Ife Piankhi

Ife Piankhi
Born Ife Piankhi
Uganda
Occupation writer
Nationality Ugandan
Genre Poetry, fiction
Website
ifepiankhi.com

Ife Piankhi is a Ugandan poet, singer,[1] creative facilitator and educator.[2] She has collaborated with artists such as Keko, Nneka, Mamoud Guinea, Geoff Wilkinson, Michael Franti, Jonzi D, Wynton Marsalis, Floetry, among others. She has toured internationally for the past 22 years visiting Canada, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Zanzibar, Zambia, Romania, Italy, Holland, and USA. Whilst living in London she was a regular on Colourful Radio founded by Henry Bonsu. She has been featured in the documentaries 500 years later by Owen Shahadah and Nubian Spirit by Louis Buckley which highlight her knowledge of Nile Valley Civilisations. She is also resident poet and MC for Poetry in Session the longest running poetry event in Kampala to date.[3]

Early childhood and education

Ife Piankhi was raised in the UK and now lives in Kampala. She is a creative expressionist who uses poetry and music, and she teaches creative writing at Art Movement in Kansanga.[4]

Ife started her career at 18 teaching in a supplementary school. Since then she has continued to work as a teacher and facilitator. She currently works as the co-ordinator for the Linking Communities Project in Merton, has worked on the Findhorn Foundation EcoVillages programme, is a participant in the British Council UK Interaction Leadership Programme for community leaders and has travelled to Africa with the African Foundation for Development to work with female traders.[5] She is a graduate of the Eco Villages Course (Findhorn Foundation) which has grounded her in the ethic of sustainable development.[6]

Writing

Ife Piankhi is a veteran on the spoken word circuit starting in 1992. She has collaborated with a number of artists including Geoff Wilkinson of Us3 and Sheron Wray. Touring internationally Ife has performed in Canada, Ghana, Romania, Italy, Holland, Scotland and the US. Ife appears regularly on Colourful radio and writes for various e magazines and newsletters.[7] Her work has been featured on the Pan-African poetry platform Badilisha Poetry Radio.[8]

Published works

Poems

Discography

References

  1. "Singing for the Heart" startjournal.org. Retrieved November 20, 2014
  2. "Ife Piankhi". http://www.inmovement.org/team/ife-piankhi''.
  3. "Ife Piankhi" badilishapoetry.com. Retrieved. November 20, 2014
  4. "Books they Read: Ife Piankhi" monitor.co.ug. Retrieved November 20, 2014.
  5. "Ife Piankhi". http://www.londonsdc.org/londonleaders/profile.aspx?ID=12''.
  6. "Ife Piankhi". http://afrikanyoga.com/organizer/ife-piankhi/''.
  7. "Ife Piankhi" applesandsnakes.org. Retrieved November 20, 2014
  8. Ife Piankhi badilishapoetry.com. Retrieved 20 November 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, July 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.