Welcome to a living practice shaped by art, thoughtful curation and care.


Kezia Ouomoye is a Ghanaian artist working primarily with sculpture and installation. Her practice constructs spatial environments that draw from architectural forms while transforming them into narrative and theatrical spaces. Through fabric structures, illustrated figures, sculptural components, and fabric dolls, Ouomoye creates installations where real-life encounters and fictional narratives intersect.

Her projects include The Fabric Cube (2011), Post-Play Machines (2019), The Broken Square Fuzzy Wuzzy (2021), and The Family Portrait (2025). Across these works, architectural forms are softened, fragmented, and reimagined through fabric, objects, and characters. Inspired in part by the history of miniature architecture and dollhouses, Ouomoye treats space as a stage where fabric dolls and other figures animate historical and fictional scenes. She lives and works in Ghana.


Kezia Ouomoye, Cousins: Sisterhood in retrospect, Sculpture/storytelling device: fabricated wooden parts, fabric, industrial and found material, Height: 80cm, Length: 100cm, Depth: 22.86cm