Danièle Diwouta-Kotto


Danièle Diwouta-Kotto, is a Cameroonian designer and architect, member of the Cameroon architects association and founder of the V.A.A. Villes et Architectures d'Afrique organization.

Biography

Born in Cameroon, Danièle Diwouta-Kotto studied architecture and graduated in 1986 in France, at the Ecole d'architecture Paris-Villemin. In the same year, she created her own society Passerelle Sud and, in 1989, the architecture firm AGG Cabinet d'Architecture Diwouta. Her attention towards history, architectural heritage, environment, climate change and urban transformation in Cameroon and in other African cities have brought Danièle Diwouta-Kotto to realizing the publication Suites architecturales: Kinshasa, Douala, Dakar, published in 2010 as the first volume of the D'architectures & d'Afrique series. The realization of this publication started in 2003 and is based on a research concerning African colonial buildings and the different ways in which this kind of architecture has been transformed and re-elaborated.
In 2003 she produces the Kiosque à eau in Douala's neighborhood Bessengue, commissioned by doual'art. This small building is conceived as a public fountain where people can buy both water and food. Its canopy in particular, goes back to Jesus Palomino's construction, realized within the Bessengue City workshop, organized by Goddy Leye and ArtBakery art center.
Between 1993 and 1994 her design work is shown at Salon MIC in Paris and Los Angeles; in 1995 she takes part at the collective exhibition Around and Around, promoted by doual'art. Her work is
presented, amongst others, at the itinerant exhibition Designers Africains d'Aujourd'hui and at
Dak’Art. In April 2001, she participates to the Havana Biennial.
Danièle Diwouta-Kotto plays an important role in the reflection on African design, architecture and urban development and also on the relation between art and urban transformations. In April 2003, she takes part in the Architecture et Développement durable conferences promoted by the French Cultural Centre of Douala, and in March 2005 she is at the convention Femmes Bâtisseuses at UNESCO in Paris. In January 2005 she takes part at the Ars&Ubis symposium promoted by doual'art as an introduction to the SUD 2007. In 2008, she participates at the seminar APERAU in Lomé, Togo, about Urbanisation en Afrique: Permanence et ruptures . In 2010 she takes part at doual'art's exhibition L'Afrique Visionnaire-GEO-Graphics in Brussels.
Danièle Diwouta-Kotto is presented in the magazine Revue Noire, in the article number 13 in 1993; in November 2001, she is considered as one of the 100 people who make Cameroon move.