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Harmattan - Togo Photo Festival
From February 7, Artphilein Focus presents a selection of works by the artists of Harmattan, the first
edition of the Togo Photo Festival, held in December 2025 at the Agnassan–Paul Ahyi Museum, Artemis
Gallery, and Le Jardin Edith Equagoo in Lomé, Togo.
The Harmattan festival was born from the desire to explore how photography can become a tool for
rethinking the West African imaginary, building new connections between past and present, cultural roots
and a rapidly growing contemporary art scene.
Each image becomes a story projected toward the future — a fragment of reality that contributes to the
construction of a complex and authentic visual identity. Which stories are told? Which narratives express
the creative urgency of the contemporary West African artistic scene?
The works of the Togolese artists on view reveal the narrative and visionary potential of contemporary
African photography, articulated through a hybrid visual language rooted in lived experience, shaped by
dialogue with ancestors, and animated by the celebration of traditions and spirituality.
For centuries, representations of Africa have been filtered through a colonial lens, turning the other into an
object and stripping it of its voice. Today, a new generation of African curators, artists, and thinkers has
overturned this perspective, restoring photography to the center of an autonomous visual language capable
of influencing the worlds of visual arts, fashion, design, and architecture.
The exhibition is accompanied by a text by curator Kwami Obed Nyamakou.
Exhibiting artists:
Parmenas Awudza (Togo), Delali Ayivi (Togo/UK), Zododo Ekue & Elise Beltz (Togo/France), Fo Kwesi (Togo), Lina Mensah (Togo), Ras Sankara Agboka (Togo), Koffi Djifa Seble (Togo), Enok Tsevi (Togo), Wody Yawo (Togo), Kadessi Alassani & Ana Veronica (Togo/UK/Colombia), David Nana Opoku Ansah (Ghana), Federica Landi (Italy), Nicola Lo Calzo (Italy/France), Malick Welli & Charlotte Brathwaite (Senegal).
Curators:
Giulia Brivio, Ako Atikossie, Vittoria Fragapane