Tag: artist

  • Artist urges people to work for change

    A Nigeria will not  progress except citizens resolved to bring change and progress, a script writer and film producer, Victor Negro, has said.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that at 58, Nigeria was at a crossroads and still talking about election inconsistencies.

    “If citizens resolve to positively bring change and progress in Nigeria, the country will see its growth, because lack of development is self-imposed by the citizens.

    “Without the citizens, there will be no Nigeria and every hand must be on deck for the nation to grow.

    “It is ridiculous when an average citizen blames the government for every problem and any trouble in the country. The government themselves do not help matters.

    “The government use Nigerians to accomplish their individual policies because most of their policies are not citizen-friendly,” Negro said.

    He said if Nigeria is at a standstill, it is because the citizens have become stumbling blocks in the wheel of her progress.

    “When I speak of citizens, it does not exclude those in government appointments; I am saying that collectively we have stagnated the development of Nigeria. We should be ashamed of ourselves,” he said.

    Negro said: “I am not satisfied with where we are as a nation, because we are underdeveloped, viewed from all development yardsticks.”

  • Artist decries poor handling of Soyinka’s portraiture at OAU

    VISUAL artist Dotun Popoola has expressed anger at the state of a sculpture he created 10 years ago as his final year school project at the Obafemi Olowowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    The sculpture is a 15ft portrait of Prof Wole Soyinka, which is erected on the ridge of the recently-opened Wole Soyinka Museum at Ile-Ife. The artist said the piece was originally placed on three books that represent poetry, prose and drama, which gave Soyinka his Nobel Laureate Prize. The intellectual aspect of the artwork is damaged, he said at a press conference in Lagos.

    Popoola said he had no problem that the sculpture had been taken to the museum, but that the front of the piece was removed, his signature and the date of execution cut off.

    “What I saw brought tears to my eyes. The painful aspect of it is that the head is placed on the ridge of the museum. I’m happy that the school authorities considered my work, which is one of the reasons I immortalised Baba Soyinka. Now, cutting off the book, destroying the base of the work made me feel like the work was relegated from a monument to a mere craft.

    ‘’What made him a professor are the books that he read. The head is useless without something inside the cranium. I just want art to be valued the way it should be; the way they taught us in school,” he said.

    The artist, who just came back from a three-month residence programme in the US, said he was shocked when he saw the image of what has become of the work on social media. He described the act as ”a monumental embarrassment, an assault on my intellectual property. But, in a way I want to sound like a trained child who was actually trained by a father and when my father offends me, I want to be very cautious in the way that I tell him that he has actually offended me”.

    Explaining how attached he is to the work, Popoola said: “I wept when I got to the site where the work was removed. I appreciate the fact that the institution recognised the work as outstanding enough to be presented to Wole Soyinka Museum. But, it is unfortunate that they did this to my work. This is an open letter to the school authority do restore this work because it’s my intellectual property that have been destroyed. Besides, there are a lot of things that could happen to that work where it is placed.”

    He said he had contacted the OAU’s Art Department and ”I have to be silent about the outcome. I don’t want to comment on what they told me. However, this is my piece; it was submitted to the department in partial fulfilment of my degree, which some of them felt since I have submitted the work, it’s no longer my property. But, I claim that whatever that is done by me and has my signature; I think I still have some right on that piece.”

    When asked what he wanted the school to do on this piece, he said he wanted the artwork to be restored to its original position. “I want alternative resolution. I’m not trying to fight. I’m appealing to them. I wouldn’t have bordered if the work was not damaged. The way they did work, it has become a signboard and not as a monument again. This is my plea. I’m pleading with the university to do the right thing,” he said.

    In his reaction, a US-based Nigerian art historian at the University of Texas in Austin, Prof Moyo Okediji, who was a lecturer at OAU said: “The decapitation of Wole Soyinka’s figure that was elegantly sculptured by Dotun Popoola is a cruel act of lynching. Nobody with any respect for art could have mastermind such a mutilation of the image of the only Nobel Laureate that Nigeria has ever produced. Those who destroyed this work must be held accountable and made to pay commensurate recompense for this blatant vandalism. It is not only an attack on the art, it is equally an assault on African literature and drama that Soyinka represents and the global expressive culture.”

    When  the Head of Department, Fine and Applied Art, Dr. Nanashaitu Oke-Umoru was contacted to verify Popoola’s claim, she said they could not comment on the issue because it is an internal matter, which they hope to resolve amicably.

  • Artist builds his foundations on lines

    After about 13 years of research into foundation of art, especially lines, Uchenna Ohagwu, a 2003 graduate of Fine Art from the Institute of Management Technology (IMT), Enugu, has embraced those basic elements of arts that will help define his art.

    In his maiden solo exhibition, Foundation,which held at Moorhouse Hotel, Ikoyi, Lagos, penultimate Saturday, Ohagwu created mosaic textures with lines by piercing through imageries of optical illusions. The exhibition,  curated by Moses Ohiomokhare, was part of Weave and Co Gallery and Ora Ataguba’s creative platform, New Possibilities 2018. It featured 30 paintings and drawings.

    Specifically, though the solo show took him seven years of experimentation, it has provided him the opportunity to address some issues in the society. He said for every milestone in life, there were pathways to it, noting that lines allow him to work on his subjects in a semi abstract way while the discordant issues still complement the whole.

    According to him, Foundation has started the beginning of his journey towards bigger things to come as far as lines are concerned. It is all about how he sees his environment through the lines in paintings and drawings. “The title is inspired by how I see art and issues that surround me,” he added.

    On his journey in the art, Ohagwu said: “After school I went into the advertising industry, although I have a studio where I paint. I had always known that I will exhibit so I kept painting. I missed my studio experiences being in advertising. But, I did not feel bad not exhibiting since because I am searching like others. This approach to my art is synonymous with what Nigeria is facing today- distraction, and changes yet things remain same.” However, his stint in advertising has helped turn up his patience.

    One common thread runs through most of his paintings and drawings. The central figure of his painting is seeking escape or direction from the web around it. Notwithstanding the novelty of his style, the show is setting the tone for his next exhibitions as he has laid the foundation.

    Ohiomokhare observed that many young artists do not have opportunities to show in big galleries because of cost. “But with this platform, it is a starting point,” he said.

    Ora Ataguba, under whose creative platform New Possibilitiesthe exhibition was organised, said though the economy is bad, no one can hold creativity down. “To some extent, you cannot commercialise it, but for us we will continue to work on it till when the value increases,” she said. Foundation will run for two weeks.

     

  • ‘To be  an artist demands sacrifices’

    ‘To be an artist demands sacrifices’

    Eluagu Nzubechukwu William, 30, is a 2013 graduate of Fine Art from the Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Lagos. His name may not ring a bell among art enthusiasts and collectors but he does the unusual by experimenting with found objects, materials and forms. He speaks with MOJISOLA CLEMENT-Omobowale on his  challenges while working on his final project: Your destiny is in your hands, an installation made from pet bottles in front of YABATECH School of Art and Designs.

    Why did you change from sciences to study fine arts?

    After my secondary education, I attended a church programme that was organised for the youth anchored by a female counselor. She lectured us about self-discovery and challenged every youth present to discover who they are when they get home. She asked us to lie down facing up and closed our eyes. And that we should look deep down into our soul. I went home to do that. But, I always knew I was an artist. When I borrowed my peers my notebook, they pass comments such as ‘your note is very neat, your diagrams look like an album.’

    Teachers will call me to draw on the board. I was always drawing but most times they were not for publicity stunt. When I draw, it always looks like a photocopy. After the programme, I discovered that art was my line and I never wanted to do something I learnt but something that came to me naturally. So, I decided to be who I am. Initially, what I did was to contact my art teacher, Mrs Fasanmi. She was my fine arts teacher in my secondary school. The first day she saw me, she just loved me. I told her my intentions to be an artist and she was very happy. She gave me my first drawing materials such as brushes and paints and she wrote a recommendation to her colleagues on my behalf. She is an alumnus of YABATECH.  They run a studio called the Universal Studio of Arts (USA) at the premises of National Theatre, Lagos. I went there as an apprentice between 2003 and 2006. Between that period, I enrolled for GCE where I did the arts subjects.

    What kind of growing up did you have?

    Growing up was very interesting. It was full of fun. You know a typical child that grew up in Ajegunle. I grew up in an average family. I lost my father when I was 6 years old. He was a businessman who was involved in importation while my mum is a trader. Many children in Ajegunle grew up with a lot of play and experiment. We will make kites and on Saturdays we go to the dustbins and pick things that we use to make toys. We always look out for Saturdays. And each season came with its own type of play or game.

    Will you say your talent or skill is hereditary? I mean does it run in the family?

    Yes. I think from my mother from what I observed personally. She has some of her biology notes she used while she was still in school. She is a perfectionist. Though she was married to my father at a tender age, she kept all her notes, her notes does not get torn. She actually told me that she misplaced most of her books when she came to my father’s house. She said they were all borrowing her notes and never returned it. I saw her diagrams and I feel it flowed from her so I believe it flowed from them.

    I used pet bottle to create a sculptural work 10 feet six inches high then the base is like three feet. The title of the work is Your destiny is in your hands and it shows two sterilized hands holding a sphere and this sphere signifies ones destiny. It was supposed to be the world when I proposed the idea. The jury that examined the idea limited it to Your destiny is in your hands. Although I have already done the design so I couldn’t go back on it and I decided to continue with it. The sphere symbolizes one’s destiny while the hand symbolizes man and his action. Now from the composition of the art piece one would notice that the hand is composed in such a way that there is a wobbling, there is a struggle of these two hands, there is a struggle trying to control the ball which we all know as the way life is, it is struggle for us all to get to our destiny or our positive feet. It is always a struggle. Although it was done in 2013, it was mounted around January 2014 and pro to that time there were lots of challenges I had to face to do that work.

    What kind of challenges?

    The challenges include catering for my needs as a student and the first challenge was money followed by keeping to time.  Note that my project that had not been done before. I didn’t have any particular blueprint or a place I will go to see the work where it has been done. The material is somehow new especially in this environment. There are only few places that the project has been done like Brazil and China. So, the other challenge I had was supervision. The first lecturer that was supposed to be my supervisor turned me down.

    You said you were not a good student?

    I was not a good student because at a point my supervisor and I were good paddies. But it turned sour because I couldn’t meet up with my assignment.

    Why didn’t you meet up with your assignments?

    I had some contracts I was doing and I had to meet up. I was lagging in my assignments. I was not able to submit my assignment promptly. I was not even paying much attention. But they knew I was a good student. In the class, we were four. I don’t want to praise myself but I was a promising student even my lecturers knew. My only problem was that I was not meeting up.

    The second lecturer that took my supervision after much begging gave me a target and a particular time frame. Yet, I couldn’t meet up still because my clients were on my neck. In fact, during that period, I felt like running away from the school.  But, to God be the Glory I was able to deliver the works to the client who threatened that he would use police to nab me. By that time, I had already received query from my Head of Department Mr. Aderinsoye  Aladegbohungbe. So, I went to explain myself to him. Thank God he is a very understanding man. He admonished me.

    My next supervisor abandoned my project because I couldn’t meet the target. I didn’t get another supervisor after that so I had to do it all myself. I mean all alone without any supervision.

    What was the duration of the project?

    Really, I wasn’t counting anymore. But it may be around 90 days or three to four months.

    What were the pet bottles you used?

    I used different brands of pet bottles because all I wanted was something dynamic, something different. If I had gone for just a brand, I would have been limited. Let me give you an example, if I had gone for a the brand Pepsi, maybe Teem, I would only have a particular type of green so if you look at the work closely, there is a green that is lighter. There is also a green like 7up. So I used Teem, 7up and the lighter one is the H20 which now gradually faded into the white, I mean the clear one, the Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Fanta and Lacasera.

    How many bottles did you use in all?

    Wow. I made an attempt to count them and I lost count so it will be over 2000 and between four to five thousand bottles.

    So how did you source the pet bottles?

    I contracted the sweepers which were also my friends in the school because everything was gotten in the school, the students consume a lot of soft drinks and all I had to do was because I couldn’t pick them all. Although I picked some by myself, they were more in the position to gather it easier than me. I was buying it 30 naira per dozen. They were very happy supplying me with those bottles. I just kept stacking them.

    You stacked them before you embarked on the project?

    Usually when we have a project, we usually have a day of proposal.  You propose three ideas and from those ideas, you are permitted to choose one or they may choose for you if they notice that your ideas are not so good. But in my case, I proposed three ideas. Those ideas were unique and I was asked to choose any of it. I told them I will like to embark on this one.  My mind was on the pet bottles.

    Between 2008 and 2010, there was a research I was doing on plastics.  And I have been thinking of how to get money and turn it into art work. That preempted my idea about plastics.  I asked myself what can I do with them? Do I take them and melt them? I never knew it was going to be popular or people were going to be wowed by it. I just felt I wanted to do something different. I knew it was going to be difficult because I don’t have any blueprint or model to follow.

    I knew what I wanted to do but I did not know the technical ways to go about it so it is just as if I had a dream but I did not know the road to follow. When I started it, pressures were mounting on the different techniques to adopt.

    So aside from pet bottles, what other materials did you use?

    Apart from that, I used lights bulb which I used in lighting them. So during the day you will see it with the bottles and at night it’s glowing.

    I am still going to explain the reasons for all of them because they all have their symbolism. I also used metal. There are different types of metal, there are quarter rods, 8mm, 10mm, 16mm, 20mm which is as thick as three fingers joined together. So I had to look for a way of bending those rods and I bent them myself. I had to make do with whatever I was going to get. When some people and my lecturers saw me at that time, they were like why don’t you just cut them in pieces and weld them. I listened to them but I did not do what they asked me to do. By God’s Grace I was able to make it stronger.

    Some of them he told me categorically that Williams what are you doing? You are not serious, what are you trying to do? While doing the work I had people that donated money to me voluntarily. Lecturer like Mr Rukeme Noserime helped me financially.

    The work is signed 2013 because that was when it was actually done but mounted in 2014.

    In what form do you want to come out with those ideas?

    I will like to come out with installations. Installations are spiritual art that have been done for a limited period of time maybe three months.  But you go back and dismantle it when time elapses. I also want to have exhibitions because people have given me the challenge. Some people want the piece or want something of this nature in their house. I have also been able to think about how I can modify it to fit into peoples’ home. I have been able to come up with the ideas because between that period and now I am quite good at using clay for sculpting figures and human beings. I have been using that to sustain myself. I have a registered business. The name of my company is the Co-Creators art and design company. There I do architectural finishing, build fountains, interiors, kitchen among others.

    Did you receive any award or scholarship?

    I have not gotten any scholarship or contract or any endorsement yet. Although there were some rumours that I must have a distinction. I refused to tell the students that I did not get an A because I was scared they could go on a rampage.  I think it was a B or something like that.

    If you get the opportunity to travel overseas would you go?

    Actually I am thinking of that seriously as a way of going for further studies. I would so much appreciate it. Though I have never thought of going abroad to live but I have always seen myself as an international person. I see myself as a global person that is why the theme of the particular topic I chose is central.

    Who motivates you?

    Firstly my inspiration is from God not man because everything I do is from deep within me. I don’t do things that come from my heart. I usually have a hunch to do something before I embark on it. I also get inspired by Mr Segun Adejumo who taught me to draw and appreciate it and so many other prominent artists such as Mr Biodun Olakun and Mr Olubunmi that taught me to appreciate art and see it as a profession.

    Any regrets?

    The road to being an artist is not an easy one. It is something that if you don’t make up your mind on it, you cannot succeed. It is not easy either in this country or abroad. It has lots of sacrifices.

     

  • Artist makes case for sexuality, women

    Artist makes case for sexuality, women

    What does female sexuality mean?  In an age where sexuality and violence against women are   raising concerns, banker-turned-artist Victor Mba has added his voice to the issues.

    He is set to stir up conversations on womanhood, women’s rights and sexuality through his art.

    For the artist, art is his medium of advocacy. Womanhood, according to the women’s right advocate, is “God’s greatest gifted to humanity that should nurtured and celebrated”.

    His debut solo exhibition, tagged: In The Beginning will be exploring the three subjects.

    The exhibition will openat Didi Museum on Saturday, February 13 and run till Friday, February 17.

    Mba does relief paintings and sculptures. He uses unconventional styles, methods and materials to create two-three dimensional sculptural or paint pieces on a flat surface to advocate his ideas.

    “Women are a gift to mankind. I have chosen to use art to explore these very important subject matters. I hope to stir up conversations around each, looking at the role and significance of each. Mine is a departure from the nude style of expressing sexuality. In an age where sexuality is an issue with growing concern, I am using my art to explore the notion of sexuality. Many are confused and do not even know where they belong,” according to Mba.

    Since 2011, Mba has featured his works at the Society for Nigerian Artists’ yearly exhibition tagged: October Rain when he became member.

    He said: “I like my works taunting the thoughts of viewers. One minute, you think you are seeing something and with a closer look it’s something else. Depending on what I’m trying to achieve, I use anything: sand, dust or cloth.”

    The exhibition is powered by Amarch Consultants. “Mba’s pieces force you to think deep about what preoccupation they expressed. His passion is infectious. We want to have a taste his talent. Supporting his dream meant the world would be blessed by his gift,”  Amarch Consultants Principal Partner, Mr Obehi Iyamabo, he said.

     

  • Artist, monarch trade words over feud

    Artist, monarch trade words over feud

    Embattled award winning artist Jelili Atiku and the Ejigbo royal family last Thursday gave conflicting accounts of their rift.

    The palace accused Atiku of committing a tabboo against Ejigbo tradition by bringing a masquerader to the town.

    Atiku denied the allegation, saying what he did was visual art and not masquerading.

    A chief who simply identified himself as Basorun Ejigbo and the Iyalode of Ejigbo said it is a taboo to bring a masquerader to the town.

    Atiku and his group, the Bashorun said, went about the town in masquerader’s attire.

    “When we first saw him, we were frightened. Then we saw the pamphlets he had been distributing,” he said.

    The pamphlets contained prayers in English and Yoruba and information concerning some allegations levelled against the monarch.

    Underneath each allegation were the web links and publication dates where the information can be accessed on internet and newspapers.

    This angered the chiefs, who claimed that Atiku’s supporters and those following him threw stones at the palace as they walked past it.

    Denying the allegations, Atiku said: “What I did was just visual art and not masquerading. Most of my face was visible. I know the taboos of the land and their consequences, and I won’t go against it.”

    Reliving the circumstances surrounding his arrest, Atiku said: “On the day of the incident, I went to see some friends and had only just returned home. As I was removing my clothes, about seven armed policemen came. They just said the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) needed me at the police station. One of them was just shouting; ‘you are a criminal, come out! Come out!’ He was also pointing a gun at me.

    “At Ejigbo police station, the DPO said I should be taken downstairs because he did not want to talk to me. My belongings were then collected and I was subsequently locked up for the night. The next day, I was asked to write a statement concerning my activities on Thursday, January 14. I wrote all about the performance we staged called “Aragamago, will rid this land of terrorism” which was not a cult group as reports had claimed.”

    According to him, five chiefs had once come to his house to warn him about his activities against the monarch.

    “They destroyed my property when I did not agree with them,” Atiku said.

    Another chief said they had gone to warn Atiku to stop posting negative comments about the monarch on Facebook.

    “He (Atiku) began to quarrel with us after which he destroyed his own properties and blamed it on us,” the Abore of Ejigbo said.

  • Behold an artist without hands

    Behold an artist without hands

    Shaidatu Abubakar, 19, is unlike many of her peers. Born without hands, she has demonstrated that there is ‘ability in disability’. She paints, draws and designs with her feet. But her dream is to set up her own studio,
    reports OJI ONOKO

    With ease, she picked the drawing pen between her toes. From sitting, she stretched her leg to the pad and began to draw. Soon, a pattern emerged. The audience cheered. But she was not done yet.  This time, an National Gallery of Art (NGA) staff member, Hadiza Muazu, volunteered to be her model. The artist did not waste time in putting an intricate design on the back of her palm known as Henna in Hausa, which is quite popular with women in the North. The design is akin to Uli in the Southeast.

    For those at the Sixth National Visual Art Competition and awards organised by the (NGA at the Shehu Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja, that Thursday, the feat was a marvel from a 19-year-old girl born without both hands, who chose to rise above her defects. The attention of the management of NGA was drawn to her special talent during the competition. For this, a Special Award was given her.  As the DG, NGA, Abdullahi Muku, put it: “Abubakar has demonstrated that there is ability in disability. If she is encouraged to set up a studio, she can become an employer.”

    But for the teenage artist, it has been a life of tenacity, doggedness and never-say-die.  A native of Lapai, in Lapai Local Government Area of Niger State, Abubakar was born on September 23, 1996 to the family of Ndeji Abubakar. She attended Bani Primary School, Lapai, passing out in 2009.  Thereafter, she proceeded to Government Girls’ Day Secondary School, Lapai where she obtained her National Examination Council (NECO) Certificate in 2014.

    According to Ezekwesili Mgbemene, the NGA Curator in Niger State, who traced her to her 44, Bani Road, Lapai modest home, “though born without hands, Shaidatu is a practising artist, who draws, designs and writes with her feet.  She has in no way resigned to her physical challenge as can be seen with many in this part of the world, but she is always busy drawing, designing, browsing on her lpad and making phone calls;  giving words of encouragement to other people. Daily, she does Kwinchi henna beauty designs on female clients who patronise her at her home.  Her ambition is to own an art studio and to be a renowned artist.”

    Shaidatu has a good command of English language and she is a good conversationalist; what she lost in hands, she has more than made up in words and feet.

    At the event, the Chairman, Senate Committee on Culture, Senator Mathew Urhoghide, promised to use his office to assist the artist.

    Observers said what Shaidatu needs are artificial arms. She awaits succour to come to her through well-meaning Nigerians? For now, Shaidatu paints on with her feet.

     

    • Onoko wrote from Abuja.
  • ‘I will  love to reincarnate as artist’

    ‘I will love to reincarnate as artist’

    US-based Nigerian scholar and artist Prof dele jegede turned 70 last April. He will be celebrated by his colleagues at the University of Lagos and Yaba College of Technology, Lagos from tomorrow.  To him, good artists never die, never fade away, but simply become more vivified; a category  which he belongs to at 70. Though disengaged from teaching, he sees the disengagement as an opportunity to re-engage himself with his studio practice,   Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports. 

    With the marking of your 70th birthday, you have joined the elder statesmen’s club. How do you feel hitting the mark?

    Where’s the King of Soul, James Brown, when you need him? “I feel good….pa para para para!” I am nothing but thankful. There are no two ways about that. The older you get, the more introspective you become. The more exposed you are to occurrences and developments, which humble you and cause you to be appreciative of the grace without which your very existence will be naught. When I was young—let me re-phrase that, because I am still young—when I was much younger, a 40-year-old man was old, very old; a 50-year-old was ancient; and a 70-year-old? That was simply antediluvian! I have since realised that your perspectives on things shift as a result of your age.

    I remember in 1995 (when I was 50), a student of mine complained innocuously about the ways of her very old dad. And then I asked how old was her father. “50,” she responded. Of course I changed the topic. Hitting 70 (which, by the way, happened in April) was something that I had no control over. It was not as if I could choose how long I would live; no one has that power. I had been in a position that I wished that death had come for me instead of someone else. It is in that sense that I talked about grace and clemency. Ageing is one thing; ageing gracefully is another. And that is something that I aspire to do, especially in terms of the extent to which I inspire my peers and colleagues, and become a positive role model for the younger generation of citizens and artists. Living gracefully has nothing to do, in my estimation, with your sartorial taste anymore than does your height. Rather, it is your personhood: your moral probity, integrity, principles, forthrightness, professionalism, and commitment to enlightened citizenship. It has to do with using your professional and intellectual abilities to positively influence society. And that is one of my new mantras.

    Retiring now at 70, how fulfilling is it to end your career outside your country?

    Retirement ke! One point of correction, I have not ended my career. In actuality, I’ve just revved it up a notch. As a vocation, art is not a 9 to 5 job. Rather, it is an organic cocoon: something that you live; a life that you exude. How can you talk of retirement in that situation? The committed artist never thinks of retirement. You have heard of the maxim about old soldiers who never die; who simply fade away. Well, that is not so with old artists. The good ones never die; they never fade away; they simply become more vivified. Examples abound. Look around the Nigerian art scene today and you can construct a strong list of artists, living or departed, vertical or perpetually horizontalised, who are continually written about in the present tense. While it is true that I have disengaged from teaching, I construed that as an opportunity to re-engage with my studio practice. As to where I practice, the age of globalisation has shrunken the world so significantly that location is no longer an issue. While my primary residence will remain where I’ve been in the last two decades, I will also take advantage of the opportunities that my ancestry offers.

     

    Looking back, how fulfilling has it been teaching in the US?

    It has been both challenging and fulfilling. It has also been rewarding. Like all countries, the U.S. has its strengths and weaknesses. For everyone, who is career-oriented, motivated, and inspired, the opportunities are super-abundant. Indeed, the United States remains as perennially advertised: a land of opportunities. If you are so inclined, you can chart your own path, create new avenues for personal success, and intuit novel ideas. But, living in the U.S. can also signal perpetual misery for those who are interested in the dream but lack the capacity, willpower, or wherewithal to prepare their beds aright. For many, the U.S. is the proverbial El Dorado. Americanisms permeate the imagination of many young and not-so-young Nigerians, who are desirous of capitalising on life styles that Hollywood has so ingenuously marketed on a global scale. But one of the unwritten canons pertains to the power that culture exerts on many, who go to the U.S. but are ill-prepared for the inevitable culture shock that they will have to contend with. Before I retired from the University of Lagos in 1992, I had worked there as a faculty member for 15 years. It was from there that I went on a leave of absence to study at Indiana, where I obtained my doctorate in 1983. And in 1987, I had taught for one year and curated a major exhibition at Spelman College, Atlanta as Fulbright Professor.

    Although exposure to American culture and the qualifications that I paraded certainly helped, they were not the primary reason for my eventual emigration, with my family, to the U.S. in 1993. Two of our children, who were born in the U.S. were asthmatic. In particular, our oldest son, Tolu, was chronically asthmatic. There was hardly a week that we did not make an emergency run from our place at Ikeja to Unilag Health Center for emergency health help, often in the middle of the night. Those were the nights when the parental adrenalin countered whatever dangers were posed by hoodlums and men of the night. Tolu became something of a recurring face at the Health Center, known to virtually all the medical personnel at that time. The situation was so dire that the sing-song by our children was that we needed to return to the U.S. Today, Tolu is professor at a college in Florida.

     

    In retrospect, are there decisions you would have taken differently now concerning your career growth—studying art, media job, teaching at UNILAG—and checking out to US?

    With full 20-20 hindsight, it is very easy to second-guess decisions that I took in the past, which have obviously inflected the trajectory of my professional growth and personal development. I have no reason to do that. As one, who has continually advocated the application of contextualism in analyses, I could not envision reversing any of the major decisions that I took in the past without asking for corresponding reversal of the context within which such decisions were taken. On the contrary, I took these decisions with deliberation and embraced the outcomes with pride and enthusiasm. My studentship at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, was the culmination of sheer determination of a young lad, who single-handedly set and attained the loftiest dream of attaining a university degree in the face of adversity. That decision was significant and momentous in my life. In terms of my career, I coveted the opportunity to work at the Daily Times when I was a third-year student at Ahmadu Bello University and worked assiduously towards that end. I was giddy with excitement when I interned at the Daily Times in the summer of 1972. At the end of my NYSC in 1974 (as a pioneer corps member), my career as a cartoonist had been launched with a series of cartoons in Lagos Weekend and Sunday Times. You could not have enticed me with anything not to accept the offer, which the Daily Times gave me, as Art Editor in July 1974.

    As students in Zaria, some of us had determined to spruce up the exhibition scene in Lagos after graduation. Kolade Oshinowo, Shina Yussuff of blessed memory, David Dale, and my humble self became quite active in the exhibition circuit. I also took up critical reviews in the Daily Times during this period. I left the Daily Times because I was simply enamored of academic life. Besides, I figured I could continue to do my cartoons from anywhere without being in the employ of the Daily Times. I joined the University of Lagos as Junior Research Fellow in January 1977 and was thrilled to be directly involved in organising certain aspects of Unilag’s FESTAC 77, which the Center for Cultural Studies undertook under the directorship of Prof Joe Alagoa. Hankering after additional degrees was something that you would do as an aspiring young man. So, by 1979, I was on my way to Bloomington.

    I should note, with extreme pride, the stable and blessed marriage that I have had. This, indeed, ranks as perhaps the best decision that I ever took. Of course, Joke, my wife of 40 years, took all evasive actions way back in 1972 when I first laid eyes on her and embarked upon the customary pursuit of a love that made itself elusive. But the more unconcerned she appeared the more determined I was to prove that I was worthy of her hand. Although she always contests my claim that it was my cooking that eventually sealed the deal, it seemed that she ultimately took pity on me, especially after learning of the day that I almost got crushed by a “tipper” as I made a dash across Ikorodu Road trying to catch a Somolu-bound danfo to her place at Akoka. No matter. Joke remains my adorable friend, partner, wife, and counsellor. She is a woman of unparalleled strength, something that I became even more appreciative and respectful of in the wake of the cataclysmic shock that the loss of our son, Ayo, unleashed on us in 2011. Without Joke (who was herself grief-stricken), my story would have taken a tragic turn.

    Are there any memorable experiences at the early stage of your stay in US?

    I learned pretty quickly that the United States is at once opened and closed. It is through its openness and transparency that I was able to secure a job based solely on my academic and professional pedigree. It was the same system, one that places premium on excellence and healthy competition, that ensured my rise within the academic system. I became, at two different times and in two states, chair of two art departments. This could have been achieved only through a transparent academic culture. But I also learned that if you were, like me, thoroughly immersed in your cultural heritage, you would have a steep culture shock to contend with. Thankfully, my immediate family provided the succor that I needed. It could get easily dreadful and lonely for those who do not have that kind of support. I learned that racism, both overt and covert, is alive in this country. I learned that a considerable degree of naiveté permeates the American social fabric with particular regard to how people from Africa are generally perceived or related to. I once ran into an American couple at the mall. Once I confirmed my African pedigree, the next question by my new mall friend was whether I knew his wife’s boss, a certain Stephen who is also an African, from Tanzania! But my overall experience has been nothing but positive.

    What are the post-retirement plans?

    There is a caveat to this retirement thing: it pertains only to my job as professor. The plan, thus, is to roam; to produce, explore, and become creatively pontifical. This I will do without being bound by geographic demarcations. A two-day conference (July 23 and 24), which Kunle Filani and his team organised, comes under the aegis of the Society of Nigerian Artists. It is gratifying to be accorded this honour and I am beholden to all who are involved in this gesture. In July 2016, I will be having a solo exhibition at Terra Kulture. This is the immediate project. Along the side, I will, where practicable, participate in a few group exhibitions across continental divides. The primary goal is to immerse myself in my studio life and savour the pleasure of professing my art. Of course, opportunities to contribute essays, deliver lectures, and consult for a diverse array of organisations, abound both in Nigeria and the U.S.

    Having lived and studied in US for so long, what is the performance level of African artists in Diaspora on the global scene?

    Laudable. So much has happened in the last two decades that has catapulted artists of the African Diaspora to the stratosphere. It is probably not that helpful to adhere to the old, rigid idea of compartmentalising artists on the basis of media singularities or geographic location. In the 21st Century, the boundaries have become so pulverised that what emerges, at times, is essentialised more by notional specificities or idiosyncratic givens than by traditional media. From Southern Africa to the Maghreb, from West Africa to East Africa, there is a catholicity of creative expressions that was either not fully made manifest or was simply non-existent a mere two decades ago. As part of this robust emergence of African art on a global scale, we should recognise the origination of vibrant, collateral fields that have quickly become formidable in the curating, analysis, and historicisation of the artists and the various genres that exist. Auction Houses such as Bonhams and Arthouse Contemporary, for example, have broadened access on a global scale. A cursory look at the list of Diasporic scholars of African art reveals the dominance of some of Nigeria’s best scholars.

    If you were to come to this world again, would you be an artist?

    My answer is unequivocally yes. Additionally, I would, with the benefit of hindsight, amplify my interest and talents in theater and music. But I would still marry Joke.

  • The light artist of Lalakukulala

    Darkness can be very enthralling and enticing. Despite the permanent darkness, despite the soot and grime and the noxious fumes from Third rate generators from Taiwan, Baba Lekki, the great sage, was in a gloriously upbeat mood. He had taken on a new role as a lightless artist which amounted to helping people manage the transition back to the tenth century and teaching them how to do without electricity. He had even formed a band that he called the Dark City Brothers. The huge queue suggested that he was not doing badly.

    As soon as I sat down, he burst into a famous Christian song of praise. Of course, it was a savage parody rendered with satanic glee.

    E se ibi tati bere, baba

    E se ibi te bawa de

    Adupe O Jesu ibi t’enko wa lo.

    Then it was time for business. An elegant woman speaking Queen’s English came forward. “Sir, there has been no light in my area for a month. The generator packed up five days ago. The food in the freezer is beginning to go bad”, she lamented.

    “Spread the food in front of the house in the night”, the guru urged.

    “What? What if rats and snakes eat the soup?” the woman asked in alarm.

    “Then you kill the rats and snakes and add them to the soup”, the sage replied poker-faced.

    “In the night?  What if I’m bitten by snakes?” the woman screamed.

    “Then you are added to the soup, period. O d’obe ni yen. Cobra no dey chop corn, na di thing we dey chop corn naim cobra dey chop” , the guru said and dismissed the woman.

    Then another woman stepped forward, rather gingerly having witnessed the previous encounter. “Oga no light no business oo”, she began on a plaintive note.

    “Which kind business you dey do?”, the great man asked.

    “I be ashewo for Agege”, she replied with a bashful smile.

    “Take your customers outside and get on with it”, the guru replied without looking up.

    “What?  Make dem comot dem blokos and fire me just like dat?” the woman shouted as she stormed off, “Oga, abi you no well?”

    But the most hilarious encounter was between the guru and a self-important man who arrived with a retinue of aides, red cap, feather fan and all what not.

    “Chief, kontri don pafuka, generator no dey work again, the meat dey smell, even the alligator my wife come bring from Abakaliki come dey rot well well for freezer”, he lamented with a hint of self-pity and self-indulgence.

    “Which technology came first, electricity or generator?” the guru asked calmly.

    “Which kind foolish question be dat one? Wetin concern dat kind grammar with dead meat?” the chief raved.

    “Answer my question”, the guru snapped.

    “ Biko, this one be real onyeosi ooo, real were man, anoya proper. I just come waste my time with this yeye ngbati crook”, the man fumed as he fled with his hangers-on cursing.

  • Artist shares his experience in the other world

    Artist shares his experience in the other world

    Everybody who lives in Lagos is aware that Lagos is a busy place. The morning and evening traffics make it unbearable for those who live on the mainland and work on the island, a contemporary topic which makes Lagos more of a suffering and smiling place for many, even though the place is called the Centre of Excellency.

    Chika Idu, a contemporary Nigerian artist who lives and does his painting in Ikorodu but goes to the island to market his artworks, said the traffic in Lagos forced him to abandon his car for boat. The artist said he was struck by the activities that go on in the water when he started using the route

    He said: “Lagos is a very busy city with a very poor road network. A 20 minutes trip can turn into a three hours journey, so I sought an alternative to driving; a friend introduced me to the ferry terminal, what a relief….now I can reduce a four hours journey by three hour thirty minutes. A ferry ride is quick and relaxing; from the lagoon, I began to see Lagos from a whole new angle but the peace is quickly disturbed when I sight the dredging that goes daily on hourly basis”

    In order to create awareness and draw attention towards these activities, Idu said during a press session last week in Lagos that 20 of his recent watercolour and oil paintings will be on display on Saturday, May 23, at Alexix Gallery, Victoria Island, Lagos, which he is using to campaign against this. The exhibition with a theme: The Other World; will run until May 30. “The Other World is more of environmental awareness campaign due to my experience on the water from Ikorodu to Victoria Island.

    “The water is calm, the boat ride gives a different view of Lagos but you cannot totally ignore the rate of environmental liquidation and pollution that goes on in the water and the boat ride is not very safe because of the high buildings creating a caution over the waters. There are signs that say this part of the water is safe or unsafe,” said the Auchi Polytechnic, Edo State, graduate.

    He is of the view that there is an urgent need for the government to check what goes on in the lagoon. “The last time I counted eight dredging companies scattered from Ikorodu to Victoria Island, tons and tons of plastics and unidentified objects submerged floating in the waters, families living by the river banks defecating, dumping, washing and at the same moment fetching water for cooking and children swimming in the waters, I mourn for the life that is supposed to be underneath these surfaces, the waters look dead,” he pointed out.

    With Idu’s emerging awareness for environmental pollution, natural disaster and health hazard, he fears what will happen if the storm should strike. He believes natural disaster could occur if the sand excavators are not controlled. Also, he pointed out that the waste and defecation, which the inhabitants discharge into the lagoon, could lead to health catastrophe.

    “Through my works, I have tried to draw attention to the subject, how it should not be necessary, how it is, with the intension to open a dialogue on our endangered marine,”he said.

    His works are characterised by its heavy texture and hazy rendition. Idu calls this technique “light against visual distortion”, a technique he has used for 16years, inspired by observing the behaviour of light striking against visual imperatives like dust and misty fog.

    His themes are women and children. He sees himself as an activist and his work as the beginning of a dialogue, and not the centre of the dialogue or the end of it. “My work is around children because they also have problems such as child abuse, child trafficking; children becoming the breadwinners of their families, the negligence and the abuse, which children are forced to endure. I know this has been banned in Lagos but do you know what goes on after a law is enacted?”

    You may say Idu is a painter who changes your mood about life when you look at his paintings; this you will see in works such as Task, Dept, Descend, which will also be on display.

    Idu specialises in oil and watercolour and he works with pallet knives for oil and sable brushes, tooth-brush for water colour. His works have his footprints at the back of the canvas. He is from Delta State.

    He had his early childhood education in Lagos. In the year 2000, he in conjunction with eight other painters opened a studio in Ebute-Meta, Lagos, called Defactori Studio, where he was elected coordinator. In the same year, he created the first ever watercolour society of artists called Sables. He is currently an art teacher at the French International School Lagos. He has participated in over ten group exhibitions and many solos.

    The exhibition is being curated by Mrs. Patty Mastrogiannis. She said: Chika’s work can diversify very low key paintings and vibrant colours. He actually can switch moods as he paints.

    “His work is very nicely palliated and he uses the media which is not very easy to copy. You will immediately know Idu’s work when you see it. His style is unique and I have been dealing with Chika for the past three years and we have been doing well in terms of sales. We are very proud to show him in Alexis Gallery even though he is not signed under us.”