Kwame Akoto-Bamfo's first major exhibition was during the 60th
Independence Day (Ghana) Celebration when he outdoored Nkyinkyim Installation sculptures of over 1,200 concrete portrait heads of people of African descent at the
Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum in an exhibition dubbed ‘Faux-Reedom’. Kwame used the strong imagery of life-size sculpted heads to question Ghana's independence and draw international attention to Ghana's
neo-colonial legacies. Kwame's work toes a fine line between
public art and
activism. His works reference colonial legacies,
racial justice,
racial equity, healing and
restorative justice. Kwame's travelling exhibition Blank Slate Palimpsest Monument, also known as the
Blank Slate Monument was unveiled in Ghana in 2019 and toured the United States, visiting notable places of historic significance to the 'African American Experience' such as Selma, Harlem and New York City's Times Square, where the monument was unveiled during the sentencing of
Derek Chauvin for the murder of
George Floyd. Other notable stops include Louisville Kentucky, Detroit's
Motown Museum, Chicago's
DuSable Museum and The
King Center in Atlanta.
Nkyinkyim Installation The Nkyinkyim Installation is an installation focused on African history and heritage, including a section regarding enslaved Africans. The installation is associated with The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, the Legacy Museum, and the works Dirge Across Time and Melancholic Lullabies. ==Other activities==