[A]FA EXHIBITION | Tamale´s Inner-Urban Ecologies
Tamale’s Inner-Urban
Ecologies is both exhibition and artistic research, exploring the dynamics of urban and ecological life in Tamale’s inner-urban
open spaces, one of West Africa’s fastest-growing cities
TIUE investigates
three distinct urban sites through field research, artistic practice, and interdisciplinary analysis, revealing the coexistence
of human and non-human life as well as the structures and narratives shaping these spaces.
The project has been
supported by an Africa-UniNet project grant (2023–2025) and was developed jointly with the University for Development Studies
(UDS) and Nuku Studio Center for Photographic Research and Practice, Tamale. The collaboration brought together academic,
artistic, and local perspectives to explore the ecological and social dynamics of the city.
[A]FA’s Tamale
Old Airfield Tree Transplanting Project transforms a section of the former airfield into a public landscape, planting
mature savanna trees to soften the harsh terrain and create collective, shaded spaces. A video documentation presents the
complex transplanting process carried out in May 2025. Extending the research beyond Ghana, the Atlas of Habitats
explores multi-species and speculative ecologies, imagining beings that exist at the threshold between ecosystem and imagination.
Together, these projects form a constellation of [A]FA’s spatial, ecological, and transdisciplinary work, inviting
reflection on the agencies and temporalities that shape urban and environmental futures
[Applied] Foreign Affairs (AFA)
is a transdisciplinary lab at the University of Applied Arts Vienna’s Institute of Architecture, exploring spatial, infrastructural,
environmental, and cultural phenomena in rural and urban contexts across Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, founded by
Baerbel Mueller in 2011.
© [Applied] Foreign Affairs, Daniil Zhiltsov, 2025
Exhibition
Duration
29.
October 2025 - 07. November 2025
Universität für angewandte Kunst Wien, Postsparkasse Kleine
Kassenhalle, Georg-Coch-Platz 2, 1010 Wien