Archive for entertainment

STUDIO VISIT: Ehi Obinyan

STUDIO VISIT: Ehi Obinyan

Why Art?

I found out around
age 12 that I had the talent for Art. I used to draw as an eight-year
old but I did not take it seriously until I became a teenager. I then
started paying attention and because I wanted to know more, I decided
to go to school.

Training

I trained at Federal Polytechnic, Auchi, Edo State.

Medium

Colour medium. I
say colour because some people paint oil, some acrylics while others
use mixed media; I just use colour as my medium. When I paint, I want
the audience to see pure and raw colour. That’s how I interpret, that’s
how I speak my language, that’s how I pronounce my subject, using
nothing but colours.

So, I use all the
media – oils, water colour, acrylics, gouache, charcoal, pencil –
everything that an artist can find to make something visual, I use.

Influences

If I go to any
environment, if I see anything, that’s an influence. So, I let my
influence be mobile. People around me, culture, even the traffic,
anything that concerns human beings, that is constantly in motion. The
earth is constantly turning; we can’t feel it because it’s so large. So
I decided to make my inspiration what I observe because it is fresh and
changing every time.

Inspirations

Everyday life.
People, places, culture, new things, old things, things criticised,
things hailed. As long as it is every day and is continuous, it
influences me. As the sun shines in a bright new day, it comes with new
things and as somebody who records events, there is no other way to
take advantage of the times than to capture what is going on right
before your eyes.

Best work so far

I’ve done more than
6,000 paintings and I have images of 4,000 out of the 6,000. I’ve been
documenting, I didn’t start on time so it will be difficult to pick my
best so far. If you ask me for my best topic, I will say my fish series.

Least satisfying work

When I try to do
realism; you can never do anything real. Everything is only as real as
it is. If you try to do it, you are just struggling to get as close.
So, trying to copy realism has been my worst.

Career high point

To be able to teach
what I know to as many people as I can come across. The day I clock the
number, that is as many people as possible, that is the highest point
of my career.

Favourite artist, living or dead

I enjoy the works
of the Auchi School, they all get me going. I enjoy the works of the
Auchi artists because each time I see their work, I always feel there
is something more I need to learn. When something challenges you, it
becomes something you like. I see works of other schools and movements
but when I see works of the Auchi School, I get excited.

Ambition

My ambition is to
help as many people that I come across. If I had two meetings with you
and I’m able to do something that helps you with whatever you have
going on, I’ve done something.

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An impressive first

An impressive first

Geraldine Iheme’s
‘Disfigured Emotions’ takes us through four simultaneous stories told
in alternating chapters. The first is about Diggy, a young man in the
university who discovers and tries to deal with the betrayal of his
girlfriend, Shari. On a night that they are supposed to have a
rendezvous, he discovers her in what he takes as an intimate embrace
with one of his best friends.

The second tells
the tale of Philip Junior, an eight-year old that is physically
abandoned by his mother and thereafter emotionally by his father. In
Philip Junior’s story, we also get to meet his babysitter, Embu, who
runs away from a bad past and then later has to deal with being
abandoned herself by her boyfriend.

The third story
centres on 12-year-old Stella, who progressively feels isolated from
her family made up of a spendthrift mother, her self-absorbed sister,
and her regularly-absent father.

The final sory
focuses on four characters, Chief Emenaju, Mr. Zakili, Kamaru and
Salame; all members of an underworldly gang that specialises in
kidnapping and dismembering young women.

By alternating the stories, Iheme instils suspense into the entire book which helps to make it a pleasant read.

However, at the end
of the book where the different stories converge, as they must, the
suspense suddenly falls flat and the entire tale subsequently becomes
predictable.

Also, the
revelation is over-told. Still, the author reveals a great imagination
which shows her potential for becoming a good storyteller if she takes
time out to train herself.

With its dark
undertone of murder and mystery, the book could have easily been
described as a thriller but with the heavy use of melodrama, it comes
across more as a “bestseller” in the style of Danielle Steele or
Barbara Taylor Bradford (obvious inspirations for the author).

This is a basic
flaw of the book that reveals the lack of proper story editing and
direction. It is sort of like watching an eagle hover above the ground
rather than soaring off into the skies.

In spite of the
flaw, Iheme’s first effort is an impressive one. Hopefully, the
potential which she has displayed would be better harnessed and
reworked into a more professional fare by better editors and publishers
in subsequent works.

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Nigerians mourn film critic, Onyero Mgbejume

Nigerians mourn film critic, Onyero Mgbejume

Reactions have
continued to trail the death of film critic and former consulting
director at the National Film Institute (NFI) Jos, Onyero
Mgbejume.Mgbejume, who also taught Film at the University of Jos and
Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, died last week after an illness.

Managing Director
of the Nigerian Film Corporation (NFC) Afolabi Adesanya, said, “The
motion picture industry, staff and students of the NFC and NFI greatly
benefitted from Mgbejume’s wealth of experience.” Pioneer director of
the NFI and former helmsman of the NFC, Hyginus Ekwuazi, expressed
shock at the scholar’s death. He said Mgbejume was a very simple man,
adding that, “the child in him often times needed an interpreter to
stand between him and world.” Mgbejume, he added, always did his best
in whatever he perceived to be his duties.

President,
National Film Institute Alumni Association (NAFIAA), Victor Peters
described the deceased as, “a man driven by a passion to develop a crop
of budding professional filmmakers.” Donald Umosen, a non-academic
staff of the institution said Mgbejume was “a man, a dramatist, who
lived as if he was acting a script and died as if rehearsing a role.”

Mgbejume obtained
a PhD in Mass Communication (Radio-TV-Film) from the University of
Texas, USA and carved a niche for himself in film and TV studies. He
was at the NFI between 2002 and 2004.

The late academic
was author of several works on film and television production. Some of
the books he wrote and co-wrote include: ‘Film in Nigeria: Development,
Problems and Promise’; ‘The Techniques of Video Tape Recording’;
‘Structuring Your Novels and Short Stories’; ‘Essential Elements in
Filmmaking’ and ‘Making the Transition from Video to Celluloid’.

Mgbejume will be buried on February 19 in Jos, Plateau State.

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Ibadan Literature Prize calls for entries

Ibadan Literature Prize calls for entries

Entries have been
invited for the Ibadan Literature Prize. The literary contest which has
just debuted in the Oyo State capital is organised by Emgee Publishing
Limited.

A total of $4,000
will be won by participants in the contest divided into four
categories.Interested writers are free to submit works in the short
story, children, Hausa and Yoruba languages categories. Three winners
in each category will share $1,000. The first place winner will get
$500; second, $300 and the third place winner gets $200.Apart from
monetary benefit, certificates of merit and plaques will also be given
to winners while all the winning entries will be published in
anthologies later in the year.

Explaining the
motive behind the introduction of the prize, president of Emgee
Publishing Limited, Muda Ganiyu, disclosed that it is “to encourage
creative writing and reading among Nigerian youth.” He added that
creative stories in Yoruba and Hausa languages were included “to
encourage writing and reading in indigenous languages.” Mr Ganiyu said
those interested in participating in the competition should visit the
company’s website, www.emgeepublishing.com or e-mail
info@emgeepublishing.com for details.

Entry forms are available for download on the company’s website while submission of entries closes on April 30, 2011.

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Journalists release book on new media

Journalists release book on new media

A book on online
and multimedia journalism titled ‘Secrets of Online and Multimedia
Journalism: A Manual for Online and Multimedia Journalism Practice in
Africa’ is out.

Written by Mudathir
Ganiyu, a former editor of the Nigerian Tribune and two-time head,
Department of Mass Communication, Lagos State Polytechnic and Qasim
Akinreti, deputy online editor, Voice of Nigeria, the book is published
by Emgee Publishing Limited.

A release from the
publisher disclosed that the book, “a compendium on new media, and what
it entails to be a journalist in the 21st century,” will be launched in
the last week of February 2011.The book consisting of 16 chapters
treats different topics that includes; developing and running a
website, blogging, using social media for journalism and using mobile
phone for journalism.

Other issues
examined in ‘Secrets of Online and Multimedia Journalism: A Manual for
Online and Multimedia Journalism Practice in Africa’ are regulatory
issues in the age of digital media and other topics relating to online
journalism practice.

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A student remembers

A student remembers

He is one of the
select few mentored by the late D.O. Fagunwa. “To know him in person
was to know a gentleman on whose cheeks perpetual smiling had
fortuitously etched a dimple,” notes Yemitan in a tribute to
commemorate Fagunwa’s 45th memoriam in 2008.

That relationship, though, began innocently

“The late D.O. was
at Igbobi College from 1945 to 1946. I was in his Yoruba class in
Igbobi College in 1946 and I remember that instead of him going to the
blackboard to write, we sat down and discussed. That was his method of
teaching and we teased him about the veracity of the content of his
book. We will be throwing banters with him. I think he had only written
‘Ogboju Ode’ at that time. Did you see what I wrote in the brochure?
That’s part of what he told us. He narrated the story of how he wrote
‘Ogboju Ode’ and the royalty he was given. What he spent the money on,”
explains Yemitan whose recollection is contained in an article
published in the brochure of the fourth D.O Fagunwa Memorial Lecture
held on December 7, 2010.

The duo’s path crossed again after Igbobi College.

“He was in the
General Publications Section of the Western Region Ministry of
Education. When that was to take off, there was an advertisement in the
press asking people to contribute short stories and I wrote one short
story which was accepted. Later on, I discovered that he was in charge
of the publication, so later I went to Ibadan. I was in Ibadan and was
dealing with him on a regular basis. I was writing short stories
regularly for ‘Aworerin’ and he was in charge. There was one Mr Levy, a
white man, he was the topmost man. D.O. Fagunwa was next to him so our
meetings became regular.” Fagunwa later gave fillip to Yemitan’s
writing career by editing and publishing his first work, ‘Oniruru
Itan’, a collection of short stories in Yoruba. “At that time, I used
to tell short stories on radio, on Nigerian Broadcasting Service on a
weekly basis and he became one of my ardent listeners. When I told a
story on radio, the next time he would call me. ‘Ladipo, I heard your
story.’ We were dealing regularly together, I was close to him and
because he had taught us before, this made us so close. He used to
advise me, he used to tell me the modulation in Yoruba language and
each time I wrote, he would help me edit it and tell me how to do it
better.

“I used to write
short stories on a regular basis and he used to ask me to write more.
One day, this book, ‘Oniruru Itan’, just came. It was edited and
published by D.O. Fagunwa. It was printed by Caxton Press but it was a
publication of Western Region General Publications. I simply saw
author’s copies, they didn’t tell me they were publishing it. He was
just asking me to write the stories, I didn’t know he had the intention
of publishing it. This was my first ever publication. It was edited by
D.O. Fagunwa. He was my mentor, my everything. When he died, I felt it
keenly.” But death couldn’t diminish Yemitan’s love for Fagunwa. He
started an archive on the educationist thereafter. One of his
materials, the first in memoriam advert on Fagunwa published in a
newspaper on December 7, 1964 is also in the memorial brochure.

Lover of research

Having benefitted
from Fagunwa’s mentorship, Yemitan proceeded to distinguish himself
with several other works. ‘Ijala Are Ode’, the first work in Yoruba
language published by Oxford University Press, (now University Press)
in 1963 is one of his popular works.

“I wasn’t a
hunter,” he starts on how he wrote the book. “I come from Abeokuta and
my father had the chieftaincy title of Ashipa. Ashipa is the head of
hunters and my father was the head of hunters in a large area. So,
whenever they had occassions to demonstate their culture, what they do
in the wild, I saw it. That was how I got in touch initially in Ijala.
I became interested in it and I was in radio, I was a radio news
reader, then producer for many years. It was in my line of profession,
doing research on culture and other things, that was how I went into
it. I did more research and wrote that book.” His love for research
also made him write ‘Madam Tinubu’. “I was told Madam Tinubu was an Owu
woman. That was how I got interested and I started to research. Later
on, I discovered her relationship to Owu was minimal. She was from
Gbagura but I wrote the book.” He did same for the novel, ‘Gbobaniyi’
which he wrote on vacation in London and ‘Oruko lo Yato’ I and II, a
collection of short stories derived from the Ifa corpus.

Writing in English

Apart from writing
in Yoruba, the retired broadcaster also writes in English. ‘The Bearded
Story Teller’, ‘Happy Times Are Here’, and ‘Adubi War’ are amongst
those written in English. “Basically, it’s because I try to be
proficient in both languages. At Igbobi College, we were taught by
Professor Babalola who was a good English scholar and he grilled us so
much. The famous author, Cyprian Ekwensi, was also one of our tutors at
Igbobi College and he inspired us to write,” he says on why he uses
both languages.

Eternal language

While some claim
that people are no longer write in Yoruba, Yemitan believes otherwise.
“People are writing in Yoruba. The fact is that publishers, if they
know that a book is not going to be a school text, they refuse to
accept it. I still write in Yoruba. I have just translated late
Professor Saburi Biobaku’s ‘The Egba and their Neighbour’. Seun Olufuwa
and I have just translated Professor Soyinka’s ‘The Lion and the Jewel’
into Yoruba. Professor Akinwumi Isola has been preaching to me that I
write too much in English. I should go back to writing in Yoruba. I
write in English because I travel out and people are interested.” He
reiterates that writings and writers in Yoruba language are endangered.
“There is hope. In fact, the hope is brighter now. Right now, in many
universities in the US and other places, people are studying Yoruba. My
grand daughter studying Medicine is taking Yoruba as one of her
subjects in the preliminary stages. People are interested in Yoruba.
Yoruba can never die, it can never die. There is no immediate danger to
Yoruba language, I can say that for sure.”

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Eighth Wonder

Eighth Wonder

In spite of the troubles that have
dogged the nation from independence till now, and the sense of anger
and disillusionment it has aroused in the Nigerian citizenry home and
abroad, it is always remarkable to find a Nigerian who chooses to see
and project what is right about the country.

This is not your run-off-the-mill,
unrealistic rebranding project. This is a project that speaks
practically and distinctively to the Nigerian experience. This is the
‘8th Wonder of the World: Made in Nigeria’, a book written by
Olaboludele Simoyan.

Simoyan comes across as amiable and
ready to engage you with her ideas. For instance, she walks into the
newsroom for the interview and asks a reporter pointedly to tell her
two good things about Nigeria, and she would reward him with a special
handband. He reels off a satisfactory answer which she considers
noteworthy because her usual encounters with people always turn out
unsatisfactory as they cannot recall even one good thing about the
country. Simoyan speaks to NEXT about her new book and her unrelenting
passion for Nigeria.

Give us some insight into your background

I was born in
Washington DC in 1965. As a diplomat’s kid I lived briefly in different
parts of the world, but I was educated in Nigeria. I went to an
exclusive American missionary school in Miyango Town, which is 25miles
to Jos. I attended the Federal Government Girls College at Oyo, and in
1982 I gained admission into the University of Lagos to study
Architecture. As my community project, I put up a playground for the
kids. I took wooden unused NEPA poles to build swings, slides and
spiral slides. Before I left, the villagers had started stealing the
wooden seats and using them for firewood. (laughing). But the thing is
I had made up my mind that wherever I was sent to serve, I would make
an impact and leave a legacy


Do you think all of these were pointers to the line you would eventually tow?

Yes. And there was
also the fact that I had always been very nationalistic from a very
young age no thanks to my father who always made us proud about our
heritage. He always made us take pride in who we were and where we were
from. In fact, in those days, the Nigerian Passport commanded a lot of
respect.

How did your interest in writing begin?

While I was at the
Kent Academy in Miyango, I was often told that I was a poor reader and
I continued to carry that impression around. It was after my School
Certificate Exams that I took interest in reading the popular romance
novels, Mills and Boon. Then I also began buying and reading lots of
Jeffery Archer novels because I just loved his ‘Kane and Abel’. This
also moved me into reading a lot of books about Nigeria and the black
race like Achebe’s ‘The Trouble With Nigeria’. I read motivational
books too, especially by Mike Murdoch. It helped me channel my energy
into knowing what to do about my purpose. Also, after youth service, I
worked in a company called Architecture Services and they had a
magazine. So I contributed some writing to the magazine just to augment
my salary. I also sold advert spaces in the magazine.

Tell us how the book was born

Sometime in the
mid-nineties I left Architecture Services. Another company had offered
me a sales job because they were impressed with my work at Architecture
Services, but I turned it down preferring to go into freelance
marketing. I later left this for a job in an insurance company, but in
spite of everything, there was still something missing. I was
unfulfilled and money ceased to be a motivation for me. I had ideas
that had been burning on my inside and that needed to be let out. The
reason Nigeria is the way it is is because our politicians are
determined to steal us blind. So those who have the interest of this
nation at heart can pursue it with the same single-minded determination
as the corrupt politicians. I resigned, took my gratuity and continued
to read some more. I began to live on a shoestring budget, secluded
myself and just wrote and wrote and wrote. I started writing the book
in 2005 and I had a mentor who I kept going back to for feedback. It
was he who advised me to publish the book in series because I had
written too much for one book to contain. The first of the series
finally came out last year.

Why use a book to convey your message?

This book is a
springboard to many other things. It is a container of ideas for a new
Nigeria. I first thought setting up an NGO was my best bet to reaching
Nigerians, but I later decided it would be best to contain all my
thoughts in a book first.

How did you deal with the hassles of getting published?

The book is
actually self-published. The truth is I did a lot of things in the book
that I think very few publishers would have wanted to publish it.

Can you give some information about the book?

It’s actually two
books in one. I wanted the book to challenge people’s basic
assumptions. So that anyone who comes in contact with the book will see
that anything is possible if it’s possible to have two books in one.
Immediately you see the book, you get a paradigm shift.

‘The 8th Wonder’ is
something incredible, remarkable and distinguishing. ‘The 8th Wonder’
is a vision. As Nigerians, I want us to create our own 8th wonder in
our own sphere of contact. For too long we have taken solutions from
the West. We need a Nigerian solution to a Nigerian problem. When I
started the book I asked myself: if the future of Nigeria was dependent
on me, what would I do? With that I began to get solutions. The
foundation of a nation is how the people think. Again, in the book, I
drew attention to our positives so the book also focuses on what we are
doing right. We have focused on the bad things for too long. For
instance are you aware that Jos had electricity before London? When you
find out what you are doing right, you can repeat it.

What was the reason behind your using illustrations in the book?

People say
Nigerians do not read so I tried to make it more user-friendly and fun
so that even a kid can make sense of it. If you are the type who cannot
be bothered to read the whole book, you can read the African proverbs.
So everyone can get something out of it.

What further plans do you have regarding this project?

I have been doing
some inspirational marathon bus rides where I go to UNILAG and ride the
buses with the students and talk with them. I also have a blog,
www.the8thwonderworld.com, and in January 2011 I want to create an 8th
wonder on the blog. So everyone should look out for that.

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EMAIL FROM AMERICA: The Three Rs: Reading, Reading and Reading

EMAIL FROM AMERICA: The Three Rs: Reading, Reading and Reading

If you love
reading this is a great time to be alive. Thanks to technology, pretty
much anything these days is a book. There is always something to read.
The democratisation of reading is happening at a time when it appears
that people have lost interest in reading anything that doesn’t chant
“Amen!” at them.

Today, there are
homes that house no books. Unfortunately, there are children in those
homes. That is child abuse. A child should be immersed in all sorts of
books. I know, I know, I have said that the book is dying a long slow
death. A house should be slaphappy with books and ideas. Look at it
another way: This is a great time to buy books because no one wants
them anyway. Buy them and leave them lying around the house. A child
may just read them.

I have enjoyed
reading many African writers. The younger ones tend to be enthusiastic
and eager to be published. Many are good at what they do, but if I had
to give advice, I would suggest that many of our writers would improve
their craft if they spent more time reading than writing.

Read, read, and
read. You will be surprised at how much it improves on your muse’s
judgment. What do I read? People regularly send me books from Nigeria.
I stalk used bookshops thrift stores, and yard sales. You would be
surprised what Americans will give away for pennies. I trek the
Internet buying the books of my childhood. If you really want to see
how the Internet is fueling the renaissance that is African literature
today, google “African writing”, kick back with a good glass of
something red, luscious and bold, and enjoy yourself.

There are blogs,
websites, and Facebook pages out there devoted to some pretty good
writing. Google Nnorom Azuonye and his ‘Sentinel Poetry Movement’ and
you will be love-struck. Jeremy Weate, (who with Bibi Bakare-Weate
publishes Cassava Republic) owns ‘Naijablog’, a brilliant blog that I
am fairly addicted to. Read Molara Wood’s ‘Wordsbody’, Chuma Nwokolo’s
‘African-Writing’, and Sola Osofisan’s ‘Africanwriter.com’ and
‘Nigeriansinamerica.com’. And of course, for home grown investigative
reporting, late breaking news, literature and some pretty strong
opinions, you should visit Sowore Omoyele’s inimitable
‘Saharareporters’ and Philip Adekunle’s bustling ‘Nigeria Village
Square’.

The irrepressible
writer and poet, Ob Iwuanyanwu (Obiwu), manages a small group of top
notch Nigerian writers on the list-serve ‘Ederi’. The poet,
Amatoritsero Ede, edits ‘Maple Tree Literary Supplement’ and manages
the list-serve ‘Krazitivity’. Indeed, many of today’s Nigerian literary
stars cut their teeth on ‘Krazitivity’ under the watchful eyes of
griots like Obiwu Iwuanyanwu, Tade Ipadeola, Pius Adesanmi, Molara
Wood, Chika Unigwe, Olu Oguibe, Afam Akeh, Lola Shoneyin, Chuma
Nwokolo, EC Osondu, Jude Dibia, Tolu Ogunlesi, and Victor Ehikhamenor.
Shola Adenekan runs ‘The New Black Magazine’. Kola Tubosun blogs his
escapades in America and elsewhere in ‘ktravula’. Chielozona Eze
connects the lush dots of African Literature in his blog ‘African
Literature News and Review’.

Google the
Zimbabwean writer, Ivor Hartmann of ‘Storytime’, and be enthralled. Do
not die until you have read Ainehi Edoro’s blog, ‘Brittle Paper’. Edoro
is enigmatic, witty, brainy and just plain fun. Binyavanaga Wainana is
the brainy godfather of them all, spewing his brilliant rage on our
e-conscience. The uber-smart Petina Gappah blogs (too occasionally
lately, alas) on ‘The World According to Gappah’.

Oh, if you are on
Facebook, please visit my favourite, Auntie PJ’s page, ‘Let’s Talk
About It’. The sum total of our sexuality is on full luscious display
right there in all its glory. It is not literature as we know it, but I
highly recommend it. There are also many groups and pages on Facebook
devoted to literature and writers. I am friends with several African
writers on Facebook and they are an invaluable source of manuscripts,
stories, leads, books, etc. They tend to accept you as a friend once
you request, don’t be shy.

When I read books,
I take copious notes along the margins of the books. The notes are
usually my observations about many aspects of the book I am reading. At
the end of the reading, I always go back and compile all the notes and
it never fails, strong opinions always result from the compilation. I
invariably always publish the opinions for what they are worth.

If I like a book,
I say so. If I don’t, I say so. It is really nothing personal. And
please do not take me too seriously; I am just an opinionated consumer
that has been fooled by America into thinking he is always right. I am
a consumer, I paid for the damn book, and I am right. Deal with it.

So tell me, I
really would love to hear from you. Where do you go to for the
literature of our people? I am thinking of compiling a digital reading
list that I would share with the world. Send me your favourite digital
site and I will put it out there for the world to see and enjoy.

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Art from the sounds of Lagos

Art from the sounds of Lagos

Emeka Ogboh was
honoured during the 2010 World Listening Day because his art shows how
much he listens. The artist who lives and works in Lagos adapts the
bustle of everyday city life into his sound and video installations.
The World Listening Project used his work last year in recognition of
his untiring efforts.

Ogboh’s first
contact with new media art – his favoured sound and video installation
– was in February 2007 in Alexandria, Egypt, when a friend invited him
to attend a workshop in the famous city . “It was at this workshop on
media and light that I first saw video art, photography and other
aspects of design apart from painting,” he recalls.

Unique medium

What started as
love at first sight has progressed into a serious affair for the artist
who underwent training under Harald Scherz at the Winter Academy in
Fayoum, a village close to Cairo. “I took a course called Audio
Spectrum and my teacher took me through the process,” he said.

With Lagos
providing the material for his sound blasts, Ogboh has created acoustic
dialogue between the Centre of Excellence and other cities of the
world. “The immersive nature of sound is what makes it unique. It is
not static and creates an experience for the listener. For example, one
can take a trip through Lagos without actually being in Lagos,” he says
while explaining his preference for the medium.

Popularising Lagos

Having spent about
five years practicing new media art and having projects lined up till
2013, Ogboh’s desire to familiarise the rest of the world with Lagos
has not waned. “To me, there is no where as loud as Lagos and it is
easy for me to experiment with its different sounds. After I record the
sounds and take them to the studio, they sound different. It becomes a
composition and every element is important to create a soundscape.”

Ogboh’s first sound
installation ever was in a bathroom in Fayoum. The work titled ‘Lake
Quarun’ birthed another, ‘Obalende Downtown Cairo’. The Egyptian
capital reminded the artist of Lagos and he wanted to highlight the
similarities between the two cities through his art. Interestingly,
promoting the sounds of Lagos has taken Ogboh to Madrid, New York and
Cologne, Germany.

He had a
particularly memorable outdoor sound installation titled ‘Reception of
Strangeness and Consumption of Difference’ in Cologne. The artist held
the show to see reactions of residents to the noise of bus conductors
on the ever busy Oshodi Oke bus route calling out to passengers. The
noise blared from speakers located outside the city’s library. “Art is
not always about beauty. It is about people’s reaction to your work. I
was able to get people’s reactions. At a point the speakers were even
broken,” he says.

“In installing
Lagos soundscapes in Cologne, I was interested in how the German public
engages with what is subversive strangeness. Given the recent debate on
multiculturalism and citizenship in Germany, I was interested in the
phenomenology of reception.”

Reception and translation

Receptiveness and
translation of reception is the thrust of ‘Lagos State of Mind Vol 1’,
an ongoing collaboration with sound artists and music producers. He
sends the Lagos soundscape to collaborators who in turn use it to give
listeners a body of sound art and music.

Apart from sound
art, Ogboh has also delved into video art. He is a pioneering member of
Video Artists of Nigeria, Lagos (VAN). He participated in the ‘One
Minute Project’, a video workshop organised by the Centre for
Contemporary Art (CCA) last year. His video titled ‘Jos 2010’
summarising the story of the recurring Jos crises was one of the main
screenings last July at Video Art Festival Miden, Greece.

He is currently
working on another series, a combination of video and art titled ‘50’
to commemorate Nigeria’s Golden Jubilee. “The 50 project explores the
making of modern Nigeria in the context of the promises at
independence. Nigerians are asked their one word opinion of Nigeria
after 50 years.” He adds that 50 words will be selected and projected
on a screen while historical statements made by Nigerian leaders at
independence will accompany the visuals.

Inspired by Lagos

“I am inspired by
my environment. I love the bus parks; I love busy areas like Oshodi and
Ojuelegba because they bring out the multicultural aspects of the city.
Lagos soundscape is art; it is multilayered with different sounds from
the ice-cream seller attracting customers by playing the sound track of
‘Titanic’ to people at the bus park. You have to listen to find your
bus, it is not like in other parts of the world where there are bus
signs that give directions,” he says of the sounds of Lagos.

He reiterates that
the call of the bus conductors on the streets gives sounds from the
city its uniqueness. This, he adds, is why he never shies away from
using the sound to tell people more about the city. Above all, he is
looking forward to giving a digital sound map to the Centre of
Excellence using bus conductors as guide.

Though he is
renowned abroad where he has delivered lectures and participated in
international conferences, Ogboh remains relatively unknown at home.
But he is not bothered. “When I started, I used to spend my own money
but now I get paid. When you work with new media tools, you will know
that they are not cheap so for me it’s all about passion. What I do is
not about me, it is about putting Nigeria on the map.”

New media art might
still have a long way to go but in Ogboh, the art form has a crusader.
“I would like to give workshops, while promoting our video art
collective. Also, I would like to give classes on new media art to
students in Art departments of higher institutions. Even if it is not
included in their curricula, it will stimulate their minds.”

Nonetheless,
appearing in the Italian edition of international magazine, ‘Marie
Claire’ in June 2010 as one of the next big things out of Africa in art
alongside compatriot, Andrew Esiebo, shows that Ogboh might actually be
doing something right.

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STUDIO VISIT: George Edozie

STUDIO VISIT: George Edozie

Why Art?

I could have been a
lawyer. That is what my parents wanted me to be. It took the
intervention of my brother to let them allow me read Fine and Applied
Arts. I chose to be an artist because I realised that I had the traits
while growing up. I loved drawing, carving, and re-creating my toys as
a child.

In secondary
school, I was attracted to the art studio and spent time there.
Basically, being an artist is a passion. Art is like priesthood. It is
a calling; you just find yourself driven towards it.

Training

I studied Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Benin. I specialised in painting and graduated in 1996.

Medium

I do more of mix
media and oil painting. My mix media are basically fabric collages on
acrylic and paper collages with pastel on oil. I use thick impasto in
my oil works, which incline towards fauvism and cubism.

Influences

My art is
influenced by my wife. I have painted her over a thousand times because
she serves as my model. When you see a painting titled ‘Cynthia’ that
is one of the many paintings influenced by my lovely wife.

I am also
influenced by fauvist and cubist painters like Paul Cezanne, Henri
Matisse, and Pablo Picasso. Things that happen around me also influence
my works. I enjoy painting figures, so the dresses and hairdo of men
and women influence what I do.

Inspirations

There are many
things that inspire an artist; politics, society and happenings on the
international scene are some of them. An artist is a mirror of society.
I can’t leave painting the crazy Lagos traffic to paint quiet streets
with flowers. I can’t paint happy people when people complain about
electricity. What I pour on the canvas are my emotions, unless I am not
being sincere with myself.

Best work so far I don’t have a best work

Art is like a man
in a relationship. You can’t say I love my wife then leave her for
another woman. The creative ability and energy I put into each work
might be different, but I love all my works.

Least satisfying work

Each work has a
soul and a buyer, so I cannot say I have a least satisfying work. When
I paint I have to satisfy myself first, I have to feel alright with the
work. If a painting stays with me a year or two, I normally add
something else to it, though I still have some paintings that I have
kept for at least 10 years and I have not changed anything. They are
like my wives, so I have refused to sell them.

Career high point

First, I have not
arrived. Art is an endless search. I will create it till I die. I want
to take art to a level where every artist in Nigeria can benefit. I
desire for Nigeria to be out there. Though we have been able to create
a book on contemporary African artists and I have curated shows in
Lagos, Accra, and Duala, much still needs to be done.

When there is the
“I” syndrome amongst artists instead of “We”, how I can say I have
reached a high point? We need to help ourselves; we need to export our
talents.

Favourite artist, living or dead

Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Cezanne, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Armando Modigliani, Chris Ofili, and Duke Asidere.

Ambitions

Now, I am combining
art with publishing. I hope to expose Nigerian art to the international
market by coming up with more books on contemporary arts and having
exchange programmes. I hope to have a book tour in the United States
with some of the artists that are featured in the book.

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