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Roberts Projects is pleased to present I Bring Home with Me, an exhibition of new work by Amoako Boafo and the artist’s third solo show with the gallery. Expanding on Boafo’s exploration and celebration of Blackness and its diverse subjectivities, the exhibition features a group of new paintings that are integrated within an architectural re-creation of the artist’s studio in Accra, Ghana, built to scale inside the gallery. Conceived by Boafo in collaboration with architect and designer Glenn DeRoche of DeRoche Projects, the installation reflects the creative energy of his cultural background, highlighting how his community personally influences his practice and holds formative emotional significance for the artist. The title of the exhibition, I Bring Home with Me, refers to Boafo's process of documenting images, sounds, people, stories and events that shape his sense of place.

Boafo’s portraits of Black subjects—ranging from friends and acquaintances to public figures and fictional characters—are exquisitely rendered in his graphic compositional approach, which incorporates patterns and paper transfers as well as a distinctive gestural mark-making that evokes 20th-century modernism from a contemporary point of view. The variety of subjects that Boafo depicts, as well as his method of applying paint with his fingertips, is a testament to the rich complexity of Black subjectivity and self-expression generated throughout the cultures of contemporary Africa and its global diaspora. Rather than directly engaging with the stereotypical representations of Black figures that have long dominated historical narratives and public discourse, Boafo instead focuses his attention on creating a space where his subjects can express their authentic selves and interior lives. This conceptual “space”—and the importance it holds for both the artist and his community—is materialized in the architectural structure of Boafo’s studio, which is then activated as a site of gathering and creative exchange by inviting contemplation and conversation among visitors.

Introducing the theme of “elsewhere within here” that connects individual components of the exhibition, the entrance to the gallery is adorned with monstera wallpaper, which echoes the vibrant patterns commonly seen in Boafo’s paintings. The boundaries between interior and exterior, intimate and ubiquitous, are taken apart and reassembled through architectural details such as grid windows and room dividers, which allow levity and lightness to fill the space. Paintings are embedded into the walls of the studio itself and similarly displayed within a wooden sculpture of folding panels that captures the spirit of nkyinkyim, an Adinkra symbol that represents ‘twisting.’ More than just a frame for Boafo’s paintings, this adaptive structure is a tribute to the resilience of his subjects as they navigate the challenges and changes of life.

Reflecting the multifunctional nature of Boafo’s studio in Accra, this architectural reimagination creates an open and fluid space where visitors can move freely and engage with each other as well as the paintings displayed within. The studio not only welcomes viewers to encounter Boafo’s work in a space that reflects the environment of their creation but also conjures the memory of gatherings that took place there and their undeniable impact on the artist’s work.

Unfolding on the walls surrounding the studio and in the two adjoining galleries are paintings that weave together Boafo’s family story with local Ghanaian history, demonstrating the interconnectedness of personal and historical narratives. Many of the figures portrayed in the works alternate between enjoying moments of rest and introspection or acts of play and recreation. Whether they meet the viewer’s gaze in a state of repose or dynamic tension, Boafo renders his subjects with an emotional and psychological depth that radiates through the surface of his paintings. Across the shifting yet interrelated group of subjects, settings and themes, this exhibition reveals the continued evolution of Boafo’s figurative language and his keen understanding of the many ways that history shapes the present and imagines the future.

About the Artist

Amoako Boafo (b.1984 Accra, Ghana; based in Accra, Ghana) has emerged as one of the leading artists of his generation, representing the contemporary culture of Africa and its diaspora. Depicting a wide range of subjects including friends, acquaintances and notable figures from public life, his portraits invite meaningful reflections on the diversity and complexity of Black subjectivity. Renowned for their vivid colors, bold compositions, patterns and textured surfaces, Boafo’s paintings embody a gestural mark-making evocative of 20th century modernism. His unique approach combines finger-painting and collaging on the surface of his canvases, imbuing his work with a singular tenderness that challenges stereotypical representations of Blackness. On this matter, Boafo has expressed, "the primary idea of my practice is representation: documenting, celebrating and showing new ways to approach Blackness."

Solo exhibitions include Amoako Boafo: I Have Been Here Before, Wooyang Museum of Contemporary Art, Gyeongju, South Korea (2025); Amoako Boafo: Proper Love, Belvedere Museum, Vienna, Austria (2024); Amoako Boafo: Soul of Black Folks, Museum of the African Diaspora, San Francisco, CA (2021), traveled to Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Houston, TX (2022), Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA (2023) and Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO (2024); Amoako Boafo: SINGULAR DUALITY: ME CAN MAKE WE, Roberts Projects, Culver City, CA (2021) and Amoako Boafo: I SEE ME, Roberts Projects, Culver City, CA (2019). Group exhibitions include Unlimited III: The African Family, Gallery 1957, Accra, Ghana (2024); Revolutions, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (2024); Accra! The Rise of a Global Art Community, Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH (2024); Recent Acquisitions in Contemporary Art, Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA (2024); When We See Us: A Century of Black Figuration in Painting, Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland (2024); Strike Fast, Dance Lightly: Artists on Boxing, The FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY (2023), travelled to Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, FL; Artists Inspired by Music: Interscope Reimagined, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA (2022); Behind This Wall, Longlati Foundation, Shanghai, China (2021); Punch, curated by Nina Chanel Abney, Deitch Projects, Los Angeles, CA (2019); Guerilla of Enlightenment, Rotor Center for Contemporary Art, Graz, Austria (2019) and Step Into the Darkness, Kunsthalle Vienna, Vienna, Austria (2016).

Boafo’s work is featured in numerous public collections, including The Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD; Blenheim Art Foundation, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, UK; Frye Art Museum; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; The Leopold Museum, Vienna, Austria; Longlati Foundation; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Miettinen Collection, Helsinki, Finland; Minneapolis Art Institute, Minneapolis, MN; Rubell Museum, Miami, FL; The Louis Vuitton Foundation, Paris, France and Colección SOLO, Madrid, Spain, among others.

About DeRoche Projects

DeRoche Projects is an Accra-based architecture and design practice working globally to create innovative, community driven spaces. Founded by Glenn DeRoche, who brings over 15 years of experience delivering major cultural, civic and commercial projects, the studio works across various scales from buildings to objects.

Their work thrives within productive tensions: digital explorations of form meet hands-on making, high-tech precision intersecting low-tech ingenuity, and contemporary construction practices meet indigenous building traditions. These complementary forces shape a methodology inherently planet-positive, future-forward, and deeply connected to the layers of place and time. Sustainability isn’t approached as a checklist; it’s deeply embedded in the design process. Their projects actively foster ecological and social resilience through regenerative materials, passive design strategies, and resource-conscious construction methods.

Notable projects and collaborations include Backyard Community Club, a tennis training facility and community hub in Accra; dot.ateliers | Ogbojo Residency, a residency for writers and curators in Accra, named Architect’s Newspaper’s Editor’s Pick in the 2024 Best in Design Awards; exhibition design for Amoako Boafo’s I Do Not Come To You By Chance at Gagosian Mayfair gallery in London; The Volta Pavilion, recently exhibited at the Belvedere Museum in Vienna; and The Surf Ghana Collective, exhibited at the 2022 Venice Architecture Biennale and awarded a 2023 Holcim Gold Award for Sustainable Construction, recognized by the jury as “an innovative project that creates a dynamic community space, empowering youth and promoting responsible tourism through a cooperative approach”.

In November 2025, DeRoche Projects was nominated for the AR Emerging Awards—an international prize established by The Architectural Review “to grant early recognition to young designers and celebrate the architectural stars of tomorrow.”