AKWAABA!

Welcome! Africa is in great transition. One of them is the large urbanization and alienation of traditional life and culture - the same process as other countries going thru modernization has experienced. After years as part time African muting to the West African country Ghana - with mane camp in Norway Scandinavia - I have learned to love the culture, and the rich art work. "My Africa" is a celebration of the combination of beautiful african images and the Scandinavian make-it-yourself approach to life. I intend to share how traditions can be kept alive in modern life style, as well as present practical suggestions to others that try to combine multicultural family life. I can be contacted for consultancy work in both Ghana and Norway.

søndag 12. desember 2010

3rd Sunday of Advent

The third light of Advent shines while we elaborate over a wonderful weekend.

torsdag 9. desember 2010

Two Angels at my table

Christmas is also about angels. I am lucky enough to have two of them in my house. As any mother I always look for good role models and images to identify with for my children. Living in Norway, it is still hard to find images showing that angels comes in all colors. I have therefor made some to underline that fact.
Two cast figures made in ready-made forms. The coloring didn´t mix well, but the girls were happy with the result and keep each their sample by their bed.
These two angels hanging at our entrance hall during advent and christmas did not have a politically correct birth, but they are still popular images in the home. After the holidays there is always sales on products that were not soled for its season. Last year I found some ginger bread dolls at 70% off. With some dressing and new hear, they became exactly what I were looking for.



2.nd Sunday of Advent

søndag 28. november 2010

fredag 26. november 2010

Inspirations from Sirigu




As Philip Briggs describes it in his Ghana Guide, nestled against the Burkina Faso border, just north of Bolgatanga - Sirigu is known for its pottery and basketwork produced by its women as an extra income outside the harvest seasons. Its colors and images is found in the villages symbolic wall paintings with which these female artists decorate their characteristically Sahelian flat-roofed adobe houses. Its uniqueness made first page on the 4th addition of the "must have" travelers guide to Ghana.










Old traditions applied in contemporary buildings and art craft.

If you want to stay and learn more about the place and the art work you can stay at the Sirigu Woman´s Organization for Pottery and Art (SWOPA), established in 1997 to maintain the artwork and secure the income of the local women. Although you can by their work in galleries in Accra, the atmosphere and the surroundings of SWOP is worthwhile visiting. You also get a chance to learn how the work is done.

When we visited the place in July 2008 the activity was low, as the women were busy working on their land. We still, however got a good introduction to the place and the work undertaken.
In 2002 Kofi Annan came to visit, the importance of the visit is expressed in a statue made at the site.

The kraals of Larabanga


Larabanga at the borderline of the beautiful Mole national park in the northern region of Ghana is a place we often retur to. The place is surrounded by stonning nature and wilde life, history, magic and rich cultural heritage.

It is described as the southerly accessible example of the traditional flat-roofed mud kraals in the country. The roofs are accessible with a wood leather, and the terrace on top has been an inspiration when we developed our own modern home in Ghana.

The first pictures shows the interior of the one-room building. While the last picture in the collage shows the outdoor kitchen, with its fireplace for cooking, the drying of palm nuts. On the wall in the background you can see the characteristic calendar of the area.


torsdag 11. november 2010

Toys from waste fabric - "bags of peas"


The left over fabric from the blue bedroom has been used to activate and teach the children how to use the sewing machine. As the kids´s handball team needed Bags filled with peas for their training activities, we new exactly what to make. You can find tutorial and suggestions for usage here, at UnePune´s blog.




Finally ready to play!

tirsdag 9. november 2010

Blue wave Bedroom design

When designing a room I normally choose a theme or a color from natures own pallet to make a holistic impression. The young girl who was moving into this bedroom preferred blue, and had picked a print she wanted for curtains at the market in Kumasi, as a start.


A local carpenter in Accra has made both beds, bed cabinets and curtain sheds from my drawings. Today cheaper alternatives can be found in stores importing from outside, however - without supporting local production local work shops will have to close down.



As I intend supporting local craft for production, the curtain fabric was brought to a nearby seamstress. Unfortunately, she like so many others had stopped using Ghanaian fabric and travelled to imported all their material from China. No problem, as I could make my own curtains, but sad for those making the wax print.

After adding some gold textile paint, a pice of the print for the curtains was framed to make a matching decor.

Based on the initial choice of fabric I found a set of matching prints in Tamale. The traditional prints was used to saw decorating pillows, and to improved the look of some old lamp shades. The dolls and the painting are fun details, indicating that this is the room of a young girl, and her friends.














The furniture in the room was designed to be flexible. The beds can easily be parted, and can easily room two people each when the house is crowded. Very convenient when the African extended family comes visiting!

The basic blue color follows into the attached bedroom. The blue and yellow basket matches the towels that goes with the room.




Marriage of two cultures


A cross cultural wedding is a golden opportunity of bringing together the beauty of two cultures, rather than dressing in what has become a uniformed white dressed bride and black suited groom. At left the traditional Ashanti Kente and Norwegian Bunad. (Foto Vedlog)



Below the Norwegian designer Lise Sjåk Bræk has married the two costumes in a Norwegian dress made with woven Kente fabric.


Kente was traditionally used by the royals. It is made up of a number of fine woven strips that is sawn together into a larger pice, often made by young boys. Different color combination and patterns give different meanings, and represents different locations - as do the various Norwegian bunads.














(Foto Opoku)
Various kente patterns from Ghana and Togo.
(Foto Sjåk Bræk)

tirsdag 15. juni 2010

Ghanian-Norwegian cultural exchang

In meetings with others you learn more about your self. In our school exchange program, sharing culture is central, as you can see in the imovie by pressing here, or by clicking on the picture.. Some of these kids performed their traditional dances for the first time when meeting pen-pals from across the world for the first time. The Norwegian kids and teachers are wearing traditional costumes from both Ghana and Norway when welcoming their long time pen-pals. The Norwegian school has their own Ghanaian dance group – as part of opening up the understanding of “others” at the school.