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Kibibi Ajanku Landing Page

KIBIBI AJANKU
Artist. Curator.

NEW & UPCOMING

Kibibi's Trunk Show

Sankofa Dance Theater: 30 Years of Music,
Movement & Folkways

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ANGELA N. CARROLL & KIBIBI AJANKU


The Ruby Artists Grant will support Sankofa Dance Theater: 30 Years of Music Movement and Folkways, a limited-edition coffee table book,  that reviews the work of Sankofa Dance Theater as a cultural ambassador that bridged communities between Baltimore and West Africa. This is the first publication to illuminate Black dance's history in Baltimore.

Recent

Kibibi's Indigo Dye Village

Kibibi Ajanku is a Indigo Fiber Artist who has recently collaborated with Agrihood Baltimore Urban Farmers and the Natural Dye Initiative to bring to life one of her signature community projects, the Indigo Dye Village. Together, with a multi-generational team comprised of her children and grandchildren, she set up a community dye vat at the Wednesday Farmers Market and various locations across the urban landscape, creating a unique experience that is both educational and interactive. Participants are invited to learn about hand-dyed Indigo techniques as they relate to West Africa and have the opportunity to create their own tie and dye projects. 

 

The Indigo Dye Village is transported on an Arabber Cart, which has deep historical significance in Baltimore City. The Indigo Dye vIllage brings Baltimore's Arabber tradition to life, celebrating and preserving the vibrant culture of this 19th-century tradition. Kibibi's Arabber Cart is decorated in bright blues in honor of the colorful, eye-catching carts of the past. You may catch her riding her horse-drawn cart through the city as she makes her way to market.

 

Kibibi's work is inspired by the vibrant hues of her West African heritage and combines the traditional with the modern. Kibibi is passionate about creating art that celebrates African and African American culture and the art of natural dyeing.

Learn more about Kibibi Ajanku's Indigo Dye Village and discover how they are making a positive impact in Baltimore by attending an event through the months of July and August.

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 Rubber Glove Blues Art Exhibition

This exhibition represents a year-long intersection of indigo projects embodied by members of House Ajanku. They are each artists in their own right. The work of each project was designed to pass ancestral and authentic practices to the next generation, and the community-at-large, in an effort to keep those practices robust and alive. 

 

The Artists are Kibibi Ajanku, K. Salim Ajanku, Jumoke Ajanku, and K. Shukura Ajanku. The intersecting projects are Indigo Magic Dye Village for Common Ground on the Hill at McDaniel College, The Arabber Traveling Community Dye Vat for the Natural Dye Initiative, Indigo for Tomorrow Maryland Traditions Apprenticeship Project for Maryland State Arts Council, Rubber Glove Blues Exhibition and Catalog Project for the Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts. 

 

This is important work. We view ourselves as portals connecting the past, present, and future, preserving West African dye traditions while pushing the processes forward to include mediums not generally used. Our influences for this project include Nigerian indigo dye traditions and Africans in the diaspora.

 

-K. Salim Ajanku

This exhibition represented a year-long intersection of indigo projects embodied by members of House Ajanku. They are each artists in their own right. The work of each project was designed to pass ancestral and authentic practices to the next generation, and the community-at-large, in an effort to keep those practices robust and alive. 

 

The Artists... Kibibi Ajanku, King Salim Ajanku, Jumoke Ajanku, and K. Shukura Ajanku. The intersecting projects were Indigo Magic Dye Village for Common Ground on the Hill at McDaniel College, The Indigo Dye Village for Agrihood Baltimore and the Natural Dye Inititative, Indigo for Tomorrow Apprenticeship Project For the Maryland State Arts Council, Rubber Glove Blues Art Exhibition for the Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts. 

 

"This is important work. We view ourselves as portals connecting the past, present, and future, preserving West African dye traditions while pushing the processes forward to include mediums not generally used. Our influences for this project include Nigerian indigo dye traditions and Africans in the diaspora."

 

-King Salim Ajanku

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