Biography
​​JEAN DAVID NKOT WAS BORN IN 1989 IN DOUALA, CAMEROON, WHERE HE LIVES AND WORKS.
 
A graduate of the Institut de Formation Artistique of Mbalmayo (IFA) and later of the Institut des Beaux-Arts of Foumban, Cameroon, he quickly established himself through his mastery of painting, sculpture, and installation. In 2017, he took part in the “Post-Master Moving Frontiers” program at the École nationale supérieure d’art in Paris-Cergy, France.
 
A painter of the human condition, he develops a realistic approach attentive to the scars left by history and to the logics of globalized capitalism. Since 2020, his work has focused on the exploitation of raw materials in Africa—such as cotton, chocolate, and minerals—and on the impact of these extractive systems, both on societies and on the environment. His compositions, drawing from photographic archives, question the role of these resources in the global economy and reveal their social and ecological consequences, from Africa to the rest of the world.
 
Increasingly exploring varied mediums such as ceramics, sculpture, and installation, Nkot pursues an artistic practice aimed at making these shadow workers visible, transforming them into emblematic figures. Between memory and contemporaneity, his work highlights the fractures of industrialization and invites reflection on the relationship between humankind, consumption, and the environment.
 
Jean David Nkot’s works have been presented at international art fairs (Miami, New York, London, Paris, Marrakech, Cape Town) and in institutions such as the Guangdong Times Museum (China), the Institut des Cultures d’Islam (France), SAVVY Contemporary (Germany), and Kunsthalle Krems (Austria).
Works
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech.
    #@l'origine de nos délices.fr, 2025
  • Jean David Nkot, Corps//matière.cm.org, 2025
    Corps//matière.cm.org, 2025
  • Jean David Nkot, Blue Bodies, 2024
    Blue Bodies, 2024
  • Jean David Nkot, Blue Bodies, 2024
    Blue Bodies, 2024
  • Jean David Nkot, Po.box. pain-and-false-laughter.org, 2024
    Po.box. pain-and-false-laughter.org, 2024
  • Jean David Nkot, BP.the-story-of-a-treasure@fr.com, 2025
    BP.the-story-of-a-treasure@fr.com, 2025
  • Jean David Nkot, www.pleasure-of-feves.com.or, 2024
    www.pleasure-of-feves.com.or, 2024
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Abstract figurative.
    @AmeDeLuxe##.fr.com, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot #@#chic gl@mour ## Acrylic and silkscreen printing on canvas Peinture métier Artist residency African contemporary art
    #@#chic gl@mour##, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Abstract figurative.
    www// ballot fashion//.fr.org, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot De la poussière aux podiums.com Acrylic and silkscreen printing on canvas Peintre de la condition humaine Exhibition Art gallery Art paris
    @.com.cm//De la poussière aux podiums.com, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot, WWW.L127.2@thebollweevil.com, 2023
    WWW.L127.2@thebollweevil.com, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Figurative.
    www.@cottonbackground.com.fr, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot, The sweat of my body in the cotton fields, 2023
    The sweat of my body in the cotton fields, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Abstract.
    #L.901-4@History of the black hand.fr, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting.
    P.O.box.EFFETNUAGEUX.CM, 2024
  • Jean david nkot Dompteur nuage Acrylic and silkscreen printing on canvas Galerie d’art africain Art contemporain
    ph__@dompteur__nuage.cm, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech.
    www.epigraphie@main.cm, 2023
  • Jean david nkot Dompteur des nuages Cameroun Acrylic and silkscreen printing on canvas
    Po.box___ dompteur des nuages.cm, 2023
  • Jean David Nkot, #L’absent@de1885.monde, 2021
    #L’absent@de1885.monde, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, Fr.blueline.org.cm.com, 2022
    Fr.blueline.org.cm.com, 2022
  • Jean David Nkot, ##Pharaons@des crevasses.org, 2022
    ##Pharaons@des crevasses.org, 2022
  • Jean David Nkot, Po.Box.The hope of the soul, 2021
    Po.Box.The hope of the soul, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Figurative.
    Po.Box PPTE.cm, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, www.headtime@.com, 2021
    www.headtime@.com, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, www.look of hopes@.com #10, 2021
    www.look of hopes@.com #10, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, www.look of hopes@.com #11, 2021
    www.look of hopes@.com #11, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, www.look of hopes@.com #12, 2021
    www.look of hopes@.com #12, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, www.transporteur à titrer.cm.org, 2021
    www.transporteur à titrer.cm.org, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, Po.box.Pomme de la discorde, 2022
    Po.box.Pomme de la discorde, 2022
  • Jean David Nkot, Pomme de la discorde.com, 2022
    Pomme de la discorde.com, 2022
  • Jean David Nkot, The shadows of space 2, 2019
    The shadows of space 2, 2019
  • Jean David Nkot, The shadows of space 5, 2019
    The shadows of space 5, 2019
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Abstract. Map.
    The shadows of space 7, 2019
  • Jean David Nkot, Les âmes des sous-sols #18, 2021
    Les âmes des sous-sols #18, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot, Les âmes des sous-sols #17, 2021
    Les âmes des sous-sols #17, 2021
  • Jean David Nkot painting. Cameroonian Artist. Contemporary African art in Paris. AFIKARIS PARIS. Environmental issues. Bold colors. Colorful painting. 1-54 Marrakech. Political
    Les âmes des sous-sols #16, 2021
Exhibitions
Art Fairs
Press
Publications
Interview

From the beginning of your career in 2015, your work has dealt with the topic of immigration and the superficiality of borders. Starting in 2020, you focussed on the over-exploitation of natural resources – specifically mining – and humans, serving the market economy. How did you come to focus on cotton fields,  evoking the past and the present at the same time? 

It has to be said that even before I focussed on the issue of migration, I was interested in violence, and more particularly the violence I experienced in my own country. Between 2013 and 2015, Cameroon was going through a terrible time as a result of terrorist acts. I wondered how I could document and keep a record of this period. That is how I became interested in the human condition. The human condition led me to question the notion of space. 

 

By working on the notion of violence, I represented and froze the spaces where these massacres had taken place, simply by inscribing the names of these places onto my works. At the time, each of my canvases represented a stamp. I used the structure, I mentioned the price and the country issuing the stamp, which I modified according to the location of the attacks. One thing led to another and I began to want to represent the notion of space differently. That's what led me to the world of cartography, and then, by studying cartography, to questions of borders. The subject of migration came naturally to me in this context where I was materializing spaces, dealing with the question of the human condition. As far as I'm concerned, any subject is a good one to tackle, as long as the humans remain at the centre. For me, any subject that reflects a form of injustice is important to be highlighted. This is how, little by little, I moved from migration to economic issues and, in particular, the exploitation of raw materials. So, it was logical for me to tackle the theme of cotton, linked to the past and history. It's a common thread. 

 

I work on the different forms of raw materials: fossil materials, agricultural materials and liquid materials. At the moment, I am focusing on agricultural materials. When you look at agricultural materials, and cotton in particular, you naturally open up a whole area of human history. This includes the period of slavery and the deportation and displacement of black people. We must therefore ask ourselves what role these events have played in the development of the economy of the Western world today.

 

 

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