Christie Ferreira

Angola

"Guided by contemporary cubist influences and an attentive listening to inner feeling, Christie creates graphic compositions that oscillate between the abstract and the figurative. For her, painting transcends representation—it becomes an act of touching what words cannot reach. Each gesture transforms emotion into matter, shaping encounters between the visible and the invisible, the said and the unsayable. In this space, Christie’s art reveals itself as a dialogue of sensations, where intuition and form converge to open pathways into the poetic and the profound."

MEET

Christie Ferreira

Christie Ferreira was born on September 30, 1991, in Luanda, Angola, and currently lives in Portugal. She is a multidisciplinary Angolan artist whose practice emerges from a deep engagement with emotion, the body, and intuition. Her work unfolds through symbolic and sensorial dimensions, weaving visual languages that speak to both memory and imagination.

FROM OUR BLOGUE
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Forbes África Lusófona Highlights Afrikanizm’s Model for Building the African Art Economy

In an op-ed for Forbes África Lusófona, João Boavida, founder of Afrikanizm Art, lays out a bold new vision for African art. He argues that the future lies not in charity, but in structure, visibility, and fair opportunity. Through a model grounded in equity, mentorship, and sustainable growth, Afrikanizm Art is helping transform African artists from overlooked talents into central players in the global market.

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Getty Foundation Invests $2.6M in Unearthing Black Art History

The Getty Foundation has awarded $2.6 million to expand its Black Visual Arts Archives initiative, empowering 12 U.S. institutions—libraries, museums, and universities—to catalogue, digitise, and bring Black art histories into public view. This multi-year commitment spotlights previously overlooked collections, transforming archives into dynamic cultural touchpoints and promoting long-overdue visibility for Black artists and institutions.

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“Dear Black People… A Love Letter”: Diasporic Time-travel in Atlanta

Now open at ZuCot Gallery, Dear Black People… A Love Letter is a bold and poetic journey through the Black American experience. With over 95% of works by artists of African descent, the show reframes visual storytelling as time travel — blending memory, identity and joy.
From glowing watermelons to shimmering histories, this exhibition pulses with creativity, community and cultural pride.

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