[A]FA and Nuku Studio present:
Sometimes the Goats Know the Way
A trilingual textile installation by Yunxi Wu
22 February – 2 March 2026
Sometimes the Goats Know the Way investigates Tamale’s inner-urban peripheries through poetry embroidered in white thread onto white Kente cloth. Developed under the heat of Tamale’s open urban spaces, the project emerged through walking, listening, and field recording when technical equipment failed. Constraint became method.
The work traces three sites, where communities informally re-appropriate space and infrastructure through everyday practice. Following the movement of goats through the city, the installation reflects on forms of spatial knowledge beyond formal planning: embodied memory, environmental attunement, and oral exchange.
Field poems are presented in Dagbani, English, and Chinese, positioning the three languages as equal anchors in cross-continental dialogue. Translation functions as both bridge and artwork.
The textile triptych embodies the global circuits it references: Kente woven in Ghana from Chinese cotton, embroidered in China with poems written in Tamale, first exhibited in Vienna, and now presented in Ghana. The cloth becomes a tactile archive — portable, circulatory, and embedded in local economies.
This marks the project’s first presentation in Ghana, completing a diasporic cycle. The work has been developed through [A]FA, in partnership with Nuku Studio, and evolved within the AfricaUninet project Tamale’s Inner Urban Ecologies.
Participating institutions
[A]FA,
@appliedforeignaffairs , I oA
@ioa.angewandte University of Applied Arts Vienna
@dieangewandte
Nuku Studio - Centre for Photographic Research and Practice, Tamale
@nukustudio
28 February 2026, 10:30 – 11:30
Public Reading
With Yunxi Wu, Artist/Curator
@yxw.xyz @yunxi.works ; Mariam Issahaka, Cultural Worker
1 March 2026, 10:00 – 11:30
Panel Discussion
From Text to Textuality to Textile
A conversation on language, material, and space Conversation with Yunxi Wu, Barbara Putz Plecko, Alhaji Suleman, Mariam Issahaka
Hosted and moderated by Baerbel Mueller
@nav_s_baerbelmueller and Nii Obodai
Venue: Nuku Studio, Bank Road, Tamale