Africa: Amutse Expands Frame of Africa in Austria

Africa: Amutse Expands Frame of Africa in Austria


FUTURIST inner and outer worlds, reflections of black masculinity and visions of Aawambo culture are the thematic sparks that ignite photographer Namafu Amutse’s current showing at Offenes Kulturhaus (OK) Linz in Austria.

Exhibiting alongside Senegalese artist Mbaye Diop and Ugandan artist Olivia Mary Nantongo in ‘Wandala – drama. dream. decolonised!’, Amutse makes use of Namibia’s natural landscapes to reshape how black people are perceived, mythologised and remembered.

Delicate and disruptive in images set against the Atlantic ocean, Amutse underscores the bond she shares with her brothers while expanding the borders of black masculinity, brotherhood and contentment in ‘Chrysalis’. In ‘Afrofuturism Meets the Aawambo People’, natural settings and pink cultural attire are juxtaposed with ultramodern eyewear which anchor ideas of the future in the present while highlighting the evolutionary act of seeing.

“On a visual level, futurism enters my work through subtle, playful elements like sculptural glasses, masks and reflective surfaces. These objects reference imagined futures, functioning less as technology and more as symbols or tools that disrupt familiarity and invite the viewer into an alternative way of seeing,” says Amutse.


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“Beyond aesthetics, the futurism I am interested in is deeply internal. My work engages the idea that meaningful futures require inner transformation, self-awareness, healing and reorientation,” she says.

“So, rather than projecting a technologically advanced Africa, I focus on the internal growth that must take place within individuals and communities in order for any future to be sustainable or liberated. In this sense, futurism becomes a psychological and spiritual space before it becomes a visual one.”

Though Amutse’s work considers the future as well as alternate, secreted or metaphorical landscapes, such speculation is conceptualised within existing places and spaces.

“I situate my work primarily within natural landscapes. Nature offers a sense of continuity and grounding, something stable to return to while imagining alternative futures,” says Amutse.

“These environments are deeply personal to me. They function as both literal and symbolic spaces: places of familiarity, memory and stillness against which speculative elements can exist without overwhelming the image,” she says.

“In contrast to dominant contemporary images of Africa and Namibia, which are often framed through narratives of limitation, crisis or development, the worlds I create resist urgency and spectacle. They are quiet, intentional and inward-looking.”