Tag Archives: Poet

Africa Re-Union Debuts at FNB Art Joburg: Africa Turns the Map, the Table and the Story

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, 9 September 2025/African Media Agency (AMA)/- The Africa Re-Union, a landmark artistic initiative, is to be unveiled at the FNB Art Joburg, transforming the fair into a stage of reclamation and imagination, where art became manifesto and memory became movement. It reverses the context of the infamous 1884 Berlin Conference — where Africa was carved and divided without consent — by restoring the continent as author of its own story and architect of its own destiny.

Conceived and co-created by pan-African thinker and founder of Brand Africa, Thebe Ikalafeng, realised on canvas by South African artist Mark Modimola, and anchored in history by Professor Kwesi DLS Prah, the Africa Re-Union is not simply an artwork but a provocative declaration to reimagine the African story and history.

The monumental 3m x 2m canvas inverts Africa—literally and philosophically—using the

Equal Earth projection to restore the continent’s true scale and dignity. Rendered without

borders, it corrects centuries of cartographic distortion that made Africa appear small, coinciding with Africa No Filter, Speak Up Africa and the African Union’s recent call to rectify the misrepresentation of Africa in global maps. The work amplifies the broader Correct the Map campaign, a movement that challenges outdated cartography and calls for equal-area maps that restore Africa’s true size, scale, and significance in the world, and Brand Africa’s broader mission to contribute to the AU 2063 agenda for an integrated, peaceful, and prosperous Africa.

At the heart of the work stands a round table — because here there is no hierarchy, every voice matters equally. Seated are some of the diverse and impactful voices that have shaped Africa’s past and are re-imagining its future: Ghana’s founding president Kwame Nkrumah, Kenyan environmental advocate Wangari Maathai, South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, the frontline independence leaders Julius Nyerere and Kenneth Kaunda, host of hte founding of the OAU, Haile Selassie, Cabo Verde and Guinea Bissau’s Amílcar Cabral, Senegalese thought leaders Léopold Senghor and Cheikh Anta Diop, proponent of the United States of Africa, Muammar Gaddafi, Nigerian writer, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, youth activist Zulaikha Patel, the diaspora W.E.B. Du Bois, Dambisa Moyo and freed slave Sojourner Truth, South African sanusis, South African singer, Mirriam Makeba, the first artist to address the United Nations in 1963, cultural activist and sanusi, Credo Mutwa, pan-African advocate for a brand-led renaissance and convenor, Thebe Ikalafeng, and advocate of the African renaissance, former South African president, Thabo Mbeki. Their presence affirms that Africa’s story has always had authors—even when unrecognised. It’s a gathering of the diaspora, the enslaved whose voices were stolen, the revolutionaries and artists, the freedom fighters and feminists, writers, sanusis, and youth across the private and public sectors and the civil service. Together, they embody the unfinished conversation of Africa’s identity, memory and destiny.

One chair is left empty at the table. It is the most important seat of all — a call to action. It belongs to the unborn child who will inherit this Africa, the ancestor whose spirit still hovers, the diaspora longing to remain rooted, and every African alive today who must rise, sit, and take their rightful place at the table of history. The empty chair is not absence; it is invitation.

In a symbolic act of permanence, the original canvas will not be sold. Ikalafeng has instead gifted it to the UNISA Art Gallery, ensuring the work lives where Africa’s future is being studied and shaped. At the largest university on the continent, Africa Re-Union will be preserved not as a commodity, but as a covenant — a manifesto for generations to come. Only 2063 signed limited reproductions will be made available to ensure the conversation goes far. The number is a reminder of the AU agenda 2063 for an integrated, peaceful and prosperous Africa.

“The Africa Re-Union is not a return to the 1884 Berlin Conference table, but the setting of our own table: equal, sovereign, and unapologetically African. It is both remembrance and declaration: Africa is whole again. This time, no one will define us but us,” says Thebe Ikalafeng, Conceptual Author and Chief Curator of the Africa Re-Union.

“For me, Africa Re-Union is about shifting the canvas of our imagination. It’s to challenge how we see ourselves and how the world sees us; not as fragmented, diminished, or peripheral, but as whole, central and sovereign. This work is both a mirror and a map, and reflects our past, but points us toward a future we must author ourselves,” says Mark Modimola, Visual Artist of the Africa Re-Union.

“Johannesburg has always been a city of convergence, where Africa meets the world. To host the Africa Re-Union at FNB Art Joburg affirms our city’s role as a crucible of ideas, creativity and cultural leadership. This is more than an artwork — it is a call to re-centre Africa in history and in the future,” said Vuyisile Mshudulu, Director of Arts, Culture and Heritage for the City of Johannesburg.

“Correcting the map is about more than geography. It’s about dignity. The way Africa is represented shapes how the world sees us, and how we see ourselves. The Africa Re-Union is a bold and creative way of reclaiming that story, insisting that Africa is seen in its true scale, power and possibility,” said Moky Makura, Executive Director of Africa No Filter.

The Africa Re-Union was unveiled at the 18th FNB Joburg Art Fair opening night, in a live performance led by celebrated actor Aubrey Poo and acclaimed poet Napo Mashiane, with costumes designed by award-winning wardrobe stylist, Sheli Masondo. The performance re-imagines the infamous 1884 Berlin Conference, but this time with African agency, voice, and vision at the table.

The Africa Re-Union, part of the broader Correct the Map campaign, a movement that challenges outdated cartography and calls for equal-area maps that restore Africa’s true size, scale and significance in the world launched in partnership with the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) and Africa No Filter, and supported by Brand South Africa, comes at a historic moment. At a time when Africa No Filter, Speak Up Africa and the African Union have called for the world to redress centuries of distorted representations of Africa’s size in global maps, and as the continent prepares to host its first-ever G20 Summit in 2025, the initiative is a milestone in Africa’s growing agency on the international stage.

The Africa Re-Union is a timely reminder that Africa’s voice, creativity and unity are central to creating a Better Africa for a Better World.

Distributed by African Media Agency on behalf of Africa Re-Union

MEDIA CONTACT: 

South Africa

Maria McCloy

(+27) 082 340 0262

mccloypr@gmail.com

International

Eloine Barry

(+255) 07 49 012 888 

eloine.barry@amediaagency.com

UK

Moky Makura

(+44 7939 485160)

moky@africanofilter.org

Thebe Ikalafeng

(+27 82 447 9130)

thebe@brand.africa

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The Poetic Wealth of Nikki Giovanni

The legendary African American poet Nikki Giovanni passed away this week at the age of 81. Since fiercely coming onto the scene during the Black Power movement of the 1960s, Giovanni established a rich and powerful literary legacy. Her work often celebrated the power of Black joy contained within the fight for civil rights by reminding readers that “Black love is Black wealth”.

Today on the show, we feature a conversation between Rachel Martin, host of NPR’s Wild Card, and Nikki Giovanni from earlier this year.

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The Sunday Story: An Indian Political Scandal

Starting in 2018, sixteen people were arrested in India for allegedly plotting to assassinate Prime Minister Narendra Modi. They included professors, a poet, trade unionists and members of an improv acting troupe. Even an elderly Jesuit priest.

The evidence against them, discovered on their electronic devices, appears damning: minutes of terror cell meetings, emails to banned Maoist rebels and a letter suggesting a suicide attack on Modi.

Today, fifteen defendants continue to await trial. They all say they were falsely accused and that the evidence against them was fabricated and planted by hackers in order to silence them. Digital forensic investigators not only agree but say Modi’s own government may be involved.

In this episode of The Sunday Story, NPR’s Lauren Frayer follows the twists and turns of what Indian police say was a complex plot to sabotage Modi’s government, and that defendants say was a setup. One of the defendants, the Rev. Stan Swamy, died while fighting to clear his name.

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Malawi’s Essyvert to release her poet EP

young Essyvert real name Esther Ndhlozi

By Donata Mpochela

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)- At the age of 16, like a butterfly emerging from its cocoon, young Essyvert real name Esther Ndhlozi is slowly proving to the world that she is becoming a young queen of Nyasa in the poetry industry.

The Mzuzu based young poet has braved the giant dominated poetry industry to announce that she will release her first Extended Playlist-EP dubbed ‘SHE’ on 1st June 2020.

Tender, calm perhaps one can say very innocent but when it comes to spoken word poetry the young poet ‘a darling to a pen and paper’ grows tall to face the world like a fearless hungry lion on a hunt. She means business.

Essyvert, who started writing poems at the age of 12, reveals that “SHE” has been structured with two positive meanings which are the main pillars of the project.

“I chose SHE because most of the pieces in the EP are based on a girl’s perspective and SHE is an abbreviation of So Here comes Essyvert; one way of introducing myself to the entertainment industry,” she said.

Three motives, according to Essyvert, pushed her to come up with the EP, one of which is to satisfy her wish of becoming an agent for social Change.

“As a youth, I think this is one of many ways we can make our voices be heard by authorities, so this is it. I’m very sure that issues being articulated in this EP are not only the work of my voice by also these are Voices of the voiceless,” she articulates.

Most importantly the EP is an ode to her departed sister, Christina, who was also a budding poet.

“Finally i chose to release in honor of Late Christina Ndhlozi who was a great poet and sister so doing this is actually continuing her legacy and celebrating her good deeds whilst we she was alive,” she said.

Transformation, Fighter (a duet with Sarasue), Dear Lord, Black girl magic, and the EP’s title SHE are some of the poems that have been included in her debut EP.

All the 7 poems have been mastered and produced by a wonder kid Chawa Beats of Excel Music in Mzuzu.