Atta Kwami

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Born
George Atta Kwami

(1956-09-14)14 September 1956
Accra, Ghana
Died6 October 2021(2021-10-06) (aged 65)
UK
OccupationsPainter, printmaker, art historian and curator
Atta Kwami
Born
George Atta Kwami

(1956-09-14)14 September 1956
Accra, Ghana
Died6 October 2021(2021-10-06) (aged 65)
UK
Alma materKwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
OccupationsPainter, printmaker, art historian and curator
Spouse
Pamela Clarkson
(m. 1992)
Websiteatta-kwami.com

Atta Kwami (14 September 1956 – 6 October 2021)[1][2] was a Ghanaian painter, printmaker, independent art historian and curator. He was educated and taught at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana, and in the United Kingdom. He created works that improvise form and colour and speak to uniquely Ghanaian architecture and African strip-woven textiles, including those of the Kente, the Ewe and Asante of Ghana.

Born George Atta Kwami in 1956 in Accra to Robert Kwami, a music teacher, and prominent first generation Ghanaian contemporary artist Grace Kwami (nee Anku),[2] he studied, and later taught, at the KNUST in Kumasi, Ghana. In 2007, he received a PhD in art history at the Open University for his work for contemporary Ghanaian artists, subsequently published as Kumasi Realism, 1951–2007: An African Modernism (Hurst & Company, 2013).[3]

Career

Kwami was awarded the title of 1st Thoyer Distinguished Visiting Scholar in New York University, New York, from 30 September to 8 October 2008.[4]

Kwami also held the Philip L. Ravenhill Fellowship (UCLA) at the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of African Art, Washington, DC, from 1 March to 31 May 2010.

He was Artist-in-Residence at the University of Michigan, Graduate School of Art & Design, in January 2011.[5]

Kwami won the Janet L. Stanley Travel Award to attend the Fifteenth Triennial Symposium on African Art entitled "Africa and its Diasporas in the Market Place: Cultural Resources and the Global Economy" at the University of California, Los Angeles, from 23 to 26 March 2011.[6]

Between 14 and 26 August 2011, Kwami undertook the Howard Kestenbaum/Vijay Paramsothy International Fellowship at Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, Maine, USA.

In 2021, he won the Maria Lassnig Prize from the Maria Lassnig Foundation in Vienna and the Serpentine Galleries in the UK.[7]

Exhibitions

Personal life

References

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