Lagos photo festival: Turning negatives into positives

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, May 5, 2024


Lagos photo festival: Turning negatives into positives
A crafted picture by French photographer Patrick Willocq is diplayed on November 13, 2014 in Freedom Park at LagosPhoto, an annual festival started five years ago. Willocq uses the young women from the Ekonda pygmy tribe in the Democratic Republic of Congo for a wry look at initiation ceremonies. This year organisers have turned to the realm of fantasy and fiction, to encourage artists to go beyond showing just the realities of daily life and worries about basic necessities. AFP PHOTO / PIUS UTOMI EKPEI.

By: Cecile De Comarmond



LAGOS (AFP).- Azu Nwagbogu sits in a futuristic, almond-green armchair created by a young Nigerian designer in his Lagos home, surrounded by hundreds of books and dozens of photographs from floor to ceiling.

Nwagbogu is the founder of LagosPhoto, an annual festival started five years ago that has since become one of the biggest photography festivals in Africa.

Since its inception it has tried to reflect the reality of life on the continent through the eyes of Africans, rather than just photographers from elsewhere in the world. 

This year organisers have turned to the realm of fantasy and fiction, to encourage artists to go beyond showing just the realities of daily life and worries about basic necessities.

"The aim is to give Africa, Nigeria, Lagos -- the city (and) its people --  a voice. We want people to be able to tell their stories," he said. 

"And beyond that, we want that to be an equal playing field for local and international guys to show their work here, in a world-class standard."

House-maids to the super-rich
Photos on vast canvasses held up by bamboo line the paths of Freedom Park, a former colonial-era prison turned cultural centre and green space, nestled among the skyscrapers of downtown Lagos.

Similar prints are displayed in art galleries, a luxury hotel and a fashion boutique in Nigeria's economic capital.

At the Eko Hotel, in the upmarket Victoria Island area, Mary Sibande is displaying her work "Long Live the Dead Queen", a series of photos featuring a female protagonist called Sophie.

Sophie, a voluptuous black woman in a majestic blue Victorian dress and a house-maid's starched white apron, is shown in fantastical images with grand accessories.

For the South African artist -- whose female relatives all worked in service for three generations -- the work is a way to ask questions about the role of women in African society.

In Freedom Park, the French photographer Patrick Willocq uses the young women from the Ekonda pygmy tribe in the Democratic Republic of Congo for a wry look at initiation ceremonies.

Several Nigerians photographers are among the 40 artists exhibiting this year.

Ade Adekola explores the myth of reincarnation in the Yoruba culture of the southwest.

Jide Odukoya portrays the life of Africa's super-rich, documenting discarded boxes of brandy, dancefloors strewn with naira notes and young men in bespoke suits brandishing $100 bills.

An artistic medium for all 
For Nwagbogu, who set up the African Artists' Foundation, African story-telling through African eyes is a key driver of the festival that first began in 2010.

"The history we've been taught about Africa is so false. The way we've come to accept ourselves as Africans is so bastardised through popular media," he explained.

"It's time for us to take charge of our own narrative... and to understand that we can tell our own stories and we have the ability on an equal footing with the rest of the world."

In debates and workshops, young Nigerians have been encouraged to study the exhibits and exchange photos to develop a more critical eye on their own daily life.

"The goal is to keep reclaiming contemporary visual culture, to tell our own stories and to empower more people," Nwagbogu said.

"Photography is the most powerful (medium) because everyone can do it, everyone can get involved."

Electricity and urban wildlife 
LagosPhoto is also a chance to plunge major foreign photographers into the chaos of Lagos life and to capture their take on the fascinating megacity of nearly 20 million people.

Dutch photographer Hans Wilschut, a self-confessed Lagos addict who has shot in the city half a dozen times, was one of the exhibitors last year.

This time round, he is exhibiting "When Light Shines in the Dark, the Darkness is Uncomprehending", a series of shots from a working-class Lagos suburb receiving electricity for the first time.

The scenes of daily life, printed on plexiglas, have an abstract and supernatural feel as natural light shines through -- an imagining of social change through the surrounding environment.

British photographer Martin Parr, known for his satirical take on tourists around the world, was guest of honour at the festival last year.

During that time he took a range of urban wildlife shot from the back of his car while stuck in traffic jams. 



© 1994-2014 Agence France-Presse










Today's News

November 20, 2014

Pop Art: Haring, Lichtenstein, Warhol, and more, live for bidding now on artnet auctions

Exhibition of new paintings by Ed Ruscha opens at Gagosian Gallery in Rome

150 never before seen drawings from the 1950s by Andy Warhol on view at Anton Kern

France, Australia to help bring home Aboriginal remains held in French public collections

Christie's announces an online-only auction of prints and works on paper by Sam Francis

Philanthropist Victor Pinchuk presented with the Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Award

Unseen masterworks to lead one of Sotheby's strongest offerings during Russian Art Week

By Proxy: Group exhibition featuring thirteen artists opens at James Cohan Gallery in New York

Dame Barbara Hepworth sculpture sells for £542,500 at Bonhams British and Irish Art Sale

Gainsborough mystery portrait of General Wolfe painted for the girl he left behind for sale at Bonhams

Maxfield Parrish's 'The Little Peach' brings $515,000 at Heritage Auctions sale in New York

Lisson Gallery opens Japanese artist Tatsuo Miyajima's first solo exhibition in Milan

Museum of Arts and Design names Elissa Auther as inaugural Windgate Research Curator

Lagos photo festival: Turning negatives into positives

Recently authenticated works by War artist lead Modern & Contemporary British Art Sale

Bonhams New York announces Russian book sale

MAK in Vienna opens exhibition of the work of Laura de Santillana and Alessandro Diaz de Santillana

Museum of Chinese in America names Nancy Yao Maasbach as President / Director

Princeton University Art Museum takes top honors in national design competition

Leading Brazilian artist Adriana Varejao's first solo U.S. museum exhibition opens

Greece asks tourists to join Elgin Marbles debate

'Beyond the Classical: Imagining the Ideal Across Time' on view at the National Academy Museum

€78.000 for a herbal book at auction in Germany

Contemporary Istanbul closed with record visitors and sales




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful