Archive for entertainment

ArtHouse Contemporary holds sixth auction

ArtHouse Contemporary holds sixth auction

Artworks including paintings, sculpture, mixed media works, prints and photographs totalling 101 lots will go under the hammer at the sixth ArtHouse Contemporary auction, to be held in Lagos on May 9.

Speaking at a press conference held in Lagos on Tuesday, April 5, Kavita Chellaram, ArtHouse Contemporary’s managing director and founder, said her company’s auction is a medium for promoting new and established artists. Artists including Jacob Jari, Krydz Ikwemesi, Obi Ekwenchi, Adeola Balogun, Sade Thompson, Marcia Kure, Demola Ogunajo, Segun Aiyesan, Oladele Awosoga, Nyemike Onwuka and Tam Fiofori are included in the auction for the first time. Artists from Ghana including Owusu Ankomah, Victor Butler and Kofi Asemnyinah will also feature.

Mrs. Chellaram said that two bronze sculptures and one oil painting by Ben Enwonwu included in the auction, are the best works of the late artist that she has had the opportunity to value and sell.

She further disclosed that curators from the Tate Modern will attend the auction, adding that it is the first time a museum from UK will be acquiring works directly from Africa. Art auctions such as the ArtHouse Contemporary’s effort have “put Nigeria on the market,” she noted, adding that there is rising interest in works by African artists.

Of the last auction by Chellaram’s company, held last November at the Civic Centre in Lagos, she informed that, “We sold almost 80 percent of our works. 80 percent in this kind of market which hasn’t recovered from recession, is fantastic. More Nigerians see art as an investment rather than just entertainment.”

Selecting the lots

Fielding media questions on the choice of works for the auction, Chellaram said, “We look for new talents and see if what they are doing is different from what we have seen.” ArtHouse Contemporary manager, Nana Sonoiki, added that, “The works must speak for themselves and must have aesthetics. People are coming to ArtHouse because they know they will get authentic works.” It was noted during the session that although art is becoming a force to reckon with in Nigeria, the market isn’t as buoyant as in America or Europe. Chellaram argued that the poor economic situation and dangers like kidnapping, are factors militating against the boom of the auction market in Nigeria, as such negatives discourage tourists from coming into the country to see artworks. However, she remains optimistic about the art scene in Nigeria and reiterated her belief that the forthcoming auction will be successful. “We’ve had works selling consistently at a high rate,” she declared.

Other organisations have created competing auctions since Arthouse Contemporary began operations, but Chellaram was unfazed. “We love the competition. More people are aware and more people are getting into the market,” she said.

The art patron and collector further disclosed that the selection process remains the biggest challenge in the way of organising the auctions. “Fine tuning and selecting the works is our greatest challenge. We get so many works and we can’t put all of them out there,” she said. As with the November 2009 auction, there are plans to put up lots for charity during next month’s edition. The company is also looking to take the auctions outside Lagos, with one likely for Abuja sometime next year.

The 101 lots that will go under the hammer at the sixth ArtHouse Contemporary auction will be on display at the Civic Centre, Lagos next month, between May 7 to 9.

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Giving music her all

Giving music her all

Donna Adja is someone to look out for in the music industry. Her Urhobo name, Ogheneyerowo, means ‘God answers prayers’. Born on June 26, 1984 in Eku, Delta State, Adja is a singer, songwriter and fashion designer aiming for the stars. Growing up, little Adja saw lots of actresses on TV and wanted to be like them. “When I was a child, I would stand in front of the mirror and wanted to be a star. I wanted to be on TV and to be known,” she discloses.

Filled with hopes of succeeding and expecting to reach her goals, Adja moved to Lagos. But things didn’t turn out quite the way she expected. “I came to Lagos because of acting but it was tough,” she recalls. “The film industry here is very complicated because people would say, ‘you are too skinny’. They only want to sleep with you and take advantage of you,” she continues, adding that, “I didn’t want to sell my personality under value.” Undeterred, she continued soldiering on with minor roles in some films. She played a nurse in ‘Together as One’; was a doctor in ‘Golden Mask’ and had minor roles in several other B-movies but the stress of acting increasingly gave her a hard time. “I felt stuck in acting, like [I was] in a box and wanted to break out and do something else.” Those unsavoury experiences made her rethink, and eventually, she realised another talent which led her up another career path – music, her real passion. “Music is different from acting and my voice was too good to waste away,” she notes.

New life in music

After bidding farewell to acting, Adja was a supporting vocalist for musicians in Lagos studios. Fortuitously, she heard that the manager of Sheraton Hotel was looking for singers. She turned in a song sample,”He auditioned me and liked my voice” she recalls. After a week’s probation, Adja started to sing at Sheraton in 2007. Two years later, she started her own band with equipment bought by the hotel’s manager. She thereafter began performing four times a week. What Adja plays is a mix of Afro and RnB ,she calls it ‘Afro-HipHop’. It features conga, native and talking drums, guitar, saxophone and keyboard with which she sets the house on fire during her shows.

She had however shown interest in music prior to becoming a professional. Adja first sang in public aged 17 as a member of the junior choir in her church. She later gave a solo performance of a self-composed song with the senior choir.

Further inspired by her idol, Michael Jackson; her favourite song ‘Smile’ by Nat King Cole and singer Celine Dion, Adja felt music was worth the effort. “I used to listen a lot to [Dion], I love her songs, I love the lyrics, I just love everything about her.” Luckily for Adja, she discovered that, “singing belongs to me, it’s inside of me, I live with it.”

Local and international tours

After a while, Adja began seeing the bigger picture and became dissatisfied with just hotel-lounge in terms of performance. She took matters into her own hands and thus embarked on a tour of Nigeria, with Abeokuta, Ogun State being her first stop. She played with her group, ‘Sugarband’ at a birthday party of Nigeria’s former president, Olusegun Obasanjo. “It was a special performance for him and a good experience for me. Something really special,” she recalls.

After some more shows in Lagos, Adja travelled to Sydney, Australia, for three weeks to play at a birthday party for a certain Mike Smith, who paid for the trip and also facilitated a free video shot. Adja soon began working with him as he showed interest in becoming her manager in Australia. Thinking he was her messiah because he had promised to make her famous, the singer gave all her songs to Smith who started mixing them. They even agreed on a profit sharing formula, and he initially tried to set up interviews with radio and TV stations. But it was a smokescreen. Smith eventually betrayed Adja, refusing to hand back her materials. This hit the artist hard and she began to question herself and the music industry. But like the phoenix, she rose again.

All is not lost

On return to Lagos, Adja’s Friday night gigs at Sheraton caught the attention of a Briton who booked her for a wedding in London. London turned out to be a good place for the singer; and her wedding gig led to further bookings. Among these was her performance at the Soffice Festival in the UK.

Dreams don’t die

Currently working on her first album, Adja hopes to open a big fashion house called ‘DA-Fashion-House’. She has a flair for fashion, and self-designs her stage costumes. “Fashion and music, that’s what I want to do,” she declares.

On why she doesn’t want to live and work in Nigeria, Adja discloses that, “entertainment business here is progressing but to me, it is not impressive. Piracy is too much; [the] work is not worth the effort because you don’t earn the money you deserve. The market is not honest. Betrayal in Nigeria is worse than anywhere else.” Ultimately, she hopes her artistic future will reflect the benevolence of her Urhobo name: ‘God answers prayers’.

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What a woman wants

What a woman wants

“I just want to be whatever I want to be,” was the constant cry of protest by Bolatito in the play, ‘Anatomy of a Woman’.

Written and
directed by Wole Oguntokun, it was staged on April 3 and will be
performed every Sunday this month as part of the initiative of Theatre
at Terra to revive Nigerian Theatre. As its title suggests, the play
provides insight into the seemingly complex nature of a woman, her
sensitivity and ever changing moods.

It opens on a note
of suspense. Just as everyone is set to watch the play on stage, a loud
shriek comes from among the audience. The owner of the voice is seen
when she jumps from her seat violently and accuses a man next to her of
taking advantage of her. Another young man comes between them as the
voices rise to a crescendo and asks if she knows him. She replies that
she does and in fact came with him. This scene sets the pace for events
that follow. While the young lady is never seen again during the course
of the play, her outburst keeps the audience in suspense.

Bolatito

The first scene
on stage is one with Bolatito and her supposed boyfriend who travels
“seven hours by road” to visit, or so he says. Bolatito, popularly
called Tito by other characters, is played by Eyimife Gold Ikponmwosa.

Although she
claims that she is not every woman, she represents a typical woman who
is constantly under pressure. Women from all walks of life, including
female bankers who have targets to meet; single ladies who are under
pressure to marry; and young females who try to make ends meet for
themselves and siblings, are under similar pressures. As a result, they
succumb to pressure from men to get material benefits. Bolatito lives
in a well furnished apartment rented by her male boss, drives a car he
bought for her and holds a job he offered her. Yet, she ignores his
obvious advances and prepares to take him on a wild goose chase. “I
will give him the impression that good things come to those who wait,”
she says.

She raises the
question, “What does a woman really want?” It is a recurring question
in the play and draws attention to its title. Bolatito provides a
simple answer, happiness. She argues that for most women, happiness
comes in the form of a good job, good families, and a good car but for
her, it is a “man’s brain, mouth and money.” However, as events unfold
in the play, she makes it clear that she is not only after money but
believes strongly in love.

Mohammed

Mohammed is the
boyfriend who returns after disappearing for two years. He expects that
Bolatito will be waiting for him, but is soon proved wrong. He finds
that she has other suitors. Her aunty who describes him as a man with
“no ambition, no future, no hope, and no shame” is correct, for he
turns out to be a lazy man who wouldn’t be bothered about getting a job
but does not mind leaching on a woman.

Aunty Jebe A much
older woman is introduced in the fifth scene and attempts to take
centre stage very quickly. Played by Ijeoma Grace Agu, Aunty Jebe is a
saucy woman whose quick and sharp tongue seems too much for her small
frame. Her exaggerated actions help create humour in the play. She is
all too concerned about choosing a marriage mate for her niece,
Bolatito. “What other priorities can a woman have?” she asks, when
Bolatito says that she isn’t thinking about marriage. The importance
placed on marriage is emphasised when she adds that if a woman remains
single till 28, she is looked at like a damaged good.

The old fashioned
woman is of the opinion that a woman’s place is in the kitchen as
portrayed by her words, “Women are not designed to have fame and
fortune.” She maintains that love is inconsequential in a marriage and
regards money to be the most important thing. She quickly changes her
mind about the men in Bolatito’s life as soon as she finds out that one
is richer than the other. Her disdain for Mohammed because of his poor
status is apparent by her attitude towards him.

The boss

Bolatito’s boss
whose name isn’t mentioned in the play, easily calls to mind a rich
sugar daddy with too much money to spend. He equates love with money
and assumes that Bolatito’s love can be bought. He sends the audience
reeling with laughter, with his dramatically heavy Igbo accent; and has
a special place in Aunty Jebe’s heart, for she describes him as “a man
that is ready-made” for marriage.

He is however
given a shock when Bolatito rejects him with the question, “So what if
you bought me a house? Does that give you mortgage over my life?” James
Another one of Bolatito’s suitors is James, played by Austine Onuoha.
Aunty Jebe regards him as perfect because he owns a house. Of course,
this is before she meets the boss whom she realises is richer than him.
Much like the boss, he assumes that Bolatito will accept him in return
for his largess. She does what he least expects by shouting, “You
assumed that because I went to the movies with you that I loved you.”
This leaves him puzzled and he asks in shock, “What is it you really
want?” to this, she answers, “I want to be what I want to be.” As the
play reaches its climax, it is obvious that Bolatito is still
misunderstood by the men in her life. The female sex is portrayed as an
enigma, but she maintains that it is what makes her a woman: “It is the
enigma of a tiger that makes it a tiger.”

Setting, Costume and Design

The stage was set
to suit a modern house with a small dining area and sitting room with
all necessary gadgets including a television set, furniture, and
painting hanging on the wall. Since all the scenes took place in the
sitting room, the setting did not change. The lighting however helped
improve the setting. The costume of each actor was appropriate until
Bolatito went out on a date with James on bare feet. The bare feet
seemed out of place with the dinner gown and some members of the
audience could be heard mumbling about this. But all in all, it was an
interesting play, well acted by actors who understood and interpreted
their roles correctly.

‘Anatomy of a Woman’ is at Terra Kulture, Lagos, twice every Sunday in April.

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A camera on the campaign trail

A camera on the campaign trail

George Esiri’s
passion for documenting history is well known. The former photographer
with Vanguard, Guardian, Reuters and occasional contributor to NEXT, is
renowned for his haunting images of the conflicts and environmental
problems in the Niger Delta amongst other issues. He, however, appears
to have widened his scope by training his lens on a different subject
matter this time around.

“I was looking at
it from the angle of an individual from the south campaigning for the
first time as the president of this nation, wholeheartedly supported by
southerners and people in the north. I said to myself, even if he wins
or lose, he has to be documented. That was what informed my
documentation of the president,” Esiri explains at the opening of an
exhibition on the 2011 national presidential campaign of the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) .

Titled ‘The
People’s President’, the three-day exhibition opened on Tuesday, April
5 at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja. It featured 52 out of the
over 10,000 images Esiri took of Goodluck Jonathan and other dramatis
personae on the campaign trail in the 36 states and the Federal Capital
Territory. There were also some of Jonathan’s days as vice president.

Beyond Jonathan

The 52 photographs,
however, are a mix of the ordinary and striking. Jonathan, who seldom
dances is shown moving his shoulders to music in one; while he appears
like a Catholic priest blessing the faithful with his hands stretched
in another. One is taken back to 2007 by an image of Jonathan and the
late Umaru Yar’Adua, his predecessor, campaigning in Delta State.

But the images are
not all about Jonathan and PDP stalwarts. ‘Port Harcourt Boy’ crooner,
Duncan Mighty is shown in one with singer Daddy Showkey doing his
peculiar ‘galala’ dance in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State while actress
Stephanie Okereke appears in another.

The hunter becomes
the hunted in another photograph showing a group of photo-journalists
with cameras pressed to their faces trying to capture a scene. Esiri
endeavours to capture the light side of the campaign with a photograph
showing some mascots and a policeman in a tired pose. A group of boys
are standing in front of Jonathan’s posters in another state.

Harrowing experience

“It was hectic,
harrowing and tough because at times, I travelled with a (pair of)
trousers and T-shirt for a week with my bag, laptop and camera. There
were some states I got to that I didn’t get hotel to stay,” Esiri says
while narrating his experience. “I never even planned for [the trips].
I left my family in Lagos for five months, I will just go spend two
days with them and come back,” he adds.

Luckily for him, he
didn’t labour in vain as Nigerians, including the president and some of
his ministers, appreciated the photographer’s efforts at the
exhibition’s opening event. Senior Special Assistant to the president
on Research, Strategy and Documentation, Oronto Douglas, was the first
in line. He disclosed that despite telling Esiri there was no budget
for him when he requested to join the president’s campaign trail, he
didn’t back down.

Acting national
chair of the PDP, Bello Haliru Mohammed also commended Esiri. He urged
the photographer to take the exhibition “round the country for the
benefit of all.”

Blessed country

President Jonathan
who also appreciated Esiri disclosed that he was pleased when told of
the exhibition, “that someone was capturing our movement.” He added
that travelling the country for the campaign has increased his
knowledge of Nigeria. “Going through the country gave me the privilege
of knowing more about Nigeria. When you travel from the coastal parts
of the Atlantic, passing through the mangrove swamps, through the rain
forest areas, the savannah belt, passing through the Guinea savannah,
the Sudan savannah into the semi desert areas, going through the rocky
parts, the flat terrain of the country; it gives you a picture of a
country with different ecological zones that could really be
harnessed.” Jonathan also commented on the style of dressing across the
regions, noting that these signify hope. “The colours I see tell me of
a bright future, a country that has hope. That if we collectively work
together, we shall reform this country. I am happy to be a part of this
project, the Nigerian project, to play our little role to see that we
collectively recreate a country for our younger generation.” Esiri, one
of the 100 photographers whose works are featured in ‘A day in the Life
of Africa’, intends to take up the suggestion to take the exhibition
round the country. The works are also available for sale to interested
people.

The photographer, who curated the exhibition himself, disclosed that
it was not an easy task. “I won’t lie to you; it took me five days
because there are some strong pictures. I was confused so on the fifth
day, I just started choosing because I have a big bank of photographs.”
One of the guests at the exhibition was the photographer’s brother,
actor Justus Esiri. “I am extremely happy and proud of this young man.
It has taken years but he has finally arrived at what he has passion
for. It’s one thing being a photographer, it’s another having a passion
for what you do as we have heard here,” he said of his brother’s effort.

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Mudi Yahaya and the naked truth

Mudi Yahaya and the naked truth

Mudi Yahaya appears to relish unsettling viewers with themes he addresses. The works featured in his ‘Nigerian Hottentots Venus’ and ‘Black Woman Unplugged’, two photography exhibitions held recently in Lagos, had subjects depicted partially nude.

His solo exhibition, ‘The Ruptured Landscape: On the Constructions of Difference’ which opened at the Centre for Contemporary Art (CCA), Yaba on Friday, April 8 somewhat toes the same line. Comprising 25 images and a video, the works investigate versions of African hybrid identities, their visual languages, currencies and vocabularies. The images also deal with the power identity wields over people in post-colonial spaces, while exploring the relationship between experience and self identity.

Yahaya’s photography has, over time, evolved from social documentary essays to critical conceptual photography and it is not surprising that he is worried about the way imagery is used in Nigeria. He feels that the differences between commercial and artistic photography needs to be made clear. “I love telling stories, I am a photo journalist, that is my inclination, but there is a difference with art,” he notes.

Identity is key

“Identity in itself is sufficient to work on,” he says in response to a question of what other factors or themes there are to motivate him. “People in this part of this world always ask questions like ‘Who are you?’ and ‘Where are you from?’ It is an African dilemma. It is important to know who you are; the black man has problems with that. The way we are translates to the way we do things. Visually, we have not done enough. We push out imagery that brings us down, we run away from critical work because it shows us who we really are,” he adds.

Yahaya who trained as an Electrical Engineer and who began his career in photography in 1995, also highlights the importance of understanding oneself. “We are the biggest Black country in the world but we are struggling because our imagery is wrong. For us to project the right imagery, we have to come back to ourselves. We need to study the limits and parameters of our identity.”

Natural state

Some of the works in ‘The Ruptured Landscape: On the Constructions of Difference’ show subjects in varying states of undress, and Yahaya explains why. “There is a difference between nudity and nakedness. Nudity in art is de-sexed and represents the ideal of beauty and freedom. One can’t really talk about issues of identity without mentioning freedom. Freedom should be seen visually.” He adds that all human beings were born naked so there is nothing wrong in showing man in his most natural state. “It is a corruption of cosmopolitan thinking that causes it. When you go to the village, one is not shocked by a naked man, woman or child. Nudity is a state and should not depend on sensitisation. When some people see the images, they say it is harassing. You are limited by the way you see the images, it is the parameters that you put on it that makes it a provocative image.”

Violence and identity

Apart from nudity, a number of images on display have bloody incisions on them. Though they were photoshopped, the blood and bullet holes look real. ‘I Love Naija’ is carved on the subject’s chest in one image and the blood from the fresh wound is visually disturbing.

“Violence is inherent but we are silent. It is part of us but we do not talk about it. But it is until we understand it visually before we do anything about it,” he reasons. All our identities, he reiterates, have been scared by violence because post-colonial African states have employed violence to accomplish questionable ends. Pointing to a work that shows a sturdy, bearded man holding a bloody knife with ‘Yes I do’ inscribed on his chest, Yahaya says, “We have been sensitised to see an image of a bearded man holding a bloodied knife as a Muslim but that is not true. It could be anyone.” There is another striking image of two naked men holding each other’s waists. Asked what the photograph means, Yahaya says, “Most people do not understand their sexuality, you need to know your sexuality the way you know your name. Most people that are judging others are actually scared.” Another image shows a woman backing the camera in five different poses. Others include: a naked woman sitting on a chair with an African mask superimposed on her face and a naked man using the skull of a cow to cover his nether regions. Though one would have thought Yahaya would have a tough time getting subjects for his works, he discloses that doing so, was easy.

‘The Ruptured Landscape: On the Constructions of Difference’ by Mudi Yahaya is at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Yaba, Lagos till April 23.

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ART OF THE MATTER: Ulli Beier: Unfulfilled dream of a true Africanist

ART OF THE MATTER: Ulli Beier: Unfulfilled dream of a true Africanist

The day broke last Sunday with the news of the death of Ulli Beier. While the nation was entangled in the election cancellation, the Visual Arts Community was engrossed in the search for truth about unbelievable news of the demise of a man whose contribution to the development of Nigerian Art remains unsurpassed. Was he truly dead? When exactly did he die? What killed him? How authentic was the news? These and more questions begged for answers and when such answers came, they were yet received with doubts.

When a man is too resourceful, his death naturally becomes doubtful. When received, it is with a wish that he still be alive and active like an energetic youngster. We all seemed to have temporarily forgotten that Ulli Beier wasn’t a young man at all. At 88, with a life totally dedicated to, first and foremost, the theoretical and practical development of Nigerian Art, nothing can be more fulfilling. All the same, no one ever wished him dead, but the truth is, while he battled his protracted illness in Sydney, how many of us sought him out? He had spent the most resourceful and productive stage of his life in Nigeria, working hard to ensure that an authentic Nigerian art was brought on world stage for global awareness, but how much of compensation was returned to him?

News from Iragbiji

Unlike the version of a rumour by a popular Nigerian art patron who insisted that Beier had been dead three weeks earlier, he actually passed on, on Sunday evening (Australian time), which was early morning in Nigeria. He died in his Sydney home in Australia. As at 4pm on Sunday, the likes of Segun Olusola who had spent time with Beier at Ibadan in the 60s, was still at loss regarding Beier’s death. It took a firm confirmation from Muraina Oyelami, one of Beier’s many artistic children. Although based in Iragbiji, an ancient town ten minutes drive from Osogbo, Oyelami seemed to be on top of the news ahead of all others. So, he became a rallying point of information dissemination. From the way he went about letting the cat out of the bag, the emotion in his voice was enough to show that indeed, a giant tree had fallen in the forest.

While we mourn and wear long faces, wallowing in painful loss of a bright star in Nigerian art development, the stark reality stares us in the face. The man died. The man has passed on, leaving us to carry the burden of our unfulfilled promises. The elephant is fallen and the weight of its body becomes a burden to the hunter. Ulli Beier had worked tirelessly and passionately to uplift the soul and spirit of Osogbo, but what did he get in return? The legacy bequeathed to our nation has aided our rating in the arts circle, but how much of appreciation did we bequeath to him?

Visionary experiments

Ulli Beier was born in Germany to a German Jew father, a medical doctor by profession, in 1922. An art scholar of note, he came to Nigeria with Susanne Wenger, popularly known as Adunni Olorisa, in 1950. It was in the course of his artistic/scholarly sojourn in Nigeria that he had his first contact with Georgina who later became his wife. The meeting occurred between 1961 and 1962. Beier had been part of the Mbari Writers Club in Ibadan in the late 50s, which had provided a melting port for like minds in the literary circle. Wole Soyinka, Segun Olusola, Christopher Okigbo and a host of other brightest literary minds in Nigeria were part of this development until Beier’s visit to Osogbo, where he finally had an ally in Duro Ladipo to start a completely different experiment at the dramatist’s resort centre/guest house, called Mbari-Mbayo Artists and Writers Club.

Beier’s meeting with Georgina would naturally spur a companionship devoted to a new direction in Nigerian art. An art workshop was organised in 1962 which put to trial the possibility of extracting creativity from the vacuum. The 1963 experiment which became much more successful than the previous one, was able to set in motion the process of luring non-artistic candidates to turn out creative products with the naivety of their knowledge and understanding. The experiments produced candidates that later became world beaters in art: Jimoh Buraimoh, Muraina Oyelami, Taiwo Olaniyi (Twins Seven-Seven) and many others.

The beauty of the experiments could be traced to the fact that most of this “unschooled artists” were artisans. Jimoh Buraimoh was an electrician and a performing member of the Duro Ladipo Theatre. Muraina Oyelami was a petrol attendant who worked in a petrol station situated very close to Mbari Mbayo. The persistent melodious sound of drums and songs had attracted him to jettison a lucrative job of attending to the petrol needs of motorists. He joined the Duro Ladipo Theatre Group, became a drummer and actor, which made it easy for him to join in the experiments. Taiwo Olaniyi was a singer, dancer and acrobat, and like his other colleagues, became an international visual artist courtesy of Ulli Beier’s vision and experiments.

Oba Koso

Ulli Beier’s resourcefulness was not limited to visual art only; he also assisted Duro Ladipo in redefining his Theatre. As the son of a clergyman, Ladipo’s drama, like his arch rival, Hubert Ogunde, began in the church and the focus was purely on biblical or Christian stories. It was Ulli Beier who advised Ladipo to research into indigenous stories, thus leading to many epic plays, the most successful being ‘Oba Koso’, which was taken to England as Nigeria’s entry in the Commonwealth competition in 1965. Despite the fact that the language and the music of the play were composed in Yoruba, it went on to win the first prize! Many other traditional plays would soon follow: ‘Moremi’, ‘Oba Moro’, ‘Eda’ and so on. In summary, apart from his vision and passion for the sustenance and dissemination of information on Yoruba oral history, Ulli Beier had contributed immensely to the Osogbo School of Art even though he was neither a painter nor a sculptor. He is survived by two male children, Sebastian and Tunji, both working and living in Australia. Georgina, their mother, certainly in mourning, also lives in Australia. She had spent her entire years with Beier with whom their two children were raised.

Beyond the rite of passage otherwise called Artist Nite, which the Osogbo artists are now planning to celebrate his life and times, were Ulli Beier’s dreams fully fulfilled? The answer is no. He had spent his most productive years developing Nigerian art, creating an unexpected market through which Nigerian economy was developed; through which lives of many Osogbo artists have been transformed, through which he had been able to augment Government efforts at developing and promoting creativity. His greatest dream was to return to Nigeria and possibly die in Nigeria. He needed a permanent home to achieve that, but all those involved in that process of producing a befitting abode for him did not live up to their promise and responsibility. And so, the man died in Australia, leaving behind an unfulfilled dream.

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Ulli Beier: A Pagan Yoruba Man in Christian Bayreuth

Ulli Beier: A Pagan Yoruba Man in Christian Bayreuth

I fly from Lagos to
Frankfurt straight into the winter breath of December in 1994. Huffing
and puffing my way across Germany for the next several months, I end up
in Bayreuth in 1996 to pursue a one-year German language intensive
preparatory classes towards full-blown studies. It is here in this
sleepy university town which speaks a drowsy and guttural low German,
that I learn from Paul Onovoh, Nigerian PhD candidate at Bayreuth
University, that there is a Yoruba man in town who lives in a residence
aptly referred to as ‘Iwalewa Haus.’ He is white and his name is Ulli
Beier. Of course Beier (also known as Obotunde Ijimere) is so
detribalised that I do not think of him as German, any more than I
consider Susanne Wenger Austrian. Wenger, a boon companion of Beier’s
earlier years, initially comes to Oshogbo with him around 1950 and
never leaves but remains in that small Western Nigerian town as an Osun
devotee and later priestess, for the rest of her life.

I find it amusing
that I think of beer when I hear the familiar name, Beier. Perhaps this
is mere phonetic and visual accidence, due to a lifelong habit of
pronouncing and reading English, even as I engage serious graduate
level German? But there is playful mischief involved. My overactive
imagination adds a truly ‘local’ colour. Everyone knows that Bayern is
notorious for its annual Oktoberfest – that gay and sunny communal
drink-fest full of beer and bratwurst where Bacchus himself would feel
completely at home. Beer. Ulli Beier. I cannot believe he lives in this
dusty, moat-eaten town; why not neighbouring glamorous Munich, or
sophisticated Frankfurt, picturesque Bonn, or world–renowned Berlin? I
am giddy while mispronouncing his name. The drunken feeling evoked does
not come from Oktoberfest beer draughts served by those rumoured
big-bosomed, Amazon German waitresses with matronly girdles. It is
rather due to Beier’s legendary exploits as an astute promoter, pioneer
and bedrock of Modern Nigerian culture from the time of dinosaurs –
when literary and arts patronage was not fashionable across Africa.

Mbari-Mbayo

In the
colonial-era-dawning of modern Nigerian literary and visual arts Beier,
himself a writer, did not only act as the usual expatriate literary
critic, educator and scholar but also as patron, facilitator, curator,
translator, anthologist, publisher and mentor to fledgling writers like
Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Christopher Okigbo or Mabel Segun; and to
a whole gallery of early Oshogbo School visual artists; and dramatists
like Duro Ladipo. His Mbari-Mbayo club, spanning 1957-1967, was an
important cultural watering hole for foundational Nigerian writers and
artists, as well as a bridgehead linking early Nigerian literary and
artistic activities to continental and metropolitan fashions and
movements. Through his cultural networking and promotional activities
he inserted modern Nigerian cultural production into twentieth century
post-war liberating and anti-colonial energies. This is within the
atmosphere of a phenomenon scholars now refer to as black
internationalism as it is exemplified and practised within the
Negritude Movement, Harlem Renaissance and Indigeneism in Paris, New
York, Latin America and the Caribbean respectively. The Mbari-Mbayo
Movement, co-founded in Ibadan by Ulli Beier, can be added to that
complex. Living in the same town with this genie and breathing the same
air is quite overpowering. I decide to seek Beier out, shake hands with
history and be done with it.

Iwalewa Haus

Iwalewa Haus is in
the ‘Stadtmitte’ – that is, at the heart of Bayreuth, and around the
outer perimeters of a busy inner-city central bus terminal, and
hospitality and shopping district. Far enough away from the madding
crowd, it sits right on the lip of windswept, narrow Münzgasse Street,
number 9, with just a narrow sidewalk separating it from the occasional
traffic. It is a nondescript, leaf-veined block of building perched on
a narrow, slightly winding incline. The façade carries the timeworn and
famous sign, IWALEWA HAUS, vertical and aslant away from the front door
with which it forms a 90-degree angle. Except for that sign, the murals
on the walls outside, and wood carved doors, the building can easily
pass for the residence of an eccentric graffiti artist. Only when you
enter is there a suggestion that this is a veritable institution built
over a half century across many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, and
finally housed here in a small, quiet German town.

I press the
doorbell. Georgina Beier, the woman of the house, opens the double
street doors with a smile. I am expected. She leads me into the foyer,
up a staircase and to the main level of the house and a hallway, which
appears to be an art gallery, albeit one where nothing seems to be for
sale. Creating the atmosphere of a permanent exhibition, large
paintings, adire and batik cloth adorn the walls and sculptures dot the
hallway. There is no real furnishing; it is mostly exhibition space in
the corridor and in the adjoining rooms, with the occasional office
workstation. As I later discover on subsequent visits, it is the same
on all of three floors except, perhaps, for the uppermost, which is
also living quarters for Ulli and Georgina.

I take a seat on
one of the occasional cane chairs or benches lying around the rather
empty exhibition hall, while Georgina disappears into the upper levels
of the house. While I wait for Beier, I decide to explore. I stand up
and move from room to room, a guest at an exhibition. I note that the
paintings are reminiscent of the Oshogbo School: they are replete with
traditional Yoruba motifs, religious and otherwise. Some Igbo
influences are discernible too. But it is disproportionately a
collection of Yoruba art. In short, Iwalewa Haus, from all appearances,
is a gallery of mostly Yoruba painting and artwork, interspersed with
work from Eastern Nigeria and other parts of the continent. While I am
in contemplation, I hear a voice at the door. It is Beier. We proceed
to an office off the hallway were we could sit across from each other
and have a conversation.

He is of a slight,
well-kept built, average height, and grey-headed. His seeming frailty
is that of a taut bow. I can feel the resilience and energy in his
frame. And the eyes are keen as blades and penetrating, yet with a soft
and wise film over them. We make small talk before he suddenly lets off
a sharp arrow out of his bow: “Why do Nigerians run after foreign gods
when they have traditional models aplenty – like the Orisha religion?”
It is a sobering thought, which invokes another time, another place and
a different mental space.

Pagan time capsule

We enter a pagan
time capsule and are shut out of a suffocating Christian evangelical
Bayreuth, and Germany. Without actually referring to her he has invoked
the person of Susanne Wenger, a good pagan, with his remark; and
recalled Oshogbo and their work together there in another life. It
occurs to me that he never really left Nigeria spiritually. The essence
of Oshogbo and its ambience is recreated in the paintings and artwork
collected at Iwalewa Haus; their religious undertones is a form of
communion and devotional service to the Osun Oshogbo groove where such
artworks are represented in their sacred form in stone sculptures, and
where Wenger is still artist in residence and Osun priestess, carrying
on her and his behalf, while he devotes himself to the secular,
scholarly, and the deceptively mundane – such as Iwalewa Haus.

A pagan Yoruba
religious and social worldview is captured in the compressed axiomatic
substantive, ‘Iwalewa’ – literally meaning ‘character is beauty,’ and
(in its expanded adjectival form) ‘only those who have character are
truly beautiful.’ ‘Iwa,’ character, is a necessity for any true devotee
of pagan Yoruba religion, whether it is of the Ifa or Osun variety. In
Ifa, this phenomenon is referred to as ‘Iwapele,’ synonymous with
‘iwalewa.’ At a point in our conversation, he emphasises this with an
anecdote.

When Beier arrived
Ibadan in the early 1950s to take up a teaching appointment at the
Extra Mural Studies Department of what was then the University College,
according to him, Ibadan was mostly rural. People were so pure-hearted
in their pagan devotion, honest, true and beautiful that he never
needed to remove the ignition key from his car, the doors of which he
also left open sometimes. No one would steal the car. He could leave it
at any spot in that town all day and it would be waiting when he got
back. Such is the purifying strength of Yoruba religion. The moral he
is pointing at is that those were the days of innocence, that with the
modern desertion of Yoruba religion, such purity of character, that
‘iwalewa,’ has also deserted the average Yoruba, or Nigerian by
extension.

Iwalewa Haus
itself, as cultural centre, is then a reminder of the requirements for
a true pagan devotee of Yoruba religion; a kind of religious grove, a
place of worship, with Beier as its priest if we go by the example of
his life. ‘Iwalewa’ as a Yoruba religious axiom and requirement for
worship sums up the esoteric dimension of Beier’s cultural work, which,
through the beauty of his character, transcends race, language,
geographies, gender and all other material and limiting suffocation
such as popular modern religion, politics and other kinds of shortness
of sight. I sit there as Beier’s vision of pagan ritual and liturgy
unfolds. I do not need much convincing from this detribalised, white
Yoruba man in Germany wearing a traditional tie-and-dye shirt. The
proof is in his life spread out before me like an Ifa divination chain.
Through honest, pagan vigour he founds the Mbari-Mbayo Literary and
Arts Movements, without which there will be little of modern Nigerian
culture to speak of. It is an occasion for rejoicing because Ulli Beier
is not dead but has merely joined his pagan Yoruba ancestors.

Amatoritsero Ede, a
doctoral candidate of Literature at Carleton University, Ottawa,
Canada, is editor of the Maple Tree Literary Supplement.

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Eulogies to Beier

Eulogies to Beier

Culture figures and organisations have continued to pay tribute to the late German linguist, Ulli Beier, who died on Sunday, April 3 in Sydney, Australia.

The remains of the scholar whose pioneering work in South Western Nigeria served as a launch-pad for arts and culture in the country in the 50s and 60s, were cremated on Friday, April 8 after a church service for family members in Australia.

Babawale on Beier

A statement from Tunde Babawale, Director General, Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization (CBAAC) said that the late linguist will be sorely missed.

“Ulli Beier would be remembered as a lover of Africa and a man whose passion for Yoruba cultural heritage remains a global reference point. He will be sorely missed by all Afrocentric scholars and lovers of African literature.” Babawale also acknowledged the contributions of Beier to the development and popularisation of Yoruba arts and culture. He said, “Ulli Beier provided an enduring platform for interaction between Yoruba indigenous ideas, beliefs and practices and the European cultural space, the legacy of which is the Iwalewa House at the University of Bayreuth which continues to host scholars in different areas of African Studies.” The CBAAC DG further lauded Beier’s contribution to the Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding (CBCIU), a UNESCO category two institute in Osogbo, Osun State. The centre houses archival materials Beier and his wife, Georgina, started to collect in the 1950s. The materials in the centre’s gallery include books, articles, photographs, videos, audio-cassettes, records and CDs. The collection, Babawale noted, provide, “a photographic history of Yoruba traditional institution, architecture, artistes and other areas of Yoruba culture.” Babawale also praised Beier’s efforts at translating the works of Nigerian authors, which made them accessible. “He discovered, encouraged and collaborated with notable artists and writers such as Wole Soyinka and the late Duro Ladipo, Kola Ogunmola among others. He also contributed to the popular African Writer Series under the pseudonym, Obotunde Ijimere.”

Osun Government

Governor of Osun State, Rauf Aregbesola, said of Beier’s activities in Nigeria,: “He encouraged the production of ‘Oba Koso’, a world class drama that confirmed the sophistication of African people before the advent of colonialists. At the formation of the Centre for Black Culture and Civilisation and the recognition of Osun Osogbo by UNESCO, Beier played the role of a giant and an honourable man. These and other roles mark him out. Like all mortals, Ulli Beier, a cultural titan, has gone to the land of the spirits but his giant footprints remain indelible and matchless in the character of great minds that shaped the course of mankind.” Aregbesola added, “May his tribe continue to come into our land for the good of man and the benefit of mankind. We shall surely miss him.”

Federal Government

Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Abubakar Sadiq, in a statement said: “His legacy on Nigeria’s cultural heritage-literary, visual and performing arts especially in the fifties and sixties- was great and that his name evokes strong, almost cult-like feelings among his devotees as well as on the ordinary artisans in Ilobu, Ife, Osogbo, Ede and its environs.”

London Gallery

John Martin, owner of the London Gallery of the same name who had not known of Beier’s passing until he was contacted by NEXT, said: “He is one of the great unsung heroes of art and I think his significance will only be really understood in years to come. Partly it is the fact that he took a back seat and was, rightly, prepared to duck out of the limelight in favour of the artists he nurtured, encouraged and promoted.” The John Martin Gallery staged a month-long exhibition of the works of late Osogbo artist, Asiru Olatunde in 2005. Many of the pieces in the exhibition, titled ‘Asiru Olatunde: Chasing Dreams’ were loaned to Martin by Ulli Beier’s Iwalewa Haus. Beier also wrote the foreword to the exhibition brochure.

A commemorative event will hold today, Sunday, April 10, in Beier’s home in Annandale, Sydney, to be attended by friends and former colleagues, for the celebration of his life and work.

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Ulli Beier to be cremated today

Ulli Beier to be cremated today

The remains of Ulli
Beier, the German linguist whose pioneering work served as a launch-pad
for Nigerian arts and culture in the 50s and 60s, will be cremated
today in Sydney, Australia.

The Africanist, who
passed away earlier this week, is survived by his wife, Georgina, and
sons, Sebastian and Tunji, a percussionist. A church service for family members will
precede the cremation of Beier, who once fraternised with Yoruba
traditional religions in Western Nigeria, and whose first wife, Susanne
Wenger, became a lifelong devotee and priestess of Osun River worship.

A commemorative
event will follow on Sunday, April 10, in Beier’s home in Annandale,
Sydney, to be attended by friends and former colleagues, for the
celebration of his life and work.

Muraina Oyelami,
one of the artists who rose out of workshops organised by Beier in
Osogbo in the early 1960s, revealed that attempts to send a delegation
to Beier’s funeral had been scuppered by visa complications, given the
short time available.

Oyelami, who
made the official announcement of the legendary Africanist’s death on
Sunday, April 3, also said meetings are ongoing to concretise plans for
a symposium on the life of Beier, whose collections are held at the
Centre for Black Culture and International Understanding (CBCIU) in
Osogbo.

Mr. Beier had been too frail to attend the opening of the centre in January 2009, but his son, Tunji, graced the occasion.

Mr. Beier had come
to Nigeria for the first time at age 28 along with Wenger, an
Austrian-born artist he met in Paris. They settled into his new life at
the Extra Mural Studies Department of the then University College,
Ibadan, but soon grew restless.

They travelled
through Yoruba towns including Ilobu and Ede before settling in Osogbo
in 1958. Along with second wife, Georgina, he organised the
epoch-making art workshops that energised the Nigerian culture scene in
the 1960s.

Along with the late
dramatist, Duro Ladipo, he founded the Mbari-Mbayo Artist and Writers
Club, and translated many Yoruba writings. Under the pseudonym,
Obotunde Ijimere, Beier was also the author of a significant book in
the African Writers’ Series, ‘The Imprisonment of Obatala’.

He served as
director of the Institute of African Studies at the then University of
Ife, and later worked in Papua New Guinea before settling in Australia
where he lived out the rest of his days.

According to Oyelami, there are also plans to send a small Nigerian delegation to
commiserate with Beier’s family in Australia at a later date.

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Developing skills in wood

Developing skills in wood

Demonstration, interest and encouragement were the key words of
artist Raqib Bashorun’s address to members of the press during a press
conference held on Monday, April 4 at the Village Creative Studios, Iba New
Site, Lagos.

The conference was held to promote the second edition of the
four-day Skill Matters Workshop scheduled, which opened at the venue on Monday.
According to Iyabo Tijani, publisher of Arts & Artists Magazine and the
programme coordinator, this latest workshop is more advanced than previous
editions.

While the 2010 workshop was limited to designing frames, this
year’s programme covers crafts and proper arts. “This year we’re looking at
doing something different from what we did last year,” she said. Speaking on
the schedule of events lined up for the workshop, she said, “The content of the
programme for this year is a step further than that of last year.”

In highlighting the aim of the workshop, master wood artist,
Bashorun, stated that the workshop presents an opportunity to help interested
participants to learn how to use wood in their craft. He further added that the
workshop is open to all artists and not only to those who have knowledge in
woodwork. “They can do it. They don’t need to have the knowledge to
participate. I never had the knowledge before I developed interest in it,” he
stated.

He noted however that it is important for the artist to have an
interest in woodwork to participate. During the course work shop, the use of
woodwork in pure art will be demonstrated to all the participants and they will
be encouraged to make art pieces themselves.

According to the Bashorun, the workshop is also aimed at
redefining the negative attitude towards wood in Nigeria. “Wood is something we
have in abundance in Nigeria but we take it for granted. We don’t appreciate it
but it’s worth appreciating,” he said.

Bashorun showed his displeasure at the fact that Nigerians will
rather invest in cement than in wood. He said people often use the excuse that
the economy is bad. He however argued that the bad economy is the best time to
invest.

In addition to acquiring skills in woodwork, participants will
also learn entrepreneurial skills. “The programme is actually a skill for
profit,” Bashorun explained.

Questions were entertained during the press conference. A
question was raised about if it is possible to achieve all the proposed plans
for the workshop. Bashorun responded by saying, “That’s the idea of workshops,
to be kept busy.” He reiterated the fact that the workshop is designed for
people to learn. “Once you say you’re coming for the workshop, then it means
you’re ready to imbibe something,” he affirmed.

The Skill Matters Workshop continues
today and ends tomorrow.

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