Ife Nii Owoo
Ife Nii-Owoo is a visual artist, graphic designer, and educator. She studied African Visual Arts at the Institute of African Studies in Accra, Ghana, and lived in London, England, and Africa for nine years. She holds a BFA from Syracuse University and a Post Graduate Certificate in Design from the London School of Communications (England). In 1978 she was a Candidate for a Masters of African Visual Arts at the Institute of African Studies in Accra, Ghana. Born and raised in Philadelphia, to which she returned in 1981, she has been part of a ground-breaking generation of African American women artists and designers pushing through barriers, part of and influenced by the nation’s Black Arts, and AfroFuturists movements.
The relevance and shaping presence of history in our lives and the power of myth and symbol—have long been essential themes for Ife, from her early days as an expatriate artist living and working in Ghana, West Africa, through her political and creative practice. In her mixed media works, she explores African American history and family traditions, incorporating meaningful artifacts, images, and symbols. She is drawn to communicating across barriers: visually and practically. She uses collage and mixed media, Adinkra and various African writing symbols and the use of repeated patterning of cloth among her materials.
Her work has been included in shows at the African American Museum in Philadelphia, Woodmere Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA, African American Museum of Art and Culture, New Orleans, LA, Art + Peace Museum in Philadelphia, Moore College of Art Gallery and Community Folk Art Center, Syracuse, New York. In 2019 she created the set designs and digital installations for the Kulu Mele African Dance and Drum Ensemble premiere production of “Ogun & the People” at the Annenburg Theatre. In 2021, “Fans of Homage” her series of 20 hand crafted collaged and painted mixed media fans were on exhibit at the Philadelphia Airport. In her site-specific public art commissions, she has created work that comes from and inspires dialogue about suppressed histories, freedom, and African American community visions of and struggles for justice. In her community engagement projects like the President’s House [2010], Free Library of Philadelphia-Logan Branch [2016]), and Elephants on the Avenue: Race, Class, and Community in Historic Germantown [2015-2017]) Ife created settings for people to encounter themselves and the past. In her President’s House commission, visitors step into the footprint of the very place where enslaved Africans “served” the first U.S. President. It is a contemplative and sacred space that transports you: and you feel a connection. Ife achieves the same live response from library-goers at her site-specific commission for the Free Library: children stand mesmerized, following the words moving through her design.
Both Ife’s graphic design and marketing practice, and her artistic practice, reflect her skill in surfacing the stories behind the stories and crafting vehicles through which people can see themselves reflected in challenging and satisfying ways. The scale and textural qualities of her public works have affinities to stage sets; they serve as backgrounds that re-contextualize visitor experience of space.
Ife Nii-Owoo has more than 30 years of professional design experience. She founded IFE designs + Associates, a full-service design firm based in Philadelphia and Atlanta, providing strategic creative thinking, graphic design, advertising, and website development to corporate and non-profit clients. The firm was committed to socially responsible design solutions that communicate to and about the needs of diverse communities—offering experience in and insight about developing creative and value-added solutions that help clients working in various emerging markets.
Ife has received numerous awards, recognitions, and grants including the New Courtland 22-23 Fellowship, Leeway Transformation Award (TLA) (2022) and Art & Change Award (2008), PRAME (Public Relations, Advertising, and Marketing Excellence) Award for advertising/print ad design (2000); Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau/ Multicultural Affairs Congress (MAC) Share The Heritage Award (2001).
Awarded Grants
2024
Window of Opportunity Grant (WOO)
Overview
Ife Nii Owoo has the opportunity to present a solo exhibition at Allens Lane Art Center in Mt. Airy. Entitled Shape of My Heart, this exhibition features 15 new works including paintings, collages, works on paper, and a small installation, all crafted over the past year as she processed grief after losing her partner to lung cancer. This exhibition is slated to run from October 5th to November 5th, 2024, with an opening reception taking place on Saturday, October 5th from 5-8pm. As a special highlight during the opening, there will be an artist talk to uncover the inspiration behind Ife’s work and a conversation with Vashti Dubois, Executive Director of The Colored Girls Museum.
The WOO Grant will assist with hiring a photographer to document the exhibition, as well as provide finishing funds for framing and art supplies.
2022
Leeway Transformation Award (LTA)
Overview
Ife Nii-Owoo is a visual artist, graphic designer, and public artist. She studied African Visual Arts at the Institute of African Studies in Accra, Ghana, and lived in London, and Ghana, for nine years. She holds a BFA from Syracuse University and a Post Graduate Certificate in Design from the London School of Communications (England). Born and raised in Philadelphia, her work has been included in shows at the African American Museum in Philadelphia, Woodmere Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA, African American Museum of Art and Culture, New Orleans, LA, Art + Peace Museum in Philadelphia, Moore College of Art Gallery and Community Folk Art Center, Syracuse, New York. In addition to her studio practice, she includes public engagement on racial justice in her site-specific work.
2021
Residencies
Overview
Fleisher Art Memorial x Leeway Foundation’s 2021 Visual Artist-in-Residence, Ife Nii Owoo (ACG ‘07) will develop 7-10 new works, including hand crafted fans, artist books, and an installation that speaks to the power of myth and symbol in African spiritual practice and diasporan cultures and how it translates into a visual art form
Ife’s new work will build on her experience in scene and stage design, influenced by her travel to Cuba with Kulu Mele African Dance and Drum Ensemble for a weeklong residency with Ballet Folklórico Cutumba in 2018. As part of this residency, Ife will continue to experiment with her artistic practice, as well as engage Fleisher’s community in visualizing and dealing with spiritual, political, and cultural change through art-making. In a time when COVID-19 has brought to the surface police violence against black and brown people, healthcare inequities, and climate change that threatens to devastate our future, Ife’s work seeks to honor life, loss, and healing.
2007
Art and Change Grant (ACG)
Overview
Ife plans to create a series of mixed media and collage pieces for her first solo show in over 30 years dealing with two distinct topics: slavery and the contradictions of democracy in the United States and her own family history from Germantown to London to Africa. This show, at the Greene Street Artists Co-Op, will set the stage for further community dialogue on the role of women artists of color, specifically in Germantown, and their unique challenges to exhibit their work.