Ibrahim Mahama Purple Hibiscus
A new artwork by Ibrahim Mahama transforms the Lakeside Terrace at the Barbican Centre, enveloping the building’s iconic concrete walls with approximately 2000 square metres of bespoke woven cloth.
Purple Hibiscus has been created in collaboration with hundreds of craftspeople from Tamale in Ghana where the colossal panels of pink and purple fabric have been woven and sewn by hand, to be fitted to the brutalist planes of our building.
Image: brahim Mahama’s Purple Hibiscus during installation at the Barbican, 2024.Courtesy Ibrahim Mahama, Red Clay Tamale, Barbican Centre, London and White Cube. Image above: Ibrahim Mahama, Purple Hibiscus, 2023-24.
100 ‘batakaris’ – robes worn by Ghanaian kings – are embroidered onto the artwork. Often saved by families over generations, these precious textiles carry the imprints of the figures they once clothed, signifying the continued relevance of intergenerational knowledge. Ibrahim Mahama holds a deep interest in the life cycles of textiles and what can be learnt from the historical memories embedded within them.
Image: brahim Mahama, Purple Hibiscus, 2023-24.
Purple Hibiscus is part of Unravel: The Power & Politics of Textiles in Art.
Find out more and plan your visit:
www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2024/event/ibrahim-mahama-purple-hibiscus