ikono

Browse
  • Home
  • Arts
  • Channels
  • Slow Art
  • Projects we love
  • Premium
  • Home
  • Arts
  • Channels
  • Slow Art
  • Projects we love
  • Premium
View Plans Create Account Login

Dear Home of Scars

In Dear Home of Scars, we see celebrated visual artist Ibrahim Mahama return to his hometown of Tamale in Northern Ghana to visit Red Clay Studio, a lively cultural centre and art space he founded, where he works on a new art installation involving old colonial railcars and the reconstruction of a stretch of track. During British rule of Ghana (1821-1957), the colonisers used trains to transport gold and other resources to the coast. Remnants of track now lie abandoned as silent reminders of this history of exploitation. They are ‘scars in the landscape’, in the words of Mahama. The project brings new energy and self-awareness to local residents. Meanwhile, Mahama reflects on his role as a sought-after artist and builder of local communities.

Duration: 00:20:20

Categories: Documentaries

Tags: colonial railway ghana, postcolonial art intervention, landscape as memory, railway exploitation history, site-specific installation art, ghana contemporary art, british gold coast railway, historical trauma art, train classroom installation, scar metaphor art, decolonial practice, landscape intervention, social practice art, contemporary african art, institutional critique

  • More Like This
  • Artists

Download our apps

  • tv
  • Amazon Fire TV
About us
Privacy Policy
Terms and Conditions
HOW TO WATCH
Subscribe To Newsletter
© 2026

Login