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Koyo Kouoh Built Institutions for African Art. We Must Keep Building.




“We need to take the time to do the things that are urgent, that are essential, that are necessary,” renowned curator Koyo Kouoh said in a 2023 podcast. “And for me, building out institutions on the continent is a matter of urgency.”

Today, those words carry even more weight following her death on Saturday, May 10, in Basel, Switzerland, after a short battle with cancer.

With her passing, the art world mourns one of its most fearless visionaries. But for African artists and practitioners, this is the loss of a giant—and I say that without exaggeration. Kouoh believed deeply that Africa’s creativity must be shaped and shared by those who live it.

Even more tragic is the timing: she died just ten days before she was to unveil her concept for the 2026 Venice Biennale. As the first African woman appointed to curate one of the world’s most prestigious art exhibitions, it was a dream interrupted. Yet her legacy continues. We can honor her legacy by moving with the same urgency she lived by in building our own spaces and telling our own stories.

Kouoh spent her life working to build platforms where African creativity could be seen, respected, and celebrated. She was the executive director and chief curator at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape Town. She once called the museum “an unapologetically and decisively Pan-African, pan-diasporic museum… we are building our own voice, our own language.” And she meant it. Under her leadership, the museum became a space that showcased African talent in powerful and lasting ways.

Born in Cameroon, raised in Switzerland, and building a career in Senegal, Kouoh knew how to move between worlds. She built bridges between artists, countries, and ideas. In 2008, she opened RAW Material Company in Dakar, an artist residency and space where she mentored young talent, published writing, and curated exhibitions that asked difficult questions about identity, migration, and history.

When she joined Zeitz MOCAA in 2019, she transformed a struggling institution. She changed how it was operated, brought in new people, and even redesigned the space to serve the art better. Under her leadership, the museum focused on giving artists the space to tell their full stories. She led major solo exhibitions for artists like Otobong Nkanga, Tracey Rose, and Senzeni Marasela.

In 2022, she curated When We See Us: A Century of Black Figuration in Painting, a powerful show about how Black people have represented themselves in art across Africa and the diaspora. It was part of her larger mission to reclaim African stories in contemporary art.

“Art is in the cracks, not in the polish,” she once said, reminding us that beauty and meaning often come from broken places. She also believed museums should stay close to their communities, not just the art world.

Kuouh was repeatedly named one of ArtReview’s 100 most influential figures in contemporary art. But what made her special wasn’t the rooms she was in or the titles she held. It was how she always put Africa at the center. Through her warmth, generosity, and belief in others, she created spaces where African artists and curators were seen and valued. She rooted everything she built on the continent and helped others believe they could lead too.

Her life is a reminder that we can’t wait. We must continue to build institutions and platforms. But more importantly, we must build each other, just as Kouoh did. If we want African creativity to be seen, we must make the space ourselves. That’s what she did, and that’s how we honor her.

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Five Things to Look Forward to at the 2025 New York 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair



The New York edition of this year’s 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair activities will be open to the public this weekend. Held in Marrakech, New York, and London, 1-54 is dedicated to showcasing art from Africa and its diaspora at thoughtfully curated events across multiple continents.


Months after this year’s Marrakech edition, all eyes turn to New York, where the fair will be hosted in Halo – at Manhattan’s iconic 28 Liberty Street – for the first time, a 30,000 square foot venue. The fair will spotlight a sprawling list of galleries and artists from Africa, Europe, the U.S., and more, along with captivating special projects.

“We’re eager to make our return to New York as we continue to grow our annual edition,” Touria El Glaoui, founding director of 1-54, said in a press release. “It’s been wonderful to see the positive response from our U.S. audience over the last decade, as well as a shared passion for expanding visibility for contemporary African art. We’re excited for visitors to see the incredible artwork and programming from this year’s gallerists and fair partners.”

Below, OkayAfrica spotlights five things to look forward to at 1-54 New York this year.

A typically diverse lineup of galleries and artists


As is now customary of 1-54, this year’s New York edition will feature 30 exhibiting galleries. Fifteen of those galleries will make their 1-54 fair debuts, while 18 will be showing in New York for the first time. The diverse selection of galleries is based across 17 countries and five continents, with exhibitors from everywhere, from Tokyo, Japan, and Lagos, Nigeria, to Geneva, Switzerland, and Johannesburg, South Africa.

The first exhibitor from the Democratic Republic of Congo


Photography of two masked figures standing inside a dilapidated building, peering through broken window panes; one wears a red vest and yellow shirt, waving from behind jagged glass, while the other, shirtless in a neon vest, stares out from the shadows. The building\u2019s fa\u00e7ade is crumbling, but intricate, colorful geometric patterns decorate the upper panels above the windows.

KUB’Art Gallery will be the first 1-54 fair exhibitor from the DR Congo. The Kinshasa-based gallery was founded in 2020 to showcase Congolese contemporary art and make the work of artists accessible to the international market. Its curatorial focus centers on heritage, identity, and preserving ancestral knowledge while challenging the erasure of indigenous narratives through painting, photography, and mixed media.


KUB’Art will be exhibiting works by Rachel Malaïka and Prisca Munkeni Monnier. Malaïka is a multidisciplinary artist who challenges ideological narratives and highlights the resilience of collective identity through photography, painting, and installation. Brussels-born, Kinshasa-raised Monnier explores memory and heritage through photography, film, and performance, and has been exhibiting internationally since 2007.

Gallery 1957’s special installation by Yaw Owusu


Yaw Owusu, Glory, 2025, U.S. Pennies on Canvas.

Ghanaian artist Yaw Owusu has consistently used his art as a form of political critique. His 2017 installation piece, Back to the Future, which coincided with Ghana’s 60th independence anniversary, was a portrait of the Ghanaian flag using pesewa coins, reflecting the country’s unyielding inflation and general economic situation.

At 1-54 New York, Owusu created an interpretation of the U.S. flag using American pennies to explore liberty as an American symbol and what that means with respect to current political and economic conditions.

The ‘Art Comes First’ special project


100% Black Cotton Bales of Black-owned cotton harvested from a farm operating since 1877 in Alabama,  symbolizing resilience and heritage in textile production.

Art Comes First (ACF) is a global collective dedicated to preserving and reinterpreting African craftsmanship through contemporary fashion and design. “Textile Language,” its special project at 1-54 New York, delves into the ancient art of weaving, linking cotton cultivation in Sudan and indigo-dying techniques from Mali, to the legacy of a Black-owned cotton farm in Alabama, which has been operational since 1877. The project merges traditional techniques with modern designs as a medium of storytelling, heritage, and empowerment.

A special spotlight on Caribbean art


Billy G\u00e9rard Frank, Who is Queen Now?, 2022, mixed media, fabric, acrylic on paper, 36 x 24 in.

ATLANTIC ARTHOUSE, a hybrid collective of artists, designers, creatives, and galleries from the Caribbean Mid-Atlantic, curates this year’s 1-54 Caribbean Spotlight. Through thoughtfully curated group exhibitions, which combine culturally specific e-commerce with dynamic programming, the collective creates space for underrepresented creatives from Caribbean, LatinX, Indigenous, and Afro-descendant communities. ATLANTIC ARTHOUSE will be exhibiting works by 11 artists during its spotlight.


Also, the TERN Gallery will debut as the first exhibitor in the Bahamas. The Nassau-based gallery celebrates the region’s rich artistic contributions while fostering the international expansion of the contemporary Caribbean art market. At 1-54 New York, TERN will show works by ceramic artist Anina Major and visual artist Leasho Johnson.

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