Kwesi Owusu is a Ghanaian writer, filmmaker, and creative entrepreneur. He is considered "one of Ghana’s leading filmmakers and communications specialists" and is also the author of five books.[1] In the 1980s, he was a founding member of the influential pan-African performance group African Dawn. Since 2022, Owusu has hosted the African Dawn podcast, covering "untold stories" from Africa's cultural history as well as current trends in the arts world.[2]
Continuing to be based in England, in the 1980s, Owusu co-founded the pan-African poetry and music group, African Dawn, together with Sheikh Gueye and Wanjiku Kiarie, later joined by Nii Noi Nortey,[6]Merle Collins, Wala Danga, and Vico Mensah.[4][7] Described as "modern-day griots",[8] African Dawn released four albums, and among other activities worked with Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o on the 1984 stage production The Trial of Dedan Kimathi.[4] Commenting on the aesthetics used by African Dawn, Ngũgĩ stated: "For Owusu, the fusion of art forms characteristic of orature is what gives to black artists an international character as artists and cultural workers defying formal definitions of the geopolitical to connect with centres of inspiration in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean without relinquishing their claims to their legitimate space within Britain and Europe. Orature so conceived is against the ghetto and the margin."[9]
Writing
In 1986, Owusu published the book The Struggle for Black Arts in Britain (about establishing an authentic Black arts tradition in the UK, and the links between popular art, activism and Black rebellion),[10] followed in 1987 by Behind the Masquerade, written with Jacob Ross, on the Notting Hill Carnival.[11]
Owusu edited Storms of the Heart: An Anthology of Black Arts and Culture (1988) and Black British Culture and Society: A Text Reader in 2000. Scholar and critical theorist Homi K. Bhabha in a review of Storms of the Heart for Art Monthly stated: "There is a storm at the heart of this book, a turbulence that accompanies the emergence of contemporary Black culture, that is reflected in the form of the text itself. ...and perhaps the most exciting reorganisation of cultural space that is presaged in this book, for me at least, is its effective refusal of a unitary concept of culture."[12]
In 2012, Owusu published Ghana Highlife Music, co-authored with African music specialist Florent Mazzoleni.[13][14]
Film
Owusu's film career began in the 1980s when he was an apprentice producer and director with Channel 4's Cinema Action. In 1988, he and Kwate Nee-Owoo made Ouaga, a documentary on African cinema, and their feature film Ama – the first African film to be shot in London[15] – was released to much acclaim in 1992, screened in Ghana, London, Cannes and elsewhere internationally.[4]
Among the numerous films Owusu has directed are Love in a Cold Climate (1990),[16]Segrin Africa (1993) and, from 2003, with the multi-media production house Creative Storm[17] and Mildred Samuel,[18]Water is Life (2003), The Lights Have Gone Out Again (2009),[19]Ghana's Plastic Waste Menace (2009), Singing For Freedom (2010), Environmental Health Channel (2013) and the Maternal Health Channel Television Series (2013),[20][21][22] including screenings at the first Environmental Film Festival of Accra.[23][24] Film producer and journalist Afua Hirsch in a review for The Guardian stated: "The documentaries tell powerful real-life stories. Creative Storm documentaries have a reputation for sparking change in Ghana. Its 2003, environmental documentary Water Is Life influenced a change in water policy, from privatisation to a public-private partnership, and a year-long series the team produced, the Environment Channel, in 2010, was praised for stimulating debate about environmental challenges."[25]
Owusu was on the editorial board of Artrage magazine, was a research associate of the University of Cambridge's African Studies Centre,[4] and has taught at universities in the UK and the US.[2]
Owusu was head of the Africa Initiative of the effective Jubilee 2000 campaign for debt cancellation for the poorest countries.[17][27]
In 2003, he opened the media production house Creative Storm, dedicating the launch to the work of musician Mac Tontoh of Osibisa,[17] and subsequently launching other works of Ghanaian music and film.[28]
^Serumaga, Mary (10 February 2015). "African dawn". King's Review. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
^Ngũgĩ, wa Thiong'o (1998). "Oral Power and Europhone Glory". Penpoints, Gunpoints, and Dreams: Towards a Critical Theory of the Arts and the State in Africa. Clarendon Press. p. 115. ISBN9780191583377.