The Metis Fund
THE METIS FUND
The arts help activate emotional intelligence, a driving force for individual and collective transformation. They can thereby complement the technical expertise that underlies any development dynamic.
In countries subject to major vulnerabilities, the Metis Fund gives the opportunity to a wide variety of entities (including hospitals, municipalities, companies, environmental NGOs, natural parks and school networks) to open their doors to artists and build a space for dialogue and creation with them in connection with a development issue.

The objective? Turn their joint creative process and the final creation into a driver for transformations. This pathway for action is highly effective but not yet common in development dynamics.
Through its extensive network of partner operators and its innovative project engineering, the Metis Fund acts as a driving force for far-reaching impact. Its approach builds up the dignity of its stakeholders, their desire to learn and take action, their mutual understanding, as well as their know-how and social skills. All these factors are essential to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Metis thereby acts as a catalyst for talent.
WHAT WE OFFER
The Metis Arts and Development Fund helps build and implement grassroots initiatives to heighten the senses in territories concerned by development issues.
These initiatives are built locally in a collaborative way by AFD and its local partners. AFD’s network of local offices selects the projects submitted to the Metis Fund on the basis of four criteria:
- The project’s link with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
- The territorial roots/local ownership by a development operator
- The involvement and collaboration of local communities
- Artistic quality and the involvement of local artists
The action of Metis also aims to scale up the impact of “Arts and Development” approaches by showcasing the results of the initiatives supported, creating and leading networks of partners of this approach, and building the capacities of operators seeking to invest in an Arts and Development process.
BIENNALE OF DAKAR
The Fonds Metis will be taking part in the OFF of the 15th edition of the Dakar Biennale with its exhibition FAIRE LIEU, which runs from 7 November to 7 December 2024.
On the African continent, artists of great renown have decided - in addition to their artistic production - to launch ambitious cultural centres rooted in the reality of their territories. The artistic, social and economic role of these spaces is decisive.
What are these spaces, who are these artists, why are they being created, and how...?
To answer these questions, the exhibition takes visitors on a unique artistic journey.
From Congo-Brazzaville with Bill Kouelany for LES ATELIERS SAHM, to Cameroon with Barthélemy Toguo for Bandjoun Station, via Senegal with Viye Diba, founder of Manifa, on to Zimbabwe with Moffat Takadiwa, and Rwanda with Inema Art Center, co-founded by Innocent Nkurunziza, the exhibition shows the ambitions of these 5 artists, founders of 5 places that are designing and shaping the political and artistic future of their respective countries.
Installations, photography, visual arts, videos, sound works, performances: so many artistic mediums to show and feel the reality of these places.
The exhibition will be held at Manifa (Grand Yoff) from 7 November to 7 December 2024.
Opening on 8 November 2024 at 6pm.
- Viyé Diba (Manifa, Senegal)
- Bill Kouélany (Les Ateliers Sahm, Congo-Brazzaville)
- Innocent Nkurunziza (Inema Art Space, Rwanda)
- Moffat Takadiwa (Mbare Art Space, Zimbabwe)
- Barthélémy Toguo (Bandjoun Station, Cameroon)
For more informations : FAIRE LIEU
TESTIMONIALS
- Nigeria - Catch’Up Project: Visual arts to get children into school in Abuja
For several months, 30 out-of-school children from 2 of Abuja’s roughest neighborhoods benefited from learning and artistic workshops with 2 professional Nigerian artists. During these workshops, both the children and the artists themselves created unique works which were exhibited and sold. The initiative has used arts as a way to make these children want to learn again and eventually set them back on the path to school.
I’ve always been sensitive to the suffering of street children and the psychological challenges they must face at such a young age. How can we get in touch with them? Through art! There’s no special language to adopt… The children simply feel free to communicate.
- Mozambique – “The Elephant” called Madala Vaku Niassa: Sculpture and sewing to combat poaching and preserve biodiversity
At the heart of the Niassa National Reserve, in the far north of Mozambique, an artist has built a sculpture of a life-size African elephant with local people and operators in the area. Covered with skin made of fabric woven by local communities, this elephant will be travelling around the country to address the complex issue of poaching, stimulate people’s imaginations regarding their connection to wildlife, and promote biodiversity protection.
They’re aged between 17 and 48. They call themselves brothers and sisters. Most of them have never left the reserve. It’s their first formal job. They’ve known wars, diseases, cyclones and droughts, hunger. For the last three months, I’ve been training Josina, Norte, Matola, Cecilia and Roques in how to work with steel. I’d be lying if I said it was easy. I’ve lost count of the moments of joy, anger, fatigue, misunderstanding. Each day brings new challenges and new learning experiences. The story of this elephant is above all an encounter. And what an encounter!
- Togo - “Vivre Ensemble” (Living Together): Using recycling and artistic creativity to get people involved in fighting pollution and protecting the environment
For several weeks and in collaboration with the municipal teams of Greater Lomé, 2 Togolese artists specialized in waste recycling have taken more than 80 young people from Lomé, aged between 8 and 15, to collect waste on the beaches. They have trained them so that they can each create an artistic work designed using these recovered materials. By serving as a vehicle for artistic expression and heightening their senses, this initiative has made them all express their pride and determination to take care of their environment.
The essence of development lies in independent thinking skills and self-identity. This is what brings artistic creation. With this type of initiative, we’re focusing on the next generation for development and we’re giving young people tools to seize the opportunities of tomorrow.