This article explores the capacity of visual arts to deal with transnational, multidirectional processes of remembering and spatial redefinition. Through analyzing two sets of work by Emma Wolokau-Wanambwa that address the tradition of formal art training at Makerere University and the aftermaths of the Second World War in Africa, respectively, the article touches on issues of art education, the production of historical meaning, and the role of cultural institutions in Uganda. It also examines the complex entanglement between colonial legacies and postcolonial and neoliberal systems of value, revealing the value of artistic research to reveal subversive alternatives to those articulations
Several artists have been occupied with the subject of decolonization in Namibia lately. By means of...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Drawing on research in Uganda, we describe our project in which we invited young people to think abo...
This article examines two socially engaged Ugandan art projects: the Disability Art Project Uganda (...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Masters in Fine Art by Research Wits School of Art (Division of Fine Art) January 2016The Ugandan ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the British Academy via the DOI in this rec...
This article seeks to study how Mary Okurut narrates the Ugandan nation through her novel The Invisi...
A critical review of Timothy Longman's recent book entitled Memory and Justice in Post-Genocide Rwan...
Docomomo International is proud to present the results of the international project Shared Heritage ...
Alex Baine is a contemporary Ugandan woman artist who graduated from the Margaret Trowell School of ...
In this paper we empirically explore the ways in which young people were enrolled in a multimodal ex...
This paper analyzes a series of vessels created by artist Helga Gamboa from 2003-2008. Gamboa, an An...
One of the most traumatic experiences that occurred in Africa at the turn of the 19th century is the...
The Acholi of northern Uganda, whose cultural heritage is rich in literature and the performing arts...
Several artists have been occupied with the subject of decolonization in Namibia lately. By means of...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Drawing on research in Uganda, we describe our project in which we invited young people to think abo...
This article examines two socially engaged Ugandan art projects: the Disability Art Project Uganda (...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Masters in Fine Art by Research Wits School of Art (Division of Fine Art) January 2016The Ugandan ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the British Academy via the DOI in this rec...
This article seeks to study how Mary Okurut narrates the Ugandan nation through her novel The Invisi...
A critical review of Timothy Longman's recent book entitled Memory and Justice in Post-Genocide Rwan...
Docomomo International is proud to present the results of the international project Shared Heritage ...
Alex Baine is a contemporary Ugandan woman artist who graduated from the Margaret Trowell School of ...
In this paper we empirically explore the ways in which young people were enrolled in a multimodal ex...
This paper analyzes a series of vessels created by artist Helga Gamboa from 2003-2008. Gamboa, an An...
One of the most traumatic experiences that occurred in Africa at the turn of the 19th century is the...
The Acholi of northern Uganda, whose cultural heritage is rich in literature and the performing arts...
Several artists have been occupied with the subject of decolonization in Namibia lately. By means of...
In December 2018, Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa reopened to the public, five years after...
Drawing on research in Uganda, we describe our project in which we invited young people to think abo...