Ibrahim Mahama

Ibrahim Mahama

BornNationalityBased In
1987GhanaianAccra, Tamale
Biography

Exploring themes of globalisation, economic exchange and migration, Ibrahim Mahama creates monumental installations made of materials defined by urban environments. The Ghanian artist is best known for his stitched together with jute bags, made with help of his collaborators who are usually intranational, local and urban immigrants, and echoing West African traditional use of fabrics. Mahama then drapes the stitched bags over buildings, thereby engaging with the politics of physical spaces by creating a continuous challenge and imposition. The jute bags, having been produced in Asia, imported to Ghana to transport cacao beans and then repurposed to package coffee, rice and charcoal, before finally being exported to Europe and the Americas, represent the very structure of the capitalist economy. Treating the materials as forensic evidence of market and human labour, Mahama traces the complex relationship between the economy and the local and international working class. The multifaceted physicality and metaphorical connotations of the artist’s materials, which also include hammers, shoe boxes, heels and needles, show how objects absorb and bear the ramifications of globalised capitalism and the social divide it produces. ...

Selected Artworks
Jamestown, Accra
Ibrahim MahamaJamestown, Accra, 2013Price on Request
Adum Train Station installation
Ibrahim MahamaAdum Train Station installation, 2013Price on Request
Awards
Future Generation Art Prize2017
Biennals
The Biennale of Sydney2020 - Sydney
Venice Biennial2019 - Venice
Dak’Art2018 - Dakar
Documenta2017 - Kassel
Venice Biennial2017 - Venice
Venice Biennial2015 - Venice
Dak’Art2014 - Dakar