Ngnima Sarr
Poet, singer, rapper, visual artist and producer

- Music
- Poetry
- Visual Arts
- Atlanta
“I believe that the first place to conquer deep-seated mutations is the imaginary”
I am a Senegalese artist based in France, where I studied and obtained a master’s degree in sociology. A polymorphous artist, my leitmotivs are experimentation and the hybridization of forms, from painting I’ve moved on to music, art installation, performing art and I’m passionate about autofiction through video. I am convinced that we are driven by narratives, and that changing the world means changing the narrative. The core of my work, regardless of the medium, is to open up spaces for conversation, questioning and transformation for ourselves and others. As a woman, I believe that the feminine frequency is what the world needs to achieve great healing and changes. Therefore, I’ve been leading, these past five years, several projects to explore the power of the feminine energy. Such as the installation and performance Mawu’s Daughters that addresses our relation to the divine feminine Nature and technology. Or, the collaborative and multidisciplinary creation “Le Vaisseau Mère’‘, result of four months of workshops with my collective “Les Femmes Sauvages” with sixty participants from different backgrounds and ages that questioned the function of the notion of gender in the balance of power in society. I also led different workshops with my ongoing research on the Uterus as a vessel including a circle of women in prison during two months to use the Uterus as symbolic and safe space to, both, self and collective healing.
Ngnima Sarr, known as T.I.E, is a multifaceted Senegalese artist: singer, poetess, songwriter, and music producer, leading projects like “T.I.E and The Love Process” and “Exillians.” She also created the immersive show “Lâcher L’homme!” inspired by Frantz Fanon’s essay “Black Skin White Masks.”
Additionally, she recently participated in the thought-provoking piece “Freedom, I’ll have lived your dream until the full last day,” curated by Felwine Sarr, showcased in New York and North Carolina with the support of the Villa Albertine’s Face theater & Fused Program.
T.I.E’s work is rooted In an Afro-eco-feminist vision, evident in her installation “Mawu’s Daughters,” premiered in Dakar during Partcours 2022. T.I.E’s ongoing work “Odyssey in Utero ”, is a polysemous research object initiated in her residency at Banlieues Bleues ,Paris 21-22
In partnership with

Banlieues Bleues
Banlieues Bleues (which means “blue suburbs”), non profit association originally funded by 12 towns of Seine-Saint-Denis (on the outskirts of Paris) runs since 1984 the festival of the same name, a key event in the French musical season, offering an artistic platform of international repute where creativity and revelations occupy a large place of the bill. Through a wide range of workshops called “actions musicales” it has also assumed the pioneering job of heightening awareness and sensitivity, together with musical training, for the general public and particularly for new audiences. Throughout the year, Banlieues Bleues runs also its own venue, La Dynamo, a musical complex located in Pantin welcoming cutting-edge concerts and also residencies and rehearsals.