Appreciating African Creativity: Nigeria Takes Major Steps

Appreciating African Creativity: Nigeria Takes Major Steps

AFP/AFRICANEWS (edited by Aworanka)

Talk about film, music, painting, or perhaps fashion but a discussion on African arts cannot be complete without an element of paintings and sculpture. These elements of art have been used over centuries as an important communication tool in different instances. For a number of people, these art elements are used to express situations one feels unable to convey verbally. Through its visual medium, it evokes feelings of joy, sadness, anger, and pain. That is why art appreciation is so important.

Engage a Nigerian in a conversation about arts in Africa and definitely, you would hear names like Burna boy, Fela Kuti, Tiwa Savage, or some other music superstar as the country’s biggest exports in terms of arts. Likewise, a Ghanaian would not hesitate without Sarkodie or Shattawale. This is an indication that the music and movies aspects of the arts are what has captured the attention of the masses and are most appreciated, but what happened to the likes of Peju Alatise, Nnenna Okore, Bright Ackwerh, and Adjo Kisser who have made a mark in contemporary art? It appears not much is said about them.

At a contemporary art fair in Lagos Nigeria, ART X, which saw patrons from the fashion, cinema, oil, and banking industries, artists Lea Perier Loko and Julie Banâtre lamented the lack of popularity for African art. "The art market in Nigeria remains rather unknown and I think that when we arrived we did not realize its importance. However, here, when a collector has a crush, he is not afraid to spend," said Loko.

On their stand is the huge blue canvases of Kenyan artist Kaloki Nyamai that was the fastest to be sold. These paintings, "which tell the story that is not taught or written in books", measure two meters by two meters and were sold for up to 20,000 dollars (or 17,300 euros).

"In Paris, we have a much harder time selling this type of format. This really illustrates the difference in scale between the two cities,” they disclosed.

Nigeria, which is tagged the West African oil giant, has one of the highest numbers of billionaires in the world among its 210 million inhabitants. Wealthy Nigerian bankers and industrialists are now the main buyers of contemporary art amidst its still growing popularity.

For a long time, the Nigerian art world operated in a vacuum, and collectors were known to acquire mostly paintings by Nigerian artists, often very colorful figurative paintings.

"This may have been true at one time, but it has changed a lot," says Delphine Lopez, who represents the Cécile Fakhoury Gallery, based in Abidjan, Dakar, and Paris, and which is participating in the exhibition for the third time.

Africa's most populous country may be known in some international circles for the violence of criminal groups and jihadists, such as Boko Haram who operate in the north than for the creativity and dynamism that characterize Lagos, hundreds of kilometers away, yet its cultural industry shines on the continent and in the West.

But clichés die hard. “When we announced that we were coming to participate in ART X in Lagos, several people said to us: "Really? But isn't it too dangerous? And there is an art market there?" said the managers of the Parisian gallery Septieme.

However, "coming to Lagos was a winning bet," said the gallery owners who hope, in the future, to forge more links with the Nigerian market.

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