Tag: photographers

  • Photographers task government to invest in photojournalism

    Some documentary photographers have called on the government and media organizations, to invest in photojournalism.

    News Agency of Nigeria reports that the photographers stated this during a panel session at the Abuja International Photo Festival on Monday.

    The session tagged; “The role of visual storytelling in conflict resolution, peace and poverty eradication”, ace documentary photographers, Rahima Gambo and KC Nwakor highlighted the importance of a robust photojournalism unit in government and media organisations.

    Gambo, who gained prominence for her photography documentary in the North East, noted the photojournalism gap she observed in the media and called for a review.

    According to her, news media in Nigeria view images as a supplement to text and have not fully grasped its importance as a stand-alone story.

    She said, “Photography documents real human experiences beyond languages. Photographs are mirrors and there is a news photography gap in media houses that need huge investments.

    “Photojournalism needs to be properly revived and reformed especially in these times. Government officials need to add photography to their mission to drive social change,” Gambo said.

    Read Also: Photographers celebrate the beauty of Abuja Carnival

    Also, Nwakor, who specialises in using photography to highlight educational needs, explained the role of photojournalism in curbing fake news.

    “Photography is one of the best tools for curbing fake news especially in times like this. This is why an investment in this sector is very important,” he said.

    Nwakor also advised photographers to find a balance between exploiting the subject of their pictures and telling stories, adding that this will determine the agenda being set.

    Earlier, Osaze Ekhator the festival director, during the opening ceremony, stated that the 2018 edition of the festival will lead conversations on using photography as a tool for national development.

    Ekhator said that the aim is to push photographers to understand their roles in nation building, regardless of the aspect of photography they practice.

    “We want everyone to be involved in the conversations, especially in the application of photography to social change and development.

    “A picture speaks more than a thousand words and we want Nigerians to understand that photographs tell great stories,” he said.

    News Agency of Nigeria reports that the ongoing 2018 Abuja International Photo Festival would feature a photo walk, exhibitions and master classes.

  • Firm organises training for photographers

    The management of Parties and Eventz, an event and protocol company based in Lagos, is organising an exciting two weeks’ intensive photography session for both amateur and professional photographers in Lagos.

    The maiden edition of the digital photography training session, which will focus on current trends in the photograph, is scheduled to hold from tomorrow February 26th to March 9th 2018 in Ikeja, Lagos.

    The Managing Director of the company, Mrs Abiola Scott, assured that seasoned professional photographers will be on ground to take the participants through the various aspects of photography and its latest technological applications.

    The estate management graduate added that the training is going to be a new dawn in the digital photography world as participants will experience new innovations, through theory and practical training, in a conducive atmosphere.

    According to her, “photography is beyond the act of posing before a camera and printing it on a paper.” Scott, who is deeply passionate about the act of photography, traced her love with the lens to the influence of her father, who she described as a master in the act, during her early days as a teenager.

  • Inside the  changing world of  Nigeria’s photographers (2)

    Inside the changing world of Nigeria’s photographers (2)

    Following a first part (last Sunday), which focused on the older generation of photographers, who have fallen by the wayside, Gboyega Alaka seeks out Kelechi Amadi-Obi, Yetunde Ayeni Babaeko and Ade Plumptre; three high-flyers, who have taken the profession to a whole different level.

    The above are just two of the lamentations of some old-time photographers, who once bestrode the profession in their own little arena and made a living out of the camera lens. They still retain their old skills no doubt, but the world has no need for them anymore, hence they are like relics of old times now and struggling to survive.

    But in the midst of all these, some very vibrant younger people are thriving and making fortunes from the same profession. The likes of Kelechi Amadi-Obi,  Yetunde Ayeni Babaeko, Ade Plumptre, who are hot cakes amongst corporate organisations, advert agencies and super celebrities,  definitely see no dark clouds and are not afraid they may run into any kind of cul-de-sac. Same for the likes of TY Bello, whose confidence with the camera can best be described as affective, and who not too long ago, was President Jonathan and family’s official photographer; and youthful Bayo Omoboriowo, who currently junkets the globe with President Muhammadu Buhari, as his official photographer.

    These crop of photographers are in fact celebrities in their own rights and enjoy sizable media prominence that only add up as marketing for them. Some of them own palatial studios, with a retinue of staff; they ride exotic cars, have impressive studios in highbrow neighbourhoods and live in their “own house(s)” like Kelechi Amadi-Obi enthused in one of the interviews preparatory to this feature.

    So then, what have they done differently? Why are they carrying on as if there are no qualms whatsoever? Yetunde Babaeko, the half-caste photographer, married to advertising whiz kid, Steve Babaeko says with childlike innocence, that “There is nothing wrong with photography. I’m surprised that you’re saying that photography is dying. I came to Nigeria in 2004, and since then, the number of photographers that I get to know on a daily basis is doubling and tripling.”

    But Kelechi Amadi-Obi, the debonair photographer, who announces with relish that he “absolutely enjoy(s) fashion photography” said it is because they “were amenable to change,” and that “those whose business modules did not change or adapt quickly (inevitably had to) close down.”

    Going down memory lane, Amadi-Obi says he spotted the advent of digital photography era, as it came on, first, slowly; and then at top speed. Like most other players in the analogue field of those days, he was cynical and contemplative. But he quickly saw it accelerate, when digital cameras that initially came in 1 mega pixel and 2 mega pixel, started coming in 400 mega pixel and 600 mega pixel. Quickly, he jumped on the bus, and that is the reason he wasn’t left stranded.

    Bearded Ade Plumptre, who specialises as an events photographer but has done a bit of this and that in the industry, sort of concurs with Amadi-Obi. Whilst the weirdness of newer technology was breaking and the younger generations were embracing it, Plumptre says, “The older generation never bothered. They never tried to associate with us. Instead, they felt we were a threat, and it was like one camp on the one side and the other camp on the other side.”

    The result of that face-off is that the older group lost grip of the job they thought they knew too well, and also lost relevance. He likened the situation to what is currently playing out in the entertainment industry, where if you’re not able to blend with the current trend, you’re dumped by the roadside, whilst the world moves on. That is where people like King Sunny Ade is different. You saw the way he blended with Whiz-Kid, despite the age difference? Except you are in that category, nobody is going to even do a collabo with you to bring you back.”

    Plumptre concludes therefore that rather than dying, “photography is growing in leaps and bounds.”

    He says a lot of people want to take pictures, even though they may not be willing to pay for it. “That everyone with a smartphone is always taking photographs proves this,” he said. It has also allowed a lot of younger women to understand about light, about how to pose and take pictures, he explained. So in a way, he says “It’s a crazy environment and generation in which we find ourselves; where even the clients are becoming more aware and looking for something extra.”

    One could therefore forgive Yetunde Babaeko, for having no idea that photography was dying in some quarters. Coming back to the country in 2004 as an adult after years in Germany, where she studied photography, and operating almost entirely in the elite circles, where she has mostly shot for corporate organisations, top celebrities and glossy magazines, she definitely hasn’t had much chance at experiencing life in backstreet Lagos, Ibadan or any other city at that, where corner-shop photographers once dominated and eked a living.

    Smartphones, no threat to photography

    Interestingly, Amadi-Obi is on the same page with Plumptre on the smartphone issue. He says: “The fact that every smartpone now has a high resolution camera makes it more evident that it is not through the camera that spectacular or extraordinary images are made. Rather it is through the mind and the eye of the photographer, because now, everybody has a camera, yet they’re not able to come up with the same kind of picture.”

    As an addition, Plumptre says “It’s not really a threat to the profession because you can’t really use cell phones  to do certain things in photography. It’s not like the technology is not there; it’s not as if you can’t shoot the cover of a magazine or wedding with an S6, but there are some extras that some clients want, which you may not be able to achieve with a smartphone. It only helps to push us.”

    Both photographers thus remind one of the lessons in the half-full and half-empty glass of water. While the older generation saw the advent of smartphones, iPad and co as a threat (half-empty), the likes of Amadi-Obi, Ade Plumptre  and other saw it as half-full.

    Dying culture of studio photography

    On the argument that more people now take photographs of themselves and therefore hardly go to photo studios to take photographs like before, Plumptre says, “I don’t know whether I’d like to be quoted on that, but I think the era of studio photography is gradually disappearing. For instance, I have a studio, but it is by appointment, so you don’t just walk in and say you want to take a photograph like we used to do. Also, most of the time, my studio is for creative work. For families that want to do portraits, you also make more money by taking the studio to them. If you take the studio to their house, they take more shots, they’re more relaxed and the minimum you’ll collect will be in the region of N150,000/N300,000. Whereas if they come to the studio, the highest you may be able to charge will be N50,000. Of course you still have the normal walk-in studios like the Le Faghts and co, but for how long? Another indication is that studios are getting smaller.”

    Babaeko corroborates this when she said, “Maybe it’s not just that they(photo studios) are dying; maybe they’re just not doing shops anymore, but are rather developing into something bigger. The photographers that I know have developed themselves, gone abroad, attended workshops and grown. You also have to look at the clientele. Our clients are well-travelled; they see what is happening in the developed countries and are demanding more and more. So you have to pick up as a photographer.”

    This may be why she says her studio, Camara Studios, is not primed for studio works nor depends on it much. As an advertising photographer, the bulk of her works come from the corporate advertising world. Therefore, most of the shoots are done on locations, while the bulk of the creative works are done in the studios.

    Amadi-Obi also agrees with this indirectly. “The percentage of income that I make through printing photograph is very minimal. The business model I have is for me to make images that people want to use for multimedia purposes. From going on the internet, to print, to TV; and you see, even motion picture has come into play, because the cameras that we’re using are shooting HP video. So now, you become a DOP (director of photography) and a director. You explore.”

    Amadi-Obi’s museum analogy

    The three photographers agree that professional photography, contrary to wider opinions, is a constantly evolving and demanding vocation. Amadi-Obi sort of puts it in dramatic perspective when he said, “As the tools of trade change, the means of dissemination also change, and one must adapt. We’re living in the information age and if you don’t, then you’re already a dinosaur. Although you may not know it, but people are already looking at you like some specimen inside the museum. So you need to know where the trend is going and be ready to adapt. For me, I enjoy and embrace change and I’m constantly searching for new ways of doing things.”

    He quickly started experimenting and doing all he could to adapt, especially when it dawned on him that the process of the digital wasn’t as tedious as the film process. That, to him, was a clear indication that it was the way to go. Soon, he began to learn how to use the computer and its photo-shop programme.

     “It was so novel,” he said, “but we knew we had to make the switch.”

    Apart from being ready and able to make the switch, Amadi-Obi also says: “I do think that you will not survive if you do not innovate, not only in photography but anything that is related to creativity and technology.”

    He stressed the fact that professional photography is a creative endeavour that demands constant creativity. “It is not a factory or like getting a formula like coca cola and you continue to make millions. When you do one thing and it is really nice and people embrace it, then you should be afraid and know that it has already gone. When you have a technique and clients really love it, for sure, younger ones will copy it and for sure, they will charge less. Will you then hold on to complaining about how the photography industry has gone bad? Two things, it’s either your work is not good or you’re not marketing it right. So there is no room for complaining. If you have value that you’re giving to your client, then it becomes a must-use. And in my line of business, there is no end to creativity. And that is the beauty of it. It is a journey that there is no arrival.”

    For this reason, he is constantly experimenting. He does shots just for the sake of disrupting his usual routine, shoots upside down, tries out inspirations from literature, from movie; just so he could come up with something different and reinvent himself. “It’s not easy,” he says, “but if one enjoys the process, then one has already succeeded.”

    Like Amadi-Obi, Babaeko also believes photography is hardwork. “It is not like the oil business or gas, where you sit at a desk and something happens and you sell five tankers and the millions roll in. Here, you really earn every kobo you make.

    Threat of the up-comers

    Interestingly, the repercussion Ade Plumptre worries about the most is the fear of the younger generations breezing past his likes like a comet. Just like his generation spotted the weakness of the older generation of photographers and  guided against it, he is wary of the fact that they could also become ‘dinosaurs’.

    “A lot of those who went into photography went in because they needed something to do and because they needed it to feed their families; not because they were passionate about it. Also, they did not understand the business of creativity. Now, that was what our generation saw. We wanted to be creative, make money, retain the passion and also be impactful.”

    Plumptre believes the younger guys are more daring and actually better than his generation potentially. That is why he says, “I cannot learn anything from anybody over 50. People ask me why and I say that anybody above 50 can only lend me wisdom and teach me from experience, but they don’t have anything new to impart. A lot of the things we’re trying to emulate are coming from the younger guys, because they’re more daring. I tell people that I’m soon going to be 50, but I have to think like a 20-year-old to be relevant, to be able to speak the language they’re speaking and have my market share.

    Lots of potentials ahead

    Plumptre is thus convinced that photography has a lot of potentials and will continue to defy those who are predicting its demise;  “the same way they thought music is for never-do-wells; and that actors, models and co had no potentials. The more educated people that are coming in, the more people that understand the business and the more viable it will become.”

    Taking it from evolutionary angle, Babaeko opines that photography is undergoing a transformation. “Nobody is dying or going into extinction. I’d rather say we’re in a cocoon and developing to become a beautiful butterfly.”

    She also believes there’s no alternative to going digital. “You also have to have good equipment and a lot of creativity; thinking outside the box and a lot of flexibility to be able to go out to meet with the client and get the job done.

    While doffing her hat for legends like Sunmi Smart-Cole, Don barber and ‘Okhai Ojeikere, Babaeko says “Like now, photography has always required a lot of patience, passion and interest to thrive. With people like Ojeikere, who died two years ago, Nigerian photography also received (international) recognition.”

    She also believes that with the younger generation like herself, Kelechi Amadi-Obi, Ade Plumptre and Deji Alakija, who are jet-setting around the world photographing events, photography has and will always be a very important part of our lives. It’s just that some people, because they think  some professions are far more important, overlook it. If you look at a big city like Lagos, with loads of weddings that you can’t even count in a week, you’d understand that photography has always being a big industry.

    “You’re actually swarmed by our works everywhere you look; the advert billboards, posters, the colourful images on the internet and everywhere. As the market, especially the media, grows, so do we.” She reeled off.

    Like Babaeko and Amadi-Obi, Plumptre also believes that a good photographer needs be patient and have an eye. He says he needs to be able to see, and be able to understand composition, study the environment and capture ‘that thing’ to tell a story.”

    In addition, he says he also has to have a teachable spirit.

    On challenges of the job, Babaeko says the greatest challenge is timing. “We could actually do two shoots a day, but because of traffic and people coming late; that becomes a bit difficult. Aside that, the business is up and down. There are times jobs are spilling in like Christmas season and co; and there are the down periods, like summer time, when everybody has travelled. But we find a balance.

    She also does her marketing herself. she discovered that nobody could sell her business better that herself, so when she’s not shooting, she is calling people and socialising.

    A tool for social change

    Apart from booking a place as an eternal trade in society, both Plumptre and Amadi-Obi  are of strong opinion that photography is a tool for social change.

    Says Plumptre: “A lot of people don’t understand that photography is also a medium or source of social change; a medium where the images we’re taking could change the psyche of a whole generation. Over the centuries, we have had images being brought forth by photography, where people look at photography and ask themselves, ‘How can we change the course of history?’

    Amadi-Obi on his part says ‘being a photographer is a very powerful place to be, as you’re engaged in social engineering, where you can set the trend and decide what is in and what is out. We as image-makers are the priests at the altar of story-telling, and we shape the way people feel about Omotola, about Genevieve, about P-Square and Nigeria as a whole.

    “If we do not make fantastic images for Africa, then it is only left for the tourists and foreigners shooting documentaries to be seeking out only images of poverty and death.

    On a certain threat by the younger generation, Amadi-Obi says “There is what is called the photographers eye, which matures with age. It is your ability to see things that other people cannot see. If you open your eyes, you will understand design and understand story-telling. And that is something everybody has that is unique to them. Some clients are looking for a photographer who will always make a spectacular image. So there’s a place for such a photographer and there’ll always be a place for him

    Asked if he knew expected the kind of fame that has come with the job, Amadi-Obi says  “At the early stage of my career, I made it a point to investigate what the standing of this profession is globally, and I realized that being a photographer was a very powerful place to be.”

    On the financially successful the job has made them, the three respondents displayed the traditional Nigerian secretiveness.

    Amadi Obi says  “I can pay salaries of ten people, five of them married with children; I can pay the school fees of my children, have my own house and maintain a basic middle income lifestyle (laughs). But for me, it’s not really about the money, but the impact.

    Plumptre says:We’re comfortable. We’re feeding our wives and families and paying our bills.  We’re doing good work and getting paid for it.

    Even  Babaeko with all her western background says “We’re doing well, let me put it that way.”

  • Inside the changing world of Nigeria’s photographers (1)

    Inside the changing world of Nigeria’s photographers (1)

    Once-upon a great profession, photography seems to be slipping away from lots of the so-called professionals, as they grapple with the invasion of technology, a natural liberalisation of the vocation and a battle to survive. But is the industry really slipping away or are people in the industry too slow to keep up with its rather fast pace? Gboyega Alaka explores the realities.

    After months of thumping his chest and insisting on his manliness, Kayode Ayinde (not real name) finally packed his belongings and joined his wife in Ikorodu. Ayinde, a photographer from back in the analogue days of the ’70s had bluntly refused to follow his more illustrious teacher wife, who had managed to complete a section of her landed property in the Lagos suburb and moved over. Like the African man that he is, Ayinde had resolved against superior counsels to go live ‘under’ a woman and therefore stuck to his photography job, even though the so-calle  job was gradually disappearing  before his very eyes. The fact that he was self-employed notwithstanding.

    Within months of his wife’s relocation, he moved out of his one-room apartment in Egbe area of Lagos (which he had occupied with his wife and children) and moved into his dingy studio. Money was coming in trickles, hence he had to cut out whatever expenses he could do without. The studio thus doubled as both place of work, bedroom and all.

    More of the time, he found himself lazing around and chatting with idle women around his shop, than doing any serious work. He recalled that customers were now scarce and far between and cash became really scarce. For meals, he fully patronised the numerous ‘mama puts’ around. At other times, he drank ‘garri;’ or simply went hungry. The digital age seemed to have encroached too quickly, leaving him adrift, especially as he knows no other vocation. To stay on course, he got himself a digital camera, but he soon discovered that the challenges went beyond just procuring a cheap digital camera. The traffic to his shop hardly improved, save for trickles of children’s birthdays and perhaps naming ceremonies, for which some of the older generation in his immediate community still remembered him. But these were still far short and the income just wasn’t up to par.  People just don’t seem to come out to take photos in studios anymore.

    He blamed his fortune (and the now threatened photography profession’s fortune) on the advent of smartphones and other gadgets like iPad, Tablets and co, which virtually everybody now carries around. In the past, anyone who taught he or she looked exceptionally well-dressed branched a photographer’s studio and took a shot or two. That no longer happens, as they now do it themselves and take a peek whenever they feel like. Even at major events such as weddings and birthdays, Ayinde laments that celebrant’s family and friends who have the good fortune of owning an iPad or tablet, literally struggle for space with professional photographers. “The situation is so, so annoying.” He said with so much revulsion.

    But how could he or anyone of his generation know that it would ever come to this?

    “More worrisome” he said, “is the fact that this whole thing came at a time when we were still battling with the group of emergency photographers otherwise known as ‘paapaapaa’ or ‘quickies’, who had invaded our profession by thronging to events’ venues and providing quick on-the-spot services.

    To make matters worse, even the passport photos, which inevitably compels people to still think of photographers from time to time has been hijacked by the so-called business centres. Ayinde laments again: “Unlike before, when one made enough money to feed the family from passport photos alone, hardly would you get two people coming to photo studios to take passport photographs. The ‘two-minute jobbers’ in the name of business centres have cornered that one as well, and this has affected we who are professionals in the industry, such that we’re suffering.”

    Ayinde lamented that “They have also bastardised the pricing. While we professionals in the shops charge between N300 and N400 for four copies, some of the emergency business centres charge N200 for eight copies. Some, even less. They are able to do this because most of them have printing machines and passport photo is just one of the numerous services that they provide. Compare that to us, who rely solely on photography and photography alone.”

    So now, Ayinde is ‘wasting away’ in his new home somewhere around Agric Bus Stop in Ikorodu. He plans to open a studio in front of the house once he can raise some money. but until then, he is practically jobless.

    Baba Shakiru

    Baba Shakiru’s story is not so different from Ayinde’s story. Now in his seventies, he has been a photographer all his life. He made some reasonable money during his prime, when photography  was still in good stead and managed to purchase a land and build himself a modest rooming house in Maya, Ikorodu. There he also erected a studio, which still stands till date. But that is as far as his success story goes. The studio is now a shadow of its old self, with old-fashioned and faded montage, decor, cameras and props. Till date, he still has in stock the legendary Fulani costumes, which once used to be a rave and people proudly wore to pose in studios.

    little wonder all he now does is wake up in the morning, sweep and open the studio, only to sit and wait languidly for never-coming customers. An incognito interview with him reveals that he now merely gets between three and four persons coming in for passport photographs in a week. For the regular 5 by 7 photos, he says he gets like four to five people, who come in on a good Sunday. But even this ‘good fortune’ is not regular. This of course is a far cry from the heavy traffic of people, who thronged photo studios in their Sunday bests in the good old days. He wondered why people think that “taking photos with phones can replace studio photos and that professional torch.”

    Now sneering, he said, “To make matters worse, they don’t even develop or print the pictures they take with these phones, let alone frame them; and when the phones go bad, get stolen or lost, the pictures disappear with them.”

    No more a job for the unlettered

    If Baba Shakiru’s story evokes pity, 67 year-old Eunice Idowu’s case looks pathetic and almost hopeless, as she now feels dumped by the profession she once knew too well. The grandmother who said she learnt photography in her youthful days, well before she got married owns an old studio in Jakande Estate, Oke-Afa, Isolo, Lagos. She complained that everything is changing and that she does “not understand what they are using these days.”

    Like her counterparts above, she also lamented that patronage is now low. “Nobody comes to the studio anymore. And when I go out to events to take pictures or look for patronage, they turn me down. Some of them ask to see my apprentices and when I say that I am alone, they refuse to patronise me. They tell me that I won’t be able to do the job because I am now old. They prefer the young people who use computers for their work.”

    But this is a job she once made a lot of money from. She said, “This is the job I used in sending my children to school, right up to the university and even built a comfortable home from.”

    Going down memory lane, she said, “In those days, we weren’t using flash. We snapped photographs, using natural light. When there’s no light, we had other ways of doing it, like using fluorescents or creating light by other means.”

    But her love for photography remains. “Photography is very good. When we were snapping, black and white, it was finer than this coloured. Back then, if you don’t learn photography, you cannot know it; but it is very different now, as anybody and everybody can now be a photographer.”

    Almost a hopeless situation

    For Mat James, who owns and runs Mat James Computers on Alhaji Alani Street off Ikotun Bus Stop, Ikotun, Lagos, photography, as a profession is gradually slipping away. James should know, because aside computers, he sells cameras, memory cards, runs a business centre and owns a photo-printing machine. This reporter was actually attracted to his shop because of the sign that says ‘photo-printing’ on his sliding doors. He sure could shed some light on whether people indeed make efforts to print the photos they take with their phones and other gadgets or if they just store them in their phones and eventually let them waste away.

    First, James said he does not sell films, as this reporter initially misconstrued. “I sell Memory Cards; films are analogue and nobody uses them in photography anymore. Now people take shots, take out the memory cards and go and print.”

    So then, people come in to print regularly, this reporter shot at him.

    But his answer was negative. As a matter of fact, the 5×7 photo-printing machine, which he bought for N300,000 and which prompted the sign outside has turned out to be a loss for him, because people rarely come in for the service. Aside that, he also said, “It’s like a waste of money for me because when I went back to purchase the printing papers, I found that it was no longer available. Apparently, nobody buys anymore, so they stopped producing it. So now the machine is just lying there idle.”

    To underline the fact that the world is indeed moving away from conventional photography, James said “Two years ago, I buried my mother; but rather than follow the normal trend, I simply hired a photographer, gave him a memory card, and at the end of the ceremonies, I retrieved my memory card from him, while he went away with his camera. Now the images are in my memory card and in my computer systems and I go there to look at them whenever I feel like or need to show it to people. I only printed and framed a few.

    “Even the cameras you see on display on my shelves may be the very last batch, as I’m not planning to replenish the stock. People are just not buying. Some Blackberry phones and androids are delivering better resolutions than most of these cameras, so you really can’t blame people.”

    The Busines Centre menace

    Unlike in the past, when photographers could be found on every major street, this reporter had a heck of a time locating photographers during his hunt for respondents. His search averaged one photo studio per 10 streets or more. What however obtains in abundance are business centres. On a busy street, you could find up to four business centres, with the message: “2 Minutes Passport” staring you in the face. In some more daring  instances, some centres promise “1 Minute, ” knowing fully well that they cannot deliver in less than five minutes.

    Their predominance confirms Ayinde’s complain that they have spoiled the business of photography.

    Media photographers not left out

    Even the media photographers are not left out. Though their income may seem secure, as their salaries are fixed, the reality is that more media houses are making do with less photographers. The Nation’s findings show that most media houses haven’t recruited new photographers in years.

    Unlike in the past when a reporter rarely went on assignment without a photographer, reporters now go on alone, armed only with their smartphones. And except the assignment is with a respected personality or a full media event, reporters hardly bother about the presence or absence of photographers.

    The implication according to Wale Adio, a freelance media photographer is that they may become surplus to requirement in the media line of production in the next few years.

    Light at the end of the tunnel

    However, if this reporter’s encounters with Taiwo Peter Popoola of Popson Photography Concepts and Raphael Kunle of Visual Pictures is anything to go by, then the profession may yet be said to be undergoing some rejuvenation rather than dying.

    Popoola’s studio located on Prince Adeyemi Street, off Governor’s Road Ikotun, no doubt is a far cry from the drab old studios of the ‘old generation’ photographers. Neat, well-decorated with modern props and equipment, Popoola sure has made efforts to remain relevant in spite of all the challenges bedeviling the industry.

    He agrees that the photography profession may well be under threat, especially with the advent and influx of smartphones and other digital gadgets. Even he is not left out of poor patronage, as he says he has to wait until weekend, before making any remarkable sales. During weekdays, he is condemned to waiting hopefully for passport photo jobs, which he says is not as high as it used to be, courtesy the business centres.

    Popoola explained that the only reason he has survived in the industry is because he does not depend on studio jobs alone. “I specialise mainly in outdoor events and portraiture. Our big money earners are weddings, birthdays, naming ceremonies and other landmark events.”

    He charges as high as N200,000 for wedding, and says what stands him out is his ‘packaging’, which he says is endearing and unique. “Our package for a wedding includes pre-wedding shoots, in which he goes to do photo-shoots with the couple at big hotels, beaches and other such exotic places in days leading to the wedding. We then package these and put in an album, on the website and on slides, which scrolls on the wedding day. ”

    He is therefore confident that he would weather the current challenges bedeviling the profession.

    Interestingly, Popoola, a graduate of Banking and Finance from the Polytechnic, Ibadan, never had any ‘training ‘ on the job. Both his parents are professional photographers, hence he was born into it and naturally imbibed the skills. He therefore took it as a hubby as far back as his secondary school days.

    On why photographers’ studios are now so scarce and the old generation photographers have all but disappeared, he said: “I think it’s because we have now gone digital. Yes, some of them have also bought digital cameras and tried to adapt, but there are some skills that most of them are not able to attain or grapple with, because of their level of education, exposure and age.

    “Besides” he says, “There are so many of those tools that we can handle that they cannot grapple with. A lot of them say they can’t withstand the rigours of photo editing, complaining mostly about the impact of the computer on their eyes.”

    Kunle Raphael of Visual Pictures, located on Oke-Salu Street in Ikotun, in his own response goes a bit philosophical in his appraisal of the situation.

    He said: Every business has its own challenges and our own in the photography profession is obvious. Those who are not professionals have invaded the industry, and with the help of digital cameras, they need not bother about skills bothering on camera setting, which used to be one of the strong advantages of a professional. there is also the coming of the smartphones, which has turned everyone into emergency photographers, and left the industry rather open and at a disadvantage.

    To make matters worse, Raphael says the professional photographers’ association is no longer as strong as it used to be. Even the emergency photographers have come together and formed an association, through which they now challenge and fight us (the professional photographers) back.

    On how he is managing to survive despite these challenges, he says, “As one era is going, another one is emerging, and everybody is working hard to make sure they keep up and remain relevant. Once you have equipment and are flexible enough to acquire new skills, then you can still find your footing. That is what has kept us in the business.”

    Unlike before, he also says people rarely get dressed and come to studios to take photographs anymore.”

    “Smartphones have sort of empowered everybody and once they think they look good, all they need is a selfie, or have their friend snap them.

    “The good thing however is that some people still recognise that when they need to take serious photos, the professional photographer’s studio is the way to go. They know there’s nothing like that professional touch and that if it’s not a photographer, it can never turn out right. That has kept us on the job.”

    Raphael says the location or environment of a photographer’s studio goes a long way in determining the level of patronage or traffic he generates. “You could say that we (Visual Pictures Studio) are well located, being that we are on a main street, and this gives us an edge. On a normal day, we get up to 15 customers, who come in for different things, ranging from casual studio shots, to ceremonial, passport size; and some come for upcoming events or shows.”

    Outdoor events remains their major source of income as well and his Visual Studio charges around N50,000 for weddings, including video coverage.

    He laments the fact that passport photos, which used to be their staple income generator has been hijacked by the emergency photographers, but insists again that those who identify with that professional touch still seek them out. “You can’t compare!” He insists.

    On the gradual extinction of the old generation photographers, Raphael says, “I think that’s because everything has gone digital and it’s not everybody that has the capacity to so migrate and upgrade to that digital level. Also some of the equipment we use today are way beyond the comprehension of some of these old generation photographers. And that’s aside the cost. They have to get a fully programmed computer, modern powerful flash, with all its accessories and a powerful digital camera. Prices of a good digital camera starts from around N150,000, and that’s for the average camera. there are others that go for as much as N500,000 and above, depending on your pocket and level at which you want to operate.”

    He insists that the profession will weather the current threat to its existence, saying there will always be those for whom photography is a destiny and they would always find their way into the industry.

    Like the plantain plantation, he said the profession will continue to rejuvenate and re-evolve.

    The future generation

    A testimony to Raphael’s theory of rejuvenation will no doubt be Maryam Azeez, incidentally his apprentice.  Maryam, clearly a teenager, dropped out of secondary school (SSII class) following what she calls ‘a mistake’. She got pregnant, dropped out to have the baby and decided she was done with schooling. Now she has signed a pact with the photography profession, hoping to make good living out of it in the future.

    But how come she picked photography? We ask. Her simple answer is, “It’s my choice. It’s a job I like.”

    She said she opted for photography because she just loves the camera and the way it works.

    Good enough, she has had a fair share of secondary school education and one can only wish that that puts her in good stead in the profession, make her flexible and amenable to change, and not end up like Mrs. Idowu and several other old generation enthusiast, by the road-side, panting.

  • Photographers mark their day in style

    Photographers mark their day in style

    Photographers from across the country converged on Lagos to mark this year’s World Photography Day. Evelyn Osagie reports.

    Decked in the army camouflage, Prophet Jacob Arogundade stood, posing for the cameras few metres away from the Military Hospital on Awolowo Way, Ikoyi, Lagos.

    With Nigeria and British’s flags in hands along with other military and religious paraphernalia, Arogundade’s mien,  could pass for a classical piece of art.

    An octogenarian and a prophet, he has not seen that number of photographers before and was happy to be their model.  As the cameras clicked away, he voiced his campaign, “I believe in one Nigeria and the unity of the world. That is why you would always see me with these flags. I am also protesting that Nigeria should treat those who have served this country better”.

    He was oblivious of a picture of another former soldier that is also protesting his abandonment on display few blocks away at the Ember Creeks as part of activities marking this year’s World Photography Day.

    Scenes as Arogundade’s formed the trappings of this year’s edition.

    Indeed, it was as if the paparazzi floodgates were unleashed on the city of Lagos when over 250 cameramen took to the streets with cameras in hand to commemorate of the day.

    Since 2013, the day, which is held yearly on August 19, has been christened as World Photography Day Nigeria by Nigerian photographers who use the occasion to celebrate the sector.

    “The World Photography Day Nigeria is a non-commercial venture, open to all photo lovers including photo-journalists and photo-enthusiasts,”Founder/Convener, World Photography Day Nigeria, Mr Yemi Royal, said.

    With the theme, Creating a viable and unified photography industry, this year’s celebrations, according to Royal, began the previous Saturday with a football match between press and commercial photographers. He noted that  the ‘photo walk’ was part of photographers’ campaigns for a better environment.

    By 11a.m. that morning, the entourage had converged on the Freedom Park, from where they left for the Silverbird Galleria in Victoria Island (VI). From there, the train moved to Ember Creeks where photo-chat and exhibition held.

    Besides discovering fresh and unique models and subject matters, like Arogundade, several interesting scenarios played out on their walk to the exhibition ground.

    Not minding the curious and questionable looks of onlookers and road users, photographers of various ages took possession of sidewalks, streets, roads and bridges, snapping their hearts away.

    Decked as if gunning for exclusive shots, the trees, houses, passers-by, vehicles, roads, bridges and lagoon of Lagos Island, VI and Ikoyi became the photographers’ subjects of interests.

    They had the power of number on their side: and so they dared what they wouldn’t have done on other days. Besides, crossing the road indiscriminately, as if expecting that vehicles would wait for them, without asking questions or permissions, they focused their cameras on any object of interest and snapped to their hearts delights.

    They didn’t even shake while taking snapshots of three military barracks on their route. But their constant clicking caught the attention of bystanders, and forced some to ask: “What is happening today?”

    At first, afraid that the government had sent them, Ugochukwu, a street hawker, and his counterparts were not particularly pleased with their actions.

    “Don’t take my picture! What is this. Why so many photographers? What’s happening today?”

    “We are celebratingWorld Photography Day in Nigeria. It is our day today! Please, can we take your picture?” Wome Uyeye, an on-air personality and documentary-photographer repliedin elation. Drawn in by the attention and her smile, he and his counterparts then posed for a shot or two. “When would we get the pictures?” they asked. “Check Facebook!” The photographers replied.

    It was their day and they siezed the occasion to make case for the sector.

    The General Secretary, Lagos State Photographers Association of Nigeria (LASPPAN), Mr Yakubu Mohammed, urged the government to pay attention to the sector’s needs by investing in its key players “Photography is the eyes of the world; without it, the world would be blind.”

    Ace artist and Head of Department of Photography, Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Dr Kunle Adeyemi, was of the opinion that pictures communicate more than a thousand words, saying: its importantance to mankind cannot be overemphasised. “A snapshot gives you what you can express with a thousand words; this is why today is very important to photographers and photo lovers across the world. Government should do more to develop the industry.”

    On his part, Mr Royal said the World Photography Day Nigeria initiative was designed  growing the sector. “Our mission is to engage, educate, empower and stimulate the photography community in Nigeria.  Through this initiative, we are offering a new view of photography to a diverse audience of professionals, hobbyists and aspiring photographers, while focusing on satisfying and growing the love for the industry in Nigeria,” he said.

    The stopover of ace football, Kanu Nwankwo, fondly called Papilo,who felicitated them on their day, was another interesting episode of the event. His visit to the train at the Silverbird Galleria came as a pleasant surprise, it was said.

    Papilopapilo!” came the screams from the crowd as everyone scampered to get a shot or pose with him. Kanu, whose studio was one of the partners of the event, pledged support for the industry players, saying: “It feels great celebrating this day with photographers and lovers of photographyacross the world. Keep your dreams alive, one day, you’d achieve it.”

    On their way to the bridge linking VI to Onikan, the group rescued a commercial bus driver from having his vehicle impounded by the officers of the Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS). The VIS officers and driver soon became models for the group. By the time the entourage reached Onikan, 11-year-old Kehinde, whose mother is also a photographer, became another model for some members of the train.

    Some photographers held roadshows with participants as models. EncounteringProphet Arogundade on the last leg of the walk was the climax, some photographers said.”It tells us that Nigeria should do more for its past soldiers and citizens that have served the country in different capacity,” they said.

    Others said receiving the gift voucher worth N10, 000 was what marked the highpoint of the day. The voucher for photography books, which was presented by Indigo, was given toabout 150 photographers, who attended the event.

    The day ended with a parley with the industry key players, such as former Head of Department, Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Sola Akeredolu; ace photo-artist, Uche Iroha and celebrity photographer, Seyi Body-Lawson.

  • Kanu joins photographers for ‘photo walk’

    Football icon, Kanu Nwankwo joined Nigerian photographers who staged a walk to mark World Photography Day in Lagos.

    The walk took off from the Freedom Park, Lagos Island, to Silverbird Galleria in Victoria Island and ended at Ember Creeks, Ikoyi, where an exhibition and a talk held.

    Nwankwo joined the entourage at the Silverbird Galleria where his appearance threw the place alive with excitement. While screaming his fond name, Papilo, in excitement, eager photographers and photo enthusiasts rushed to take snapshots with him.

    After the walk, he pledged support for the photography industry.

    According to him, the photography industry holds large potential that would yield a lot for the great country if well tapped.

    He urged photographers to keep their dreams alive and focus on being the best in what they do.

    “It feels great celebrating this day with photographers and lovers of photography across the world. It feels great to be loved by them; and seeing them rushing to me in exciting made me really happy, that I had made the day memorable for them. They made it memorable for me too.”

    The convener and founder of the World Photography Day Nigeria, Mr Yemi Royal, lamented that the industry has remained an untapped goldmine, urging government to support it.

    “There several opportunities waiting to be tapped in this industry, we are using this day to call on the government and investors to take advantage of what the industry has to offer. Our mission today is to engage, educate, empower and stimulate the photography community in Nigeria,” Royal said.