Alchemy and Symbols: The Afro-Ancestral Spiritualism of Ahmed Partey

In the vibrant and ever-evolving landscape of Ghanaian contemporary art, Ahmed Partey stands out as a visionary whose work offers a profound meditation on ancestry, identity, and transformation. Based in Accra, Partey’s practice spans painting, pastel, sculpture, wood carving, and immersive digital technologies—including virtual and augmented reality. At the center of it all is a guiding philosophy he calls Afro-Ancestral Spiritualism: a worldview that reimagines West African spiritual heritage through a symbolic, surrealist lens.
Rooted in Ritual, Reaching Toward the Unseen
Partey’s work emerges from deep engagement with traditional African visual systems—particularly Ga Samai, a sacred symbolic language of the Ga-Adangbe people of Ghana. Since 2017, he has expanded this lexicon from 30 to nearly 100 symbols, breathing life into what he calls “speechless voices”—nonverbal forms that transmit ancestral wisdom across generations. His figures are elongated, mask-like, and rendered in charged states of stillness or transformation—guardians of memory who exist somewhere between the spiritual and the surreal.
These figures are not portraits, but vessels: containers of emotion, myth, and psychic memory. His compositions, shaped by Ghanaian cosmologies and folklore, collapse time and space.

From Wood to VR: A Practice That Moves Across Dimensions
Partey moves fluidly between traditional and experimental media. He works with acrylic, oil, pastel, and carved wood, but also builds digital environments using VR, AR, and NFTs, extending ancestral motifs into immersive, contemporary realms. His figures are often encoded with Ga Samai, adorned with scarification and beads, and set against backdrops that range from kente-inspired geometry to cosmic abstraction.
This interplay between tactile and digital reflects Partey’s broader vision: to show that heritage is not static, but expansive. His works function as spiritual interfaces—technologies of memory and transformation that invite viewers into ritual spaces reimagined for the now.
In addition to his studio practice, Partey has collaborated with Ghanaian musician Okaidja Afroso, designing cover art for two of his albums—further extending his symbolic language into sound and storytelling.

International Reach, Deep Roots
Partey’s work has been exhibited internationally, including at The Gund Gallery (USA), Africa House at the World Economic Forum in Davos (Switzerland), Shanghai International Art Fair (China), NFT Paris, and NFT NYC. In Ghana, he has appeared at platforms such as the Chale Wote Art Festival and Art After Dark in Accra. In April 2025, his work was featured in Baring It All, a juried virtual exhibition presented by Art Fluent.
His practice has also been featured in prominent media, including ArtNews (“10 Africans Using Technology as Their Canvas”), Le Monde, MakersPlace, and ARTYNFT—testament to his growing impact across both traditional and digital art spheres.

Spiritual Inheritance as Artistic Fuel
For Partey, art is not just an aesthetic pursuit—it is devotion, recovery, and resistance. His works confront cultural amnesia, rekindling symbolic systems that have been sidelined or forgotten. Through his practice, he offers new ways of seeing: where tradition is not ornamental, but alive; where masks are not static relics, but interfaces; and where the past is not behind us, but encoded in the now.


Through Afro-Ancestral Spiritualism, Ahmed Partey invites us to witness what was never truly lost—to listen to silence, see through symbol, and feel what continues to move beneath the surface of form.
- Follow Ahmed Partey on Instagram @ahmedpartey
- For more: ahmedpartey.wixsite.com/partey









