Echoes of Home

 

Echoes of Home- Family, Heritage and Identity Across Africa

Featuring

Mpho Feni (South Africa)

Lionel Mbayiwa (Zimbabwe)

Olamide Ogunade (Nigeria)

28 May – 02 July 2026

 

In a world that is increasingly interconnected, the notion of “home” has become both expanded and unsettled. The digital age has collapsed distances, allowing cultures, ideas and influences to move fluidly across borders. What was once local is now global. What was once inherited is now constantly reinterpreted. Within this landscape, many find themselves navigating a quiet tension between tradition and change, between inherited value systems and contemporary realities.

Echoes of Home brings together three artists from across the African continent to reflect on this shifting terrain. Through their distinct practices, Lionel Mbayiwa, Olamide Ogunade and Mpho Feni explore how identity is shaped, carried and redefined through different expressions of home — as ancestry, as memory, and as lived experience.

For Mbayiwa, home exists within the realm of ancestral knowledge and cultural mythology. Drawing from Shona cosmology and oral traditions, his work speaks to the enduring presence of inherited wisdom in contemporary life. In a world where identity is increasingly influenced by global media and external narratives, his figures act as intermediaries between past and present — reminding us that heritage is not static, but a living system of guidance. His work suggests that within the complexities of modern life, cultural memory remains a compass.

Ogunade approaches the idea of home through a more introspective lens. His compositions, often layered with personal references and symbolic elements such as bubbles, reflect the fragile and transient nature of identity. Here, home is not fixed in geography or tradition, but exists within memory — shaped by personal history, experience, and the passage of time. His work captures a sense of quiet uncertainty, where the past lingers gently within the present, and identity is continuously forming.

In contrast, Feni grounds the notion of home within the immediacy of lived experience. His paintings draw from scenes of family life — gatherings, shared rituals, and moments of observation — where values are not taught explicitly, but absorbed through presence and participation. These works speak to the quiet continuity of tradition: the passing down of humility, respect and togetherness through everyday interactions. In Feni’s world, home is not abstract, but deeply rooted in the rhythms of communal life.

Together, these three practices offer a layered understanding of what it means to belong in a rapidly changing world. While the structures that once defined identity may no longer hold in the same way, the need for grounding remains. Echoes of Home does not attempt to resolve this tension, but instead sits within it — acknowledging both the fluidity of contemporary identity and the enduring pull of heritage.

In bringing these perspectives into dialogue, the exhibition reflects a broader, pan-African sensibility. It speaks not only to the specific cultural contexts from which these artists emerge, but also to a universal condition: the search for meaning, belonging and continuity in a time of constant movement and noise.

What emerges is not a singular definition of home, but a series of echoes — fragments of memory, tradition and experience that continue to shape who we are. In listening closely to these echoes, we are invited to consider our own points of return. In a world that is always shifting, what remains? And what, ultimately, do we carry with us?

 

Artists

 
 

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