There is a moment many creatives know well. You are in a room. A gallery, a pitch, a conversation. Somewhere along the way, you find yourself shrinking. Softening your edges. Translating yourself into a language that feels safer for the people around you.
Zainab Sumu decided she is done with that room.
The Sierra Leonean-born, Cambridge-based artist has spent her career building a practice rooted in what she calls the living intelligence of African cultural inheritance. Through woven sculpture, painting, textiles, and print, she does not just reference African heritage. Instead, she treats it as a full creative methodology. One with its own depth, logic, and power.
This year, she is not dimming any of it.
In this edition of the African Creatives Spotlight, Zainab Sumu shares what it really means to build with intention and why the most powerful thing a creative can do is stop shrinking.

From Over-Explaining to Owning It
One of the most honest things the Zainab Sumu journey reveals is how much energy creatives spend justifying their work to audiences who were never their people to begin with.
Last year, something shifted for her. She stopped needing to over-explain. The more grounded she became in her own cultural language, the more her work resonated. Not less. That is the counterintuitive truth she is living right now.
Ultimately, it is a lesson that takes most artists years to learn. You do not make your work more universal by making it more generic. In fact, you make it more universal by making it more yours.
What Stewardship Looks Like in Practice
Zainab is the founder of Studio Znabu, her fine art studio launched in 2021. In addition to that, she runs her textile brand, Zainab Sumu Primitive Modern, which she started in 2015. Her woven fiber sculptures also sit in permanent collections, including the Peabody Essex Museum and The Quin House Boston.
However, when she describes her mindset for this year, she does not reach for a hustle word. She says stewardship and expansion.
This is a deliberate choice of language. Stewardship suggests responsibility and care. The work, in her view, is not just hers. Rather, it belongs to something larger and carries a duty beyond the individual. Consequently, her practice is built not for speed, but for legacy.
That kind of thinking changes how you build. In short, it means growth does not come at the cost of the thing that made the work worth building in the first place.

The African Creatives Spotlight Interview
We asked Zainab Sumu the same questions we ask every creative in this series. Her answers, as you will see, are anything but ordinary.
Introduce yourself.
My name is Zainab Sumu. I am a contemporary artist and cultural storyteller born in Sierra Leone and based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Furthermore, I am the founder of Studio Znabu, a creative platform through which I expand my practice into community, design, and cultural dialogue. Through woven sculpture, painting, textiles, and print, I explore memory, material, and cultural inheritance as living systems of knowledge within African and diasporic cultures. At the heart of my practice is a deep love for beauty, lineage, and the ways culture connects us across time.
Describe this current season of your creative journey in one sentence.
This is a season of intentional expansion. Specifically, I am deepening my voice while building structures that allow my work to travel further and touch more lives.
What did the past year teach you about yourself or your brand?
The past year taught me to move with patience and conviction. When I honor my roots and trust my intuition, the right opportunities align. As a result, the work carries itself with quiet authority.
Was there a moment in the past year that changed how you approach your work?
Yes. I realized that I no longer need to over-explain my work for it to be understood. The more grounded I am in my cultural language, the more universally the work resonates.
Nothing About Zainab Sumu Is Accidental
Not the words, not the work, not the direction she is moving in. Moreover, the second half of this conversation makes that even clearer.

What are you being more intentional about right now, creatively or in business?
Above all, I am being more intentional about balance. Building sustainable systems around my creativity means that inspiration is supported by strategy. That way, growth does not come at the expense of joy.
What are you letting go of so you can aim higher and create better this year?
I am letting go of shrinking in rooms that require me to dim my light. I am stepping fully into the responsibility of the vision I carry.
What bold reminder or insight would you give creatives?
Your heritage is not something to dilute. On the contrary, it is a source of depth, intelligence, and power. When you create from that place, your work becomes both personal and timeless.
Describe your mindset for this year in one word or short phrase.
Stewardship and Expansion.
Why Heritage Is Your Greatest Creative Advantage
If there is one thing to take from this interview, it is this. The thing you have been told to water down is the very thing that makes your work matter.
African heritage is not a niche. Furthermore, it is not a limitation to work around. It has always been a source of intelligence, depth, and power. Zainab is not discovering that. Rather, she is reminding us.
Therefore, this season, she is stepping fully into the responsibility of the vision she carries. And that is exactly the kind of thoughtfulness the African Creatives Spotlight is built to celebrate.

Follow Zainab Sumu:
- Website: studioznabu.com
- Instagram: @studioznabu
The Bellafricana African Creatives Spotlight celebrates African creatives who are building with intention. Follow us on Instagram @bell_africana and never miss a story.