This technique creates a stunning duality. The skin of his subjects is built up with dense, swirling strokes of vibrant browns, deep caramels, and rich umber. It is tactile, sculptural, and almost three-dimensional. You feel the presence of the sitter’s flesh. In stark contrast, the clothing, hair, and backgrounds are often rendered with smooth, thin layers of paint applied via palette knives or brushes, or left entirely blank.
In works like "Lemon Bathing Suit" (2019), a woman sits against a stark white background. Her skin is a mosaic of finger-painted blue-black and violet highlights. She does not smile. She does not need to. Her authority is in her stillness. Boafo elevates the everyday act of relaxing into a classical portraiture worthy of a Renaissance duke. Historically, portraits of Black figures in Western art were either absent, caricatures, or objects of ethnographic study. The subject was looked at as an "other." Boafo reclaims the gaze. amoako boafo paintings
This contrast is deliberate. By foregrounding the texture of the skin, Boafo forces the viewer to look at the person, not around them. The rough, expressive finger-painting mimics the act of touch—an intimate, human connection between the artist and the subject. It is a formal celebration of melanin as a landscape of beauty. Boafo’s work is a love letter to the contemporary Black figure. His subjects are his friends, family, and fellow artists in Accra and the broader African diaspora. They are posed with a quiet, unshakeable confidence. This technique creates a stunning duality