Category: Life – The Midweek Magazine

  • Kunda Kids adds two new books to its collection

    Kunda Kids adds two new books to its collection

    As part of its continuous effort in diversifying children’s books in homes, libraries and schools around the world and inspiring young people about African history and culture, Kunda Kids has added two new books to its collection. One of such books is Queen Moremi Makes a Promise, a story written by Ayo Oyeku, inspired by Queen Moremi a legendary Yoruba queen and folk heroine in the Yorubaland region of present-day south-western Nigeria.

    The other book written by Sokhna Ndiaye, is King Alboury Cooks the Best Jollof  inspired by King Alboury, the last king of the great Jolof Kingdom of Senegal, and which celebrates the popular African dish jollof rice which originated from Senegal.

    Speaking about the new additions, Co-founder, Kunda Kids, Dele Olafuyi said: “With these new additions, we are making a continuous effort towards bridging the diversity gap in children literature to help preserve African history and culture in the minds of kids in Africa and the diaspora. This is why we continue to partner with creative storytellers who can tell informative and engaging stories that make children feel represented and introduce them to new people and places that they can enjoy learning about.”

    Also speaking, Co-founder, Kunda Kids, Louisa Olafuyi added: “The lack of African representation in children’s book is hugely problematic because when children’s literature and content, in general, fails to provide representations of individuals from different backgrounds, cultures and races, it breeds ignorance. This is why it is important that parents/guardians, uncles and aunties buy such diverse books for their kids to help shape their worldview.”

    Kunda Kids was founded in 2020 by husband and wife, Dele and Louisa Olafuyi during the COVID-19 lockdown and has since sold over 7,000 books from its premier collection including  Africa’s Little Kings & Queens-a collection of four beautifully illustrated picture books, inspired by some of ancient Africa’s most influential leaders.

    Both  Queen Moremi makes a promise and King Alboury cooks the best jollof rice are currently not on sale, but can be pre-ordered on the Kunda Kids website, www.kundakids.com and will be available on additional platforms by August 2021 once released.

     

     

     

  • Meet the expert behind Aggital Works

    Meet the expert behind Aggital Works

    Aggital Works, founded by Oghoghozino Otefia is one of Nigeria’s best digital agencies. The award winning agency aimed at driving creative improvements for the digital age is based in Nigeria’s most populous nation in Africa.

    Aggital Works provides digital products and has over the years delivered tech related projects for various businesses, organizations and individuals in Nigeria, Canada, Australia, Germany, India, Europe and the United Kingdom.

    Having imprinted its mark in the creative and digital industry, the agency has won the 2018 Business Excellence Award for the category of the best web development company of the year and also 2019 Nigerian Role Model Awards for Excellence and Innovation in ICT services.

    At Aggital, work is fun and results are outstanding. As for the tech entrepreneur who doubles as the firm Chief Executive Officer, Otefia believes in a culture that allows all staff to love and enjoy the work environment. He also manages the financial position of the company.

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    Let us take a look at Oghoghozino Otefia’s success story. He earned a bachelor’s degree from National Open University (NOUN), Lagos in Computer Science in 2017.

    During his undergraduate program at NOUN, Otefia worked with several organizations as an IT/E-Learning specialist and later as an IT analyst at Harrybaker Training Institute from 2013 to 2016. He also served as an IT manager for Gidimarket from October 2016 until March 2017 before going on to establish Aggital Works.

    Adding to his wealth of skills, which serves as another source of income, Otefia is also a seasoned speaker who has facilitated conferences, workshops and summits, some of which include the GETWORK Nigeria Workshop, The Engineering Summit and The Digital Workforce Conference, among others.

    A list of all his experiences includes IT managing, IT analyzing, E-Learning specialist and developer, computer instructor and public speaking.

  • ‘Foreign authors wrote on Africa from uninformed position’

    ‘Foreign authors wrote on Africa from uninformed position’

    Prof. Rowland Abiodun who turns 80 on July 25, is John C. Newton Professor of Art, the History of Art, and Black Studies at Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA. He is author of Yoruba Art and Language: Seeking the African in African Art (2014), What Follows Six Is More than Seven: Understanding African Art (1995); and co-author of other books on Yoruba arts and culture. In 2011, he received the Leadership Award of the Arts Council of the African Studies Association in recognition of his excellence, innovative contributions, and vision in the fields of African and Diasporic Arts. Prof. Abiodun was a consultant for and participant in Smithsonian World Film, Kindred Spirits: Contemporary Nigerian Art. In this chat with Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME, he speaks on how brain drain decentres African culture, his years at the University of Ife, (now Obafemi Awolowo University), Leo Frobenius’ Voice of Africa as uninformed voice on Africa, the undermining of the voice and contributions of makers and users of African art and why the struggle to liberate African epistemology is difficult, among other issues.

    How does it feel to be 80, do you feel any different from 10 or 20 years ago?

    Good. I’m grateful to be alive. Of course, no one will be around forever. So, this is a good time to reflect on what one has learned over the years. I would not have done this, 10 or 20 years ago.

    What is the state of art education today in view of the incursion of technology?

    Technology is an integral component of all educational goals today, art education included. To be real innovators in the world of art, we need to be more than copycats. While I welcome the incursion of technology, it would be wise to know that it is a tool – one which can be used to project our contributions as Africans to the world of art education.

    Do you miss Nigeria, or more appropriately, what do you miss most about the country since you left about 30 years ago?

    I miss the country that constitutes the foundations and the inspirations of my research in African art. I miss the vibrant culture of the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) enlivened by colleagues who were equally ecstatic about our quest for knowledge. When I joined the university, I was allocated Omígbiidùn House as my home. It was on Arùbídi Street in Ife¹ town, next to Olókun Cultural Centre, and within walking distance of Opá Orànmíyàn (the staff of Orànmíyàn). I witnessed the performance of many rites there. Frequently, I walked to ¸nuwá where the Ooni’s palace and a number of important shrines including Òke Mògún (the site for Ojoo/OÍojo-òní festival and annual rites). The location of my residence was priceless to my physical involvement in, and understanding of the ancient city’s culture, facilitating intimate interaction with its dynamism. This embodied intimacy was an indelibly penetrating experience which resonates through my work. It is imprinted at the intersection of the evanescent observed activities and the intangibilities of memory. The intangible but profound, in turn, vibrates in the scribal permanence of my scholarship.

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     You taught at  the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) for over 25 years. Tell us what your experience was like compared to what is obtainable in the U.S.

    The Ife experience of the 70s and 80s cannot be replicated outside Africa. As pioneers in Yoruba Studies, we were at the centre of the culture we were studying, yet we were also in touch with the rest of the world, as scholars from different parts of the world streamed into and out of Ife in the heyday of the birth of modern African scholarship, and our work gathered attention globally.

    The Nigerian economy, university system and social fabric began to deteriorate in the 80s, triggering an exodus of Nigerian scholars to the West, often the United States. In the West, we have everything we need to do the best scholarship, except the lived environment that is the inspiration for scholars of Africa, especially those of us who study its cultures.

    I took with me what I had gained in order to better develop it in the United States. The exodus of African scholars there in the late 80s combined with various economic and social factors made the United States the centre of African Studies. The relocation of this centre outside Africa has contributed to a similar decentering of African cultures as the primary sources for methodologies in my discipline. This has occurred even as the African academic environments themselves struggle with colonial mindsets. My work has opposed this trend by contributing to the discourse that privileges Africa as the epistemic centre. This moves Africa from being simply the object of study to being the source of the methods for the study of Africa – essentially seeking the African in African art, the subtitle of my 2014 book. That book, Yoruba Art and Language: Seeking the African in African Art privileges naming and affirming Africa’s own epistemologies and ontologies (ways of knowing, and ways of being) as the primary source for understanding its art.

     Yoruba language is now recognised and has become an official language in some parts of the world, what is your take on this?

    Every language is a carrier and repository of a people’s philosophy, history, psychology, religion, politics and art. It seems that in those parts of the world which you refer to, they have held on to something precious – something which we Nigerians have ignored but need to make the cornerstone of our development. During the colonial era in Nigeria, speaking in vernacular (local language) in high schools, including mine, was punishable by up to 12 strokes of the cane. Now, the British coloniser does not need to be physically present for their legacy to persist. What a price to pay for “education”! Speaking, writing and thinking in English, French, and even Latin (which is no longer even a spoken language) are enshrined and actively promoted in the Classics departments of many academic institutions of former colonies.

    Today, researching and theorising African art in a colonial language and thought system is the norm. The result has been a systematic undermining of the voice and contribution of the makers and users of African art. Indeed, many scholars of Yorùbaì birth are ashamed to be caught speaking their mother tongue, for fear of being called “illiterate,” uncivilised”, “primitive”, and “not forward-looking”. This can extend even to hatred of their language and cultural heritage.

    Some stolen Yoruba artworks were returned recently to Osun State, what is your take on this?

    I welcome the latest trend of returning African works of art from Western museums and collections to Africa. In the meantime, a lot of irreparable damage has been done. The Western world has named and defined African art in their language and proclaimed the result universal. Take for example, the famous German explorer and scholar, Leo Frobenius whose 1913 world-acclaimed book, Voice of Africa was perceived as representing the reality of African artistic achievement. Frobenius’ ethnocentrism and mistaken attributions of the authorship of works he found at Ile-Ife have become clear with time.

    The implications of Frobenius’ title, Voice of Africa, projects an ongoing challenge of what Valentine Mudimbe’s 1988 book describes as the ‘invention’ of Africa, the discursive construction of the significance of Africa. Frobenius spoke for the continent from an admiring but uninformed position. Other voices, admiring or denigrating have also spoken for the continent from a position of inadequate understanding.

    The struggle of countering the problems created by these “voices” without adequate epistemological alertness in African art studies is an ongoing struggle represented by my 2014 book. One of the great ironies of African history is that the struggle to liberate African epistemology is carried out using tools of writing and scholarship introduced to Africa by colonisation. What directions could that history have taken without the disruptive yet partially empowering – as with the introduction of widespread writing – impact of Western political, cultural and religious colonisation?

    Your latest book Yoruba Art and Language ‘’ Seeking the African in African art was controversial, why?

    None of the reviewers of my book have thus far suggested that my book is “controversial”. I wouldn’t either. The book clears the ground of weeds, replacing them with healthy crops. The book is subtitled “Seeking the African in African Art.” For a long time, the African was “lost” in studies of African art; his or her voice was muted or elided by those who ignored or downplayed its existence and value. The book is a culmination of a career dedicated to centering that voice and excavating its message.

    Reviews of my book in internationally renowned academic journals give credence to my approach in foregrounding these voices. Nkiru Nzegwu, for example, states in Journal of Art Historiography that “Yoruba Art and Language… is an epistemological tour de force on art and aesthetics from within a Yoruba intellectual scheme. Writing in English though thinking in Yoruba, Abiodun marshals the deliberative methodology of the Yoruba intellectual tradition … [he] consummately leads readers out of the Western aesthetic paradigm and its attendant epistemological scheme. He then takes us deep into the Yoruba intellectual arena where normative and meta-theoretical disputations of art, culture, and aesthetics habitually take place.” Joseph Murphy elaborates in Material Religion, “Rowland is one of the most distinguished historians of African Art in the world and his latest work is a crowning achievement … Each chapter of Yoruba Art and Language is concerned with a different religio-aesthetic concept in Yoruba thought and how it is expressed in intertwined verbal and visual media … The total effect is a master work from a master scholar and the most thorough illumination of Yoruba religious art to be found.” Allen Roberts clarifies in History of Humanities, “[Abiodun] demonstrates that Yoruba visual and performance arts must be situated in an epistemology made manifest through a narrative (and sometimes tonally drummed) idiom called oríkì … In so far as àse is “the empowered word [that] must come to pass”, it is the poetry of Yoruba creative practice as expressed through oríkì and related narrative practices that is so affecting to Yoruba themselves and to readers seeking to understand Yoruba ontology. Yoruba Art and Language will convey its own àse affecting energies to readers who take its propositions seriously…” And, in his review of my book in AFRICA, The Journal of International African Institute, William Rea writes, “It is possible that with this publication Professor Rowland Abiodun has consolidated a recognisable ‘School of African art history, one that is genuinely African, in terms of its geographic origin certainly, if not necessarily wholly in its approach towards the discipline … It is to complement Professor Abiodun’s work that his book as a history of (an)art (or arts) stands comparison to Michael Baxandall’s close reading of art and language in 15th-century Italy.”

    It’s fairly easy to understand why my book has not been like any other in the field of African art. Growing up in Yorùbáland with parents, grandparents and extended family members who lived and embodied Yorùbá traditions, my early exposure to traditional education in Yorùbá art and culture has shaped the direction of my research. The unity of the lived experience of Yorùbá language, artistic concepts, and belief systems and their critical study enabled me to understand the epistemological notions at the heart of the Yorùbá worldview, sensitising me to the inseparability of Yoruba language and culture as the epistemological foundations for the study of Yoruba art. It is this commitment that has made the book different.

    As a Yoruba Cultural Ambassador do you support and believe in Prof Banji Akintoye and Sunday Igboho’s struggle for Oduduwa Country?

    Prof. Akintoye and Chief Sunday Igboho are pursuing a worthy cause. Let me direct our attention to a Yoruba proverb to ground their struggle. It is “Èdì ò gbodo mú aláso kan,” (Spells or charms like èdì/èdìdì, ¹Ìfún, or àsàsí no matter how powerful, should not be able to cause the person who owns only a single piece of clothing to relinquish it). Here, I use Aláso kan metaphorically to refer to “Yoruba cultural identity and political and economic integrity” – our “only piece of clothing” which Western colonisers once tried replace with theirs, and which new would-be colonisers wish to deprive us of. The success of a civilisation is dependent on the preservation of its cultural, political and economic integrity.

    I link the struggles of Akintoye and Igboho with the cultural survival of the Yoruba. As Akintoye and Igboho advocate for political and economic self-determination for the Yoruba people, I strive for Yoruba cultural flourishing, as centered in Yoruba verbal, visual and performative arts and their philosophical wealth. The preservation, study, and use of our language, and the demonstration and projection of the scope of knowledge it embodies, must be pursued with vigor. This is foundational to developing successful political, social and educational structures, vital to building a lasting and progressive Oduduwa nation.

    You left Nigeria 30 years ago and have not come back, why?

    So much has changed from the Nigeria I knew. What was once considered relatively normal expectations like electricity, water, personal safety, and funds to do regular research have become increasingly difficult to access.

    Did you receive your pension, if no, why?

    No. I did not. It was not particularly convenient to jump over all the bureaucratic hurdles that made it almost impossible for anybody to access their hard earned money.

    Is this Nigeria of your dreams?

    Of course not. My dream had been that by now we would be leading Africa on all fronts – scientifically, economically, educationally and politically.

    At 80 what are your regrets, if any.

    No regrets whatsoever. There’s always an opportunity to learn and grow.

    Keeping a beard seems to be an artist’s trademark, when was the last time you shaved your beard?

    Can’t remember!

  • Lyrico-Poetic testimonies of Nigerian artistes for Usman

    Lyrico-Poetic testimonies of Nigerian artistes for Usman

    Title: Songs For Bukar Usman
    (A Collection of Panegyric Poems) 

    Author: Khalid Imam 

    Reviewer: Ben Tomoloju 

    Publisher: Whetstone Publishers 

    Pagination: 253

    The renascence of African culture is supposed to be as all-encompassing as it is dynamic. Its banner was borne aloft during the years of nationalist struggles by the then political titans. Alongside the assertion of the negritude writers whose poetry was described by Leopold Sedar Senghor as a means of revitalising and re-invigorating the African heritage, his Nigerian counterpart, Nnamdi Azikiwe, was who sensitised the public with the idea of re-nascent Africa.

    An example, and a highly significant one for that matter, is the multi-faceted, monumental scholarly output of Dr. Bukar Usman in the promotion, propagation and preservation of Nigerian folklore, especially in the field of orature. Scholars have written – and will continue to write – about the phenomenal field and literary works of Dr. Bukar Usman who is, in fact, the President of the Nigerian Folklore Society (NFS) at this point in time. They have written about his transnational support to literary development through the Dr. Bukar Usman Foundation. His social vision as a public affairs analyst, expressed in books and the media have also received commendation from observers. But there is yet another fascinating side to the life of this individual role model. Even as an elite within a patrician bracket, Bukar is also grass-rooted in his socialisation bearing evidence by the works of the five oral poets featured in this book, Songs for Bukar Usman by Khalid Imam.

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    Reading the book, Songs for Bukar Usman, one cannot but appreciate the manner in which Dr. Usman’s goodwill permeates the entire spectrum of the society in terms of relevance and veneration as a real man of the people.

    The book proves copiously that the subject’s creative and critical labour are not only seminal, but are also acknowledged among the grassroots folk. And this is borne out by the lyrico-poetic testimonies of the five oral artistes from the northern part of Nigeria whose panegyric works extol in heroic staves the virtues of the subject that makes him worthy of celebration. These singers (who essentially are oral poets) are Umar Idris (Dan Kwairon Biu); Sulaiman A. Tijjani (self-styled Professor of Poetry); Aminu Ladan Abubakar (a.k.a ALA); Maryam A. Baba (a.k.a. Sangandale), the only female among them, and Bashir Yahuza Malumfashi.

    As praise-singers, they do not compromise their art with any kind of pretension or vain-glorification. A praise-singer is a praise-singer. A jester is a jester. A singer of the halo (song of abuse) from the Ewe ethnicity in Ghana, as enunciated by Kofi Awonoor, owes no one any apology about his venomous tongue. So, a praise-singer, as demonstrated by these five in Songs for Bukar Usman, seeks value and virtue in noble individuals, singles them out for eulogy and amplifies the subject’s attributes with robust and, if necessary, hyperbolic imagery for descriptive effects.

    Umar Idris, for instance, opens Folk Hero with the invocation:

    “Bless me with genius

    O Allah, grant me brilliance

    So I can duly praise this champion.” 

    Semantically, ‘duly’ connotes sincerity and is synonymous with ‘truly’, the true judgement both morally and aesthetically. Maryam A. Baba in ‘Foundation For Humanitarian Support’ sings:

    “Whatever begins without the mention of Allah goes wrong.” 

    Dr. Bukar Usman’s works have been subjects of studies in many institutions of higher learning which, perhaps, accounts for the publication of this book of panegyric poems by Khalid Imam. Bukar Usman has made a name for himself locally and internationally.

    The song, ‘He Treats Us With Love’, by Umar Idris, says it all even in the title. Also, the opening lines of Umar’s ‘Foundation For Liberation’ is quite significant. He sings:

    “Bukar Usman: Here is a respectable foundation.

    Bukar is a respectable foundation.

    Certainly, he did not find it for his selfish needs.

    And not for any political gain.” 

    With a play on words, the singer shows that the man himself is both a foundation of exemplary attributes and an institution in his own rights; thus, a duality exists in the personality, combining the institutional and the moral.

    Maryam A. Baba elaborates on the people-friendliness of Bukar in ‘The Foundation For Humanitarian Support’:

    “Bukar Usman’s foundation supports the society.

    Bukar Usman’s foundation develops the society.

    Bukar Usman’s foundation is the cornerstone for regeneration.

    Bukar Usman’s foundation makes education economical.”

    In Songs For Dr. Bukar Usman, there are twenty-four poems altogether, classified into three self-explanatory parts. Part One comprises works by Umar Idris (Dan Kwairon Biu), Sulaiman Tijjani (The Professor of Poetry) and Aminu Ladan Abubakar (ALA). Song 1, ‘The Stalwart’ by Umar Idris profiles the subject as a leading light in society. Song 2, Folk Hero, also by Umar, portrays Bukar Usman as a winner – a champion. In Song 3, ‘The Doctor of Literature’, Umar celebrates the subject’s academic accomplishments.

    Another singer, Sulaiman A. Tijjani, emerges in Song 4, ‘The Philosophical Bukar Usman’, praising the inimitability of Bukar. Tijjani goes on in Song 5 to celebrate his subject’s meritorious service in government. The same Tijjani in Song 6, ‘The Phenomenal’, does a relay of epigrammatic antithesis in favour of Bukar, singing:

    “If you are above him in money

    He is above you in wealth

    If you exceed him in age

    You won’t equal him in intelligence…” 

    Part two is devoted to ‘Songs On Dr. Bukar Usman Foundation’, an institution that has promoted research, documentation and publication of intellectual property across Nigeria and beyond, one of which, from one’s intimate knowledge, is the gathering and publication of folktales from various zones of Nigeria.

    Part three of Songs for Bukar Usman comes in the form of ‘Odes On Biu Emirate And Borno Kingdom’. Sulaiman A. Tijjani has just one song in this part. All the same, the song pulsates with the vibrancy of his poetic genius. Titled ‘Biu City’, Song 18 opens with the line:

    “Lead on, Farfesan Waka, lead on.”

    Such an arresting opener is a self-adulating morale-booster for the performer who humorously transliterates the title ‘Professor’ in the mother-tongue of ‘Farfesan’, the Professor of Songs.

    Umar Idris sings the rest of the songs in Part Three. Song 19, ‘Let’s Make Biu a Better Place’ brims with political interventionist statements, calling for co-operation and patriotism against the run of violence in the North-east of Nigeria, against the wanton destruction of lives and properties by the Boko Haram insurgents. In successive songs, he calls on government (Song 19) towards this end.

    Reading the profiles of each of these singers in Part Four, one discovers something gratifying. They are literate through and through.

    Khalid Imam, the translator and annotator of these songs, which are unquestionably poems in their own rights, connects perfectly with the second part of the observation by the renowned literary critics. He has produced translations – especially as a creative writer himself – which convey ‘the essential qualities and meaning of the original’.

  • Ogbebor for UK fellowship

    Ogbebor for UK fellowship

    Benin-based fine artist, Mr. Enotie Paul Ogbebor, has been granted a visiting fellow in Creative Arts at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, London.

    His research will be on the museum’s collections, drawings and paintings, according to a statement by the Director, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Professorial Fellow, Trinity College Cambridge, Prof. Nicholas Thomas.

    “We anticipate that he will be in Cambridge regularly over the year to June 2022, and join us subsequently for follow-up presentations at conferences and colloquia. Over the same period, he will be undertaking other work as an artist and visiting other museum collections in the United Kingdom and also in Germany and elsewhere in Europe,” he said.

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    The 12month fellowship, which commenced early this month is  honorary and does not bring a stipend.

    Ogbebor, who is one of Nigeria’s contemporary artists, has previously hosted University of Cambridge researchers and facilitated their access to artists and makers, other cultural professionals and University of Benin colleagues.

    He had visited the United Kingdom and contributed to academic and public programmes at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, at King’s College, Cambridge, and at the Royal Academy of Arts, London.

    “He is highly regarded by museum and cultural sector colleagues in the UK and other European nations. Our ongoing collaboration has been and continues to be funded by the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, other University of Cambridge awards, and research grants from agencies including the Arts and Humanities Research Council,” Thomas added.

     

  • NYSC holds free medical outreach at Ileogbo

    NYSC holds free medical outreach at Ileogbo

    By Quadri Adegun

     

    To promote healthy living among residents of Ileogbo and its environment, the Ileogbo Development Forum (IDF), a non-profit developmental organisation based in the headquarters of Ayedire Local Government, Osun State has facilitated a health initiative for rural development in partnership with National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) in Osun State.

    No fewer than 200 people were tested and provided with free medication for malaria, hypertension, and diabetics among other ailments at the premises of Ileogbo Grade C Court, Oja-Ale. They were also given appropriate health talk on benefits of exercise, good food and resting.

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    There were six doctors, three pharmacists, five nurses and six NYSC officials who were on ground to provide the people with health talk and free medication. The Chief Imam of Ileogbo, Sheikh Nafiu Shifaudeen Adeyemo, who was present at the occasion offered the opening prayer and also got tested and given drugs.

    Speaking to reporters after the programme Mrs Adisa Tawaklit, who benefited from the programme, said: “This is quite impressive as I’ve been tested for free and got drugs, something which I can’t afford personally.”

    Also another beneficiary, Mr Mr Kola Abeeb said: “IDF is known for its developmental strides in Ileogbo and its environments. I’ve always been a beneficiary of their activities. I pray God continues to strengthen them in unison and continue to promote their developmental agenda.”

    The Health Initiative for Rural Development is a yearlyl programme by the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) that seeks to provide health care delivery service for the people in rural communities.

  • At last, befitting home for returned Benin artefacts underway

    At last, befitting home for returned Benin artefacts underway

    For many decades, the Federal Government and other stakeholders, such as Legacy Restoration Trust (LRT), Benin Dialogue Group and Digital Benin, have been advocating the return of stolen Benin bronzes with little or no success. But, with increasing mass global protests against racial injustice, conversations about restitution seem to be yielding result as many museums and private galleries across the United States and Europe have pledged to return the objects to Nigeria. Last Thursday, Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki unveiled the design of a world-class edifice, Edo Museum of West African Art (EMOWAA) to house the objects, Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports.

     

    The long-held notion that the looted Benin bronzes are ‘safer’ at institutions in the United States and Europe than in Nigeria’s museums will no longer be valid as Edo State Governor Mr. Godwin Obaseki has announced plans to accelerate the development of a world-class multimillion naira edifice, Edo Museum of West African Art (EMOWAA).

    Obaseki, while unveiling the design of the museum in Benin City last Thursday, said the construction of the early phase ­­— the Pavilion —  of the EMOWAA , would commence before the end of the year.

    He stated that the creation of the first facility within the larger museum complex of buildings and grounds would enable EMOWAA to match the ever-increasing momentum of an international movement for the return of Benin artefacts and restoration of the cultural heritage of the Kingdom of Benin.

    Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye, who designed the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture, designed the project.

    At a retreat organised by National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) and Legacy Restoration Trust (LRT), the independent, non-profit organisation, charged with building and managing the museum, Obaseki displayed the pavilion designs rendered by the renowned architect. It was learnt that the LRT, in partnership with the British Museum, has secured the equivalent of $4m of funding for the project.

    The governor highlighted features of the EMOWAA Pavilion, which include secure state-of-the-art facilities for functions including conservation, study, exhibition and public programming as historic artworks of the Kingdom of Benin are repatriated from the institutions where they are now held across the world.

    He also announced that the EMOWAA Pavilion, and the museum complex as a whole, would be situated within an emerging Benin City Cultural District, as part of a wider Benin City Masterplan that has been commissioned by the state.

    According to him, “the integration of EMOWAA into the daily life of our people, and its impact on a greatly improved urban fabric, will begin with the opening of the EMOWAA Pavilion. In his well-thought-out design, Sir David Adjaye has served all the requirements of the still-developing Museum and at the same time created a place that will welcome and embrace all members of the public.

    “The EMOWAA Pavilion will be an important and integral part of the EMOWAA complex, which will be situated in what was the heart of the historic Royal Palace grounds in Benin City before the British Invasion in 1897.”

    Director-General, National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Prof. Abba Isa Tijani, said: “The ever-increasing pace of agreements to repatriate the cultural heritage of the Kingdom of Benin, and the cooperation now being extended to Nigeria by institutions in Europe and North America, have encouraged us to begin creating EMOWAA with this important first phase of construction. The Federal Government of Nigeria is committed to EMOWAA and the Legacy Restoration Trust as a transparent, innovative way of attracting investment into the arts and culture infrastructure in Nigeria. As revealed in Sir David Adjaye’s magnificently sensitive and dignified plans, the EMOWAA Pavilion will enable the museum to begin fulfilling its mission as needed in the very near future.”

    Continuing, he said: “We have 52 museums across the country and 65 monuments and sites. The issue of training and retraining is really a big problem for us in the commission. When I took over, I said the best way is to partner the private sector and our partners outside the country. They have been able to now come to our aid in terms of capacity building. The Edo Museum of West African Arts (EMOWAA) is a big opportunity for us to be at the forefront of promoting and establishing this museum. We have curators who are experienced; they just need slight training at the international level so that the standard that we want to set up at the EMOWAA will be maintained.”

    Chair of the Board of Trustees, Legacy Restoration Trust, Mr. Phillip Ihenacho, expressed gratitude to Adjaye for envisioning a first-phase facility that is complete in every way and at the same time is achievable on the organisations’ timetable. He emphasised that “the EMOWAA will be ready to provide a secure, environmentally controlled facility for artworks and artifacts by the end of next year.”

    Ihenacho explained that the EMOWAA Pavilion was conceived as a highly sustainable, efficient single-story building comprised predominantly of locally sourced rammed earth.

    “The EMOWAA Pavilion will house an exhibition gallery with views into the secure, climate-conditioned storage and collection study area, an auditorium with seating for 180 persons, conference rooms, conservation laboratories and a library. The landscaped grounds outside the building will include an informal public gathering place and a museum facility for outdoor programmes,” he added.

    In the near term, the EMOWAA Pavilion will provide a state-of-the-art secure facility for repatriated objects and archaeological finds, a project center for the archaeological work currently in progress on and around the EMOWAA site in Benin City, laboratories for studying artifacts unearthed during the archaeological excavations, a visitor center for engaging the local community and stakeholders and interim offices for EMOWAA staff.

    In the long term, after EMOWAA is complete, the EMOWAA Pavilion will be a base for on-going archaeological research, a hub for training in archaeology, conservation, heritage studies, and museology, and a storage and conservation center for the objects held by EMOWAA.

    According to Museums Association’s website, the archaeology project, which will investigate the Kingdom of Benin, starts this year and involves a wide range of partners including local communities, the Benin Royal Court, the Government of Edo State and the National Commission for Museums and Monuments.

    The initiative constitutes early phase work for the building of EMOWAA, which is being developed to house West African art and artefacts. It will include the Royal Collection, the most comprehensive display in the world of Benin Bronzes. The museum will also include galleries dedicated to contemporary art.

    Architect Adjaye, said: “From an initial glance at the preliminary design concept, one might believe this is a traditional museum but, really, what we are proposing is an undoing of the objectification that has happened in the West through full reconstruction.

    “Applying our research into Benin’s extraordinary ruins, the city’s orthogonal walls and its courtyard networks, the museum design reconstructs the inhabitation of these forms as pavilions that enable the re-contextualisation of artefacts. Decoupling from the Western museum model, the EMOWAA will perform as a re-teaching tool – a place for recalling lost collective memories of the past to instil an understanding of the magnitude and importance of these civilisations and cultures.”

    EMOWAA is focused on reuniting Benin art works currently within international collections, as well as investigating and presenting the wider histories that these represent. In addition to directly supporting the building of the new museum, this archaeology project will actively engage with wider debates concerning Benin cultural heritage and the representation of its history. The open dialogue that this project fosters is designed to create new opportunities to address the significant history of the Kingdom of Benin but also the painful history of the invasion and destruction of Benin City by British forces in 1897 – and to engage in new forms of cultural exchange and understanding. The EMOWAA and the archaeology project are part of a wider scheme to revitalise the cultural core of Benin City and to aid in the economic revitalisation of the city.

    Last April, in an unprecedented turn of events, Germany pledged to repatriate the thousands of Benin Bronzes housed in its museum collections as early as next year.

    Germany‘s Culture Minister Monika Grütters described the move as a “historic milestone.”

    “We face a historic and moral responsibility to shine a light on Germany’s colonial past,” says German Culture Minister Monika Grütters…”We would like to contribute to understanding and reconciliation with the descendants of people who were robbed of their cultural treasures during the colonial era,” according to Smithsonian magazine.

    This decision came on the heels of a renewed push to return the looted artifacts to their home country of Nigeria. Other European countries that have pledged to return the looted artefacts include.

    In 1897, British colonial forces razed Benin City, massacring an unknown number of people and bringing a violent end to the Kingdom of Benin, which had thrived for centuries as one of West Africa’s major powers. During the raid, British troops looted at least 3,000 precious items made by the Edo people, including ivory statues, carved elephant tusks, ceramics, masks, carved portraits of Obas (or kings) and their mothers, and more than 1,000 intricately decorated brass plaques that once adorned ancestral altars and court buildings in the city’s royal palace.

    According to report, more than a century later, the Benin Bronzes remain scattered throughout at least 161 museums around the world, according to research compiled by Dan Hicks, an archaeologist at the University of Oxford. For academics and art lovers alike, the works’ fate represents colonialism’s destructive impact on Nigerian cultural heritage, as Nina Kravinsky reported for Smithsonian magazine in 2019. References to the artifacts appear in blockbuster movies and feature prominently in art world debates about if—and how—looted art should be repatriated.

    In one major development, Berlin’s Humboldt Forum—a new museum set to open this year—announced in March that it plans to fully restitute all of its Benin Bronze holdings. After the artifacts are returned, the museum may exhibit replicas or simply leave empty spaces to signify their absence.

    That same month, Scotland’s University of Aberdeen said it would unconditionally return a sculpture depicting the head of an Oba. Per a statement, this move will make the institution the first museum in the world to agree to the full repatriation of a piece of art looted from Benin in 1897.

     

  • Rotary donates prostate centre

    Rotary donates prostate centre

    By Joseph Eshanokpe

     

    Rotary International District 9110 has donated a prostate centre worth over N100 million to the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OOUTH), Sagamu, Ogun State.

    At the unveiling last Thursday, Rotary 9110 outgoing District Governor Bola Oyebade was all smiles when he handed over the facility to the state Deputy Governor Mrs. Noimot Salako-Oyedele for inauguration.

    ”We are proud to say we have delivered on our promise. I am super excited. I want to thank the committee (Building) that did it and the committee that raised the money for us. I didn’t do it alone,” he said. He thanked the deputy governor for giving Rotary the land on which the centre was built. ”

    Without the land, we wouldn’t have been here,” he added. He also thanked donors to the project. Specifically, he mentioned Tolaram Group, the Rotary’s District Education and Welfare Endowment Fund (DEWEF) and Rotarians.

    On equipping the centre, he promised to do so. ”We’ll support with equipment. We’ll not renege on that,” he said. He advised that the centre be maintained.

    Mrs. Salako-Oyedele, who represented the governor, commended Rotary for the gesture and for meeting its set timeline to finish the centre. She recalled that she attended the foundation laying last November 9, when Oyebade pledged to complete the project in eight months, adding surprisingly, he did it much earlier.

    She said one major reason the government gave Rotary the nod to site the project at OOUTH was that it was noted for its humanitarian services worldwide, adding that the organisation’s vision was in tandem with that of the state government in quality health delivery. Listing the state government’s stride in the health sector, she admitted that no government could do it all. She, therefore, called for more partnership.

    Similarly, the Commissioner for Health Dr. Tomi Coker, who noted that the centre was the first in Ogun, promised not only to equip, but maintain it.

    Both the OOUTH Chairman Dr Adekunle Hassan and Acting Chief Medical Director Dr. Oluwabunmi Fatunga thanked Rotary for the centre with Dr. Fatunga describing the event as epoch-making while Hassan said: ”I love Rotary for one thing. They don’t speculate. They plan and execute. We promise to bring to pass your vision which we share with you. I thank you for your generosity and vision to make the society better.”

    Akarigbo of Remoland Oba Babatunde Adewale Ajayi also thanked Rotary for siting the centre in Sagamu. He said prostate cancer is a deadly disease that has afflicted man for ages and that with the centre in his home land, its infection rate in the area would be reduced.

    Other dignitaries at the event included Rotary International DG-elect Remi Bello; past DGs Dende Soga, Patrick Ijehon Ikheloa, Dr. Jide Akeredolu; a past Assistant Governor, Wale Kukoyi; Chairman, Building Committee, Assistant Governor Tunde Alimi; and Chairman, FundRaising Committee Tunde Olaleye.

     

     

  • Love Island Nigeria  for October debut

    Love Island Nigeria for October debut

    Digital Play Africa, licensee of ITV Studios famous dating reality show, Love Island, has confirmed that the award-winning, record-breaking format will begin its Nigerian journey in October. It is scheduled to broadcast to millions of entertainment fans via Free TV’s free-to-air and premium channels; including ONTV, MTV Base among others. The show will also be available for digital streaming via 9Vision mobile app.

    The announcement was made in Lagos last Thursday at an event where representatives of the companies were joined by members of the press, brand sponsors, and entertainment enthusiasts as well as representatives of the UK Department of International trade.

    The Love Island format, which originated in the United Kingdom in 2005, has since grown to become one of the most-watched content on TV and online platforms with a strong presence in 21 countries, including the United Kingdom, United States, Australia and Spain.

    Speaking on what inspired the decision to bring the show to Nigeria, Toyin Subair, executive at Digital Play Africa, explained that Love Island perfectly sums the expectations Nigerians have of entertainment as the programme offers a rich mix of fun while still touching on the subjects of friendship, love, romance, and enduring relationships between islanders.

    Love Island Nigeria, the first format to have an all-black cast, will give 20 singles an opportunity to come together and share the true essence of love, romance, friendship and relationship with all the twists and intrigues in seven exhilarating weeks in the Love Island villa.

    Huub Van Ballegooy, Head Global Content and Productions at ITV Studios Global Entertainment who spoke online, reiterated Subair’s comment describing the show’s debut in Nigeria as timely at a time when the viewers are longing for something different. “As we have already seen in different parts of the world, Love Island works equally well across linear, digital and catch-up platforms. With love being a universal language and the growing Nigerian market, we are very excited to roll out Love Island soon in Nigeria as well”, he said.

    Speaking on their plans for the show’s production and how viewers will enjoy the forthcoming experience, Odiri Iwuji of Chudor House Production, an executive producer on the show, commented that Love Island is perfect for the Nigerian youth audience as it simply ticks all the boxes.

    Neil Oyenekan, the Series Producer, added that dating is a critical part of millennial maturation in today’s Africa, and Love Island Nigeria offers a ‘verified’ format through which its key stages get tested – we expect great entertainment.

     

  • Abayomi Barber’s iconic essence @92

    Abayomi Barber’s iconic essence @92

    By Rasheed Amodu

     

    Abayomi Barber is a legendary 92-year-old art icon and founder of Abayomi Barber Art School.

    The school is an informal art school with a mixture of workshop and apprenticeship standard. The school promotes surrealism and naturalism ideologies. Barber is the founder and mentor of the school. He is a renowned painter and sculptor. Barber had executed many commissions for both public and private sectors in Nigeria and abroad.

    The exhibition is a well-deserved celebration of excellence in contemporary Nigerian art by the National Gallery of Art (NGA) on Barber with his School members, which include Muri Adejimi, Olumuyiwa Spencer, Oluwatoyin Alade, and Olubunmi Lasaki, among others. The show was staged in May at the National Museum, Lagos. It was a remarkable display by Barber and his disciples while the 305 plus pages brochure with notes/essays from Ebeten Ivara (Director-General, NGA), Dr. Simon Ikpakronyi (Director of Curatorial Services, NGA), and Prof. Sheriffdeen Abayomi, among others, added historical value to the exhibition.

    With an abundance of recent and evergreen works on display, it became a grand exhibition of Barber and his disciples. Some of Barber’s busts/figures of popular Nigerians in the persons of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Oba Adesoji Aderemi, Sir Tafawa Balewa, General Murtala Muhammed, and General Ike Nwachukwu were on display. Busts of some other Africans and Europeans were also exhibited.

    The resemblance of the portrait of the aforementioned individuals were sublime. His popular “Ali Mai Goro” was also exhibited. It is a unique bust of a northern Nigerian man with stained and irregular dentition because of Goro (cola nut) addiction. “Ali Mai Goro” is a well sculpted happy face with a superbly conviviality. Some of Barber’s paintings in the show are “Miyoso”, and “Oruu Olugbon”, “Elementary Cosmology”, among others. They are good ambassadors of his unequal mastery of surrealistic and naturalistic depictions.

    Muri Adejimi like most of the other members of the Barber Art School is a painter, a master of his art. Some of his works on display are “The Egg” and “African Dance”. “The Egg” is a surrealistic representation of a grayish egg with a reflection in the midst of countless meaningful folds of cloths in colours of white, grayish tones, orange to golden tones and shades to darkness. It is probably about the beginning of life, growing from the brightness and joy of youth before getting to the old age stage of reminiscence. Maybe, a metaphor on the good and the bad, and finally the sorrow and darkness of death at the upper part of the painting.

    “African Dance” dwells on a beautiful semi-nude African maiden with enticing bosom, waist beads and other beautiful body adornment.

    Olumuyiwa Spencer’s paintings are majorly surrealistic with his own masterly uniqueness. His “Over flowing of Blessing” is a scene of zillion fishes jumping in and out of the water while some of them are caught in a basket. Spencer’s “Peaceful Place” is a picturesque paradise in the middle of nowhere. The variety of lush green leaves forever caressing the trees in rhythmic response to the melodious breeze with the lake and hut without any human in sight is a masterpiece.

    Toyin Alade is another master painter from the Barber School. He is a good portraitist as noticed in his tribute to the great art patron of blessed memory, Sammy Olagbaju, titled “Olagbaju the Biography”. The man was standing boldly, dressed in suit in the foreground while six smaller portraits of him from infancy to adulthood dominate the background. It is an inspiring memorabilia on a grand patron of the art. “The Legend” is a glorification of his master, Abayomi Barber. Barber’s golden portrait in bust-like depiction was in the foreground, in the background are images of Yemoja, Ori-Olokun (Ife art), Nok terracotta head, and an Oni (king) figure with a reflection of Barber’s head in the glass ceiling. Thus, Alade equates Barber to the ancient artwork of Nok and Ife in a museum ambience that resulted in a quasi-surreal masterpiece.

    Bunmi Lasaki is a more realistic painter/portraitist. His pencil portrait of the legend, titled “Barber’s Point of View (Barber’s Thought)” is awesome. Lasaki’s “Ibile Rhythms” and “Organic Rhythms” are works focused on Yoruba talking drummers. Archibald Etikerentse is a graphic designer. He exhibited some posters on his Itsekiri heritage.

    Bayo Akinwole is a sculptor. Like Alade and Lasaki, Akinwole also celebrate his professional benefactor, Abayomi Barber, in “The Great Master”, which is a bust of Barber. The bust is a good replica of the legendary Barber. Femi Atewolara is another painter from the Barber School. His “Sallah Day in Kano” and “Emir and His Entourage” are interesting scenic records from his visit to northern Nigeria. “Lockdown” is Atewolara’s visualised symbolism of COVID-19 pandemic that started in China in 2019 before spreading to other parts of the world in 2020/2021.

    Ato Arinze is a sculptor/ceramist. Some of his works on display are plaques and bust of remarkable Africans/Nigerians, which include Nelson Mandela, M.K.O. Abiola, Chinua Achebe, Adekunle Ajasin, and Nnameka Achebe. The resemblance and finishing of Arinze’s works are incontestable.

    Tunde Barber is the son of Abayomi Barber. His “Woman with Necklace” is a successful surrealistic painting. “A Place of Rest” shows Tunde’s mastery of blending the nude form of a lady coupled with other faces into the foliage and bushes of the surrounding landscape. The calm river and bright sky helped balanced the composition with finesse. Conrad Decker exhibited terracottas. His “Stone Breeds” and “Framed” are his abstract personalised visual discourse in clay. Kent Ideh (late) was a realist painter. “Weaning Bond” is the never ending visual story of a mother breast feeding her child. Busari Agbolade (late) was a naturalistic and surrealistic painter. His “Ejire” is a representation of infant identical twins.

    The exhibition was a wonderful experience on Barber and his School. Looking forward to more of such celebration of Nigerian art grandmasters or masters from the National Gallery of Art (NGA).

     

    • Rasheed Amodu, is a Lagos based artist and art historian/critic.