Kyiv's Khanenko Museum has taken a bold step towards decolonization by hosting an exhibition on Africa that shatters the conventional way of approaching the continent. Titled "Africa Direct," the show brings together 40 works from 18 African countries, all collected over two decades by a Ukrainian couple who have worked extensively in public health. The collection is not your typical ethnographic display but instead focuses on the sensual engagement with African art and material culture – things made to be touched, carried, and embraced.
The exhibition reflects Ukraine's cultural shift towards recognizing that decolonization is not only about geopolitics but also about epistemology. By displaying artifacts that originated from diverse cultures, the museum blurs geographical boundaries and highlights the interconnectedness of human experiences. "We are both freedom fighters," declared Anika Johnson, a long-time resident of Ukraine, drawing parallels between Africa's fight against colonialism and Ukraine's struggle for independence.
One striking piece from north-western Nigeria stands out – a terracotta vessel with a face in relief that gazes into an invisible distance. The artisan behind it made it for funerary purposes, conveying care, mourning, and continuity. Nearby, an angel painted on the parchment of a Christian Ethiopian healing scroll also stares with wide eyes meant to protect from evil.
The exhibition is conceived as an experiment in redefining museum roles during times of resistance. Ukraine has traditionally looked westward and inward but now turning southward allows it to engage in global conversations on its own terms, de-colonizing narratives of art and empire by addressing racism and rethinking knowledge production. The show unfolds against a backdrop that complicates any easy idealism due to tensions between Ukraine and African states with Russian influence.
The process is unfolding under bombardment giving it particular gravity, as the museum staff who are mostly in their 20s and 30s have committed themselves to this institution and the city they love. Amidst war, culture remains a form of civic resilience and critical reflection. The Khanenko Museum stands by its principle that continuity, intelligence, and a critical engagement with inherited narratives are essential – neither tragic nor heroic but necessary.
The exhibition reflects Ukraine's cultural shift towards recognizing that decolonization is not only about geopolitics but also about epistemology. By displaying artifacts that originated from diverse cultures, the museum blurs geographical boundaries and highlights the interconnectedness of human experiences. "We are both freedom fighters," declared Anika Johnson, a long-time resident of Ukraine, drawing parallels between Africa's fight against colonialism and Ukraine's struggle for independence.
One striking piece from north-western Nigeria stands out – a terracotta vessel with a face in relief that gazes into an invisible distance. The artisan behind it made it for funerary purposes, conveying care, mourning, and continuity. Nearby, an angel painted on the parchment of a Christian Ethiopian healing scroll also stares with wide eyes meant to protect from evil.
The exhibition is conceived as an experiment in redefining museum roles during times of resistance. Ukraine has traditionally looked westward and inward but now turning southward allows it to engage in global conversations on its own terms, de-colonizing narratives of art and empire by addressing racism and rethinking knowledge production. The show unfolds against a backdrop that complicates any easy idealism due to tensions between Ukraine and African states with Russian influence.
The process is unfolding under bombardment giving it particular gravity, as the museum staff who are mostly in their 20s and 30s have committed themselves to this institution and the city they love. Amidst war, culture remains a form of civic resilience and critical reflection. The Khanenko Museum stands by its principle that continuity, intelligence, and a critical engagement with inherited narratives are essential – neither tragic nor heroic but necessary.