New African Masquerades: Artistic Innovations and Collaborations highlights the stories of four contemporary masquerade artists, their motivations, artistic choices, and the patronage and economic networks with which they engage. Through the presentation of works of Chief Ekpenyong Bassey Nsa (Nigeria), David Sanou (Burkina Faso), Sheku “Goldenfinger” Fofanah (Sierra Leone), and Hervé Youmbi (Cameroon), the exhibition offers fresh research models for contemporary masquerade, bringing to the fore issues relating to restitution, ownership, and research ethics.

A collaboration between an international team of scholars and artists, this is the first major exhibition on contemporary West African masquerade artists to focus on individual creators rather than the typical presentation of masquerades as products of entire cultures, which undermines the nuanced and layered stories that individual artists and masquerades tell.

Organized by the New Orleans Museum of Art in partnership with Musée des Civilisations Noires (Museum of Black Civilizations), Dakar, Senegal

David Sanou in the studio of André Sanou. Compromise Kimi Masquerade Ensemble honoring André Sanou (headpiece); the maker of the body requests anonymity. Commissioned for Fitchburg Art Museum in 2022. Courtesy of the New Orleans Museum of Art. Photo: Sesthasak Boonchai

Exhibition supporters


The Frist Art Museum is supported in part by

The Frist Foundation, the Tennessee Arts Commission, and the National Endowment for the Arts