heritage
Helen Annobil Finds “Firm Ground” in Ghana’s Expanding Art Landscape
There is a moment in many artists’ lives when experimentation gives way to certainty — when years of searching suddenly settle into clarity.
For British artist Helen Annobil, that moment appears to have arrived not in London or Manchester, but in Accra.
Her inaugural exhibition, Terra Firma, currently showing at Annobil Contemporary Gallery, feels less like a debut and more like an arrival.

After decades spent balancing nursing with artistic practice in England, Annobil’s work now carries the confidence of someone who has finally located the emotional and cultural terrain that speaks fluently to her imagination.
The title, Latin for “firm ground,” is more than poetic framing. It reflects the artist’s deepening relationship with Ghana after three years of living and working in the country.
In her paintings, fishing communities dissolve into restless skies, still-life compositions pulse with unexpected movement, and landscapes stretch beyond realism into emotional memory. Ghana does not simply appear in the work as scenery; it reshapes the rhythm of the paintings themselves.
There are traces of European art history woven into the canvases — Turner’s atmosphere, Monet’s sensitivity to light, Kandinsky’s emotional abstraction — yet the works resist imitation.
Instead, Annobil filters those traditions through the intensity of Ghana’s colors, textures, and daily encounters. The result is art that feels instinctive rather than academically constructed.

Curated by celebrated Ghanaian artist Kofi Setordji, the exhibition also speaks to a broader shift within Ghana’s contemporary art scene. Increasingly, Accra is becoming a place where international artists come not merely to exhibit, but to rethink their practice altogether.
That ambition is echoed in the vision behind Annobil Contemporary Gallery itself. Founded by Ishmael Fiifi Annobil, the space rejects the long-standing notion of Africa as only a source of artistic inspiration for foreign institutions.

Instead, it positions Ghana as a center of global artistic exchange — a place where creative identities can be unsettled, rebuilt, and newly understood.
In Terra Firma, Helen Annobil offers paintings shaped by migration, observation, and reinvention. But perhaps the exhibition’s most compelling statement is quieter than that: sometimes artistic belonging is discovered far from where the journey began.

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