Testaments to the Beautyful Ones, on view from January 21 through May 16, 2027, brings together a dynamic group of artists and writers in an exhibition that reflects on contemporary life across the African continent. Curated by Yuan-Chih (Sreddy) Yen, the project unfolds as both a visual and literary conversation, shaped by the enduring resonance of Ayi Kwei Armah’s landmark novel and its meditation on disillusionment and renewal. In parallel, it echoes the vibrant, layered optimism found in Njideka Akunyili Crosby’s work, creating a space where tension and possibility coexist.
The exhibition assembles photographs by eight artists whose practices span multiple regions and perspectives, including Tatenda Chidora, Fatoumata Diabaté, Yagazie Emezi, and Sarah Waiswa. Their images are presented in thematic clusters that explore urgent and deeply personal subjects: gender identity, spirituality, displacement, environmental change, and the evolving language of self-representation. Social media emerges as an undercurrent throughout, not merely as a platform but as a lived space where identity, visibility, and community continue to take shape in real time.
Complementing the visual works, newly commissioned texts by six writers introduce another layer of reflection. These responses do not explain the photographs so much as extend them, offering poetic, critical, and narrative interpretations that deepen the viewer’s engagement. The interplay between image and text forms a rhythm, moving between documentation and imagination, between observation and introspection.
At the heart of the exhibition lies the notion of the “beautyful ones,” a phrase that carries both weight and ambiguity. It suggests fragility and fracture, yet also resilience and collective strength. The works gathered here do not seek to resolve these contradictions. Instead, they hold them in balance, acknowledging the complexities of contemporary African life while insisting on the presence of creativity, care, and persistence.
In its layered approach,
Testaments to the Beautyful Ones resists singular narratives. It offers, instead, a constellation of voices and visions that affirm the vitality of lived experience, even within constraint, and point toward forms of renewal that emerge quietly but persistently.
Image:
Hashim Nasr, A Dream of Symbiosis, from the series A Leap into a Dream, 2024 © Hashim Nasr, courtesy of the MoCP