Paul Ayihawu

Nigeria

Figurative and Portrait Painting by Paul Ayihawu

Contemporary Nigerian Art and Postcolonial Identity

Fine Art Collectors and Black Diaspora Artists

"For Paul Ayihawu, art is an extension of breath - a visual language through which his deepest emotions find space and form. In his practice, he explores the human form as a vessel for psychological depth, capturing fleeting emotional states and posing a quiet, insistent question:
How do we feel a sense of belonging in a world that continuously tells us we are not enough?

Paul is drawn to the overlooked - the familiar rhythms of neighbourhood life, the unspoken beauty in mundane gestures, and the joyful chaos of local exuberance. These everyday scenes evoke in him a profound sense of nostalgia, where memory is preserved not in grand narratives but in fragments of lived experience.

He works primarily with charcoal and acrylic, favouring the delicacy of flesh tones rendered in charcoal, while surrounding elements are brought to life with vibrant colour. His figures often inhabit abstract, feathered backgrounds - imagined spaces that echo ancestral memory and cultural dreamscapes.

Paul’s art is both meditation and activism. His work stands as a personal yet political gesture - a quiet form of resistance and reclamation, challenging dominant narratives while affirming the layered, evolving truth of African identity.
"

MEET

Paul Ayihawu

Paul Ayihawu is a contemporary Nigerian artist whose figurative works blend charcoal and acrylic to explore the complexity of African identity in a postcolonial world. Based in Nigeria, his practice challenges dominant narratives and reclaims the Black experience through poetic portraiture that merges traditional African textiles with Western influences.

At the heart of Ayihawu’s work is an investigation of cultural hybridity, socio-political memory, and transformation. His portraits — often inverted or recontextualised — depict Black subjects in a symbolic fusion of ankara fabrics and Western dress, reflecting on how African values and self-perception continue to evolve in the wake of colonial impact.

With a quiet yet powerful visual language, Paul honours the unseen, unheard, and untold stories of the African diaspora. His artworks serve as a space of reflection and empowerment, inviting viewers to engage deeply with the nuances of Black identity, resistance, and continuity.

Ayihawu’s work has been acquired by collectors in the USA, South Africa, Ghana, and Nigeria, contributing to a growing global discourse on the importance of African perspectives in contemporary art.

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