Finding A Place: Nigerian Artists in The Contemporary Art World Author(s) : Olu Oguibe Source: Art Journal, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Summer, 1999), Pp. 30-41 Published By: CAA Accessed: 23-07-2019 11:35 UTC
Finding A Place: Nigerian Artists in The Contemporary Art World Author(s) : Olu Oguibe Source: Art Journal, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Summer, 1999), Pp. 30-41 Published By: CAA Accessed: 23-07-2019 11:35 UTC
Finding A Place: Nigerian Artists in The Contemporary Art World Author(s) : Olu Oguibe Source: Art Journal, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Summer, 1999), Pp. 30-41 Published By: CAA Accessed: 23-07-2019 11:35 UTC
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In the late 198os a new generation of Nigerian artists began to register their
presence in the art world, especially in the metropolises of the West. They
include Sokari Douglas Camp and the late Rotimi Fani-Kayode, both of whom
had immigrated from Nigeria to the United Kingdom. In the 199os others
have come to prominence, also. These include Osi Audu, Oladeile Bamgboy6,
Mary Evans, Donald Odita, Chris Ofili, Folake Shoga, Yinka Shonibare, Ike
Ude, and myself. Works by these
Olu Oguibe artists have found their way into
international biennials, group exhi-
bitions, and other forums. Likewise,
Finding a Place: scholars, critics, and other writers
3 I art journal
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there has been a shift in favor of the independent curator, whose allegiances
are more ambivalent and flexible. Such curators, working under less institu-
tional pressure, have proved more willing to experiment and to initiate cross-
cultural collaborations. In the 198os and 199os, also, segregationist positions in
the centers of contemporary cultural practice came under increasing scrutiny,
for which an entire contingent of non-Western scholars, artists, and critics
must be partly credited.2
Consequently, a more international awareness has begun to emerge
among certain curators, critics, and administrators, with the result that plat-
forms that for long remained bastions of Western exclusivity are beginning
to open up, albeit ever so cautiously, to artists from the non-Western world.
In the 199os, particularly, independent curators and critics such as Octavio
and Antonio Zaya from Spain; Rasheed Araeen, Jean Fisher, and Sean Cubitt
from England; Adelina von Furstenberg from Switzerland; Peter Weibel from
Austria; Guillermo Santamarina from Mexico; and others have in different
ways expanded opportunities for non-Western artists to get a foot in the
door of the international mainstream. By offering such artists opportunities
to exhibit their work alongside their Western contemporaries or by bringing
critical attention to them and their work, this generation of curators con-
tributes to an environment in which contemporary artists from around the
world may aspire for visibility.
Perhaps even more decisive is the emergence of Nigerian and other
African practitioners within this cadre. In an era that some have described as
the Curator's Moment, the progress of a number of Nigerian artists on the
international contemporary art scene owes significantly to the increasing influ-
ence of individuals such as the Nigerian-born, New York-based curator
Okwui Enwezor. In 1994 Enwezor founded Nka: Journal of Contemporary African
Art, which is now published by the Africana Studies and Research Center at
Cornell University. This journal has not only brought relative visibility to a
number of African artists and initiated serious discourse on contemporary
African art, it has also attracted many important critics, thus creating a forum
for dialogue. Enwezor was also artistic director of the Second Johannesburg
Biennale in 1997-the first black African to serve as artistic director of a
major international biennial; in 1998 he was appointed the artistic director
of Documenta XI. Through his curatorial work and his writing, he has show-
cased the work of artists such as Bamgboy6, Fani-Kayode, Odita, Shonibare,
and Udi, among others, placing them alongside their contemporaries from
other parts of the world. He and others have questioned how the condition
of diasporicity has remapped the global terrain of contemporary culture by
questioning hegemonic concepts of ethnicity, nationality, and authenticity,
of center and periphery.
2. It was with the intention to provide a shared Sokari Douglas Camp made her mark on the British art scene in the 198os
platform for such scrutiny that the Tate Gallery in with her large-scale, motorized sculptures. Born in Buguma on the Niger Delta
London, in collaboration with the Institute of
International Visual Arts (inlVA) hosted a sympo- in 1958, she moved to England as a teenager, where she was raised by her
sium on internationalism in 1994. For debates that brother-in-law, the anthropologist Robin Horton. In the 197os, she moved to
emerged from the symposium, see Global Visions:
Toward a New Internationalism in the Visual Arts, ed.
San Francisco, where she studied briefly at the California College of Arts and
Jean Fisher (London: Kala Press/inlVA, 1994). Crafts, before returning to England to enroll at the prestigious Central School
32 SUMMER 1999
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at St. Martins in London, from
which she graduated in 1984. In
between her travels abroad, Douglas
Camp spent periods in Nigeria,
during which she studied with the
Yoruba master sculptor Lamidi
Fakeye. In Nigeria, she also came
under the mentorship of the choreo-
grapher and dance scholar Peggy
Harper. Through Harper she made
the acquaintance of the Austrian
sculptor Suzanne Wenger, matron of
the Oshogbo school, which thrived
in Nigeria in the i96os.
Alali Aru, one of Douglas Camp's
earliest works, is a sculptural inter-
pretation of a pageant float or festival
boat inspired by the annual marine
festivities of the Kalagbari group of
the Niger Delta. Although her boat is
stationary and the occupants are not
represented, Douglas Camp motor-
izes the oars, creating the illusion of
rowing. She also surrounds the boat
with an audience of stylized figures.
These she animates with a time-
33 art journal
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.??i
4ol
Yivi
'44
b,:
NAi?
2. Sokari Douglas
the formal and Camp
iconographical attributes of her work. Also, at the beginnin
Installation view of Spiri
of her career she was keen to avoid marginalization by dissociating herself
in Steel: The Art of the
from so-called
Kalabari black exhibitions and spaces. This led to a mild controversy
Masquerade,
American Museum of
when, on the advice of her dealers, she declined to participate in the definit
Natural History, New
York, April 25, black British exhibition of the decade, The Other Story: Afro-Asian Artists in Post-
1998-january 31, 1999.? Britain, at London's Hayward Gallery in 1989.
American Museum of
Natural History. Photo J. The above notwithstanding, Douglas Camp was all but abandoned in the
Beckett.
early 199os by London's commercially driven art dealers and galleries, som
of whom apparently found her themes difficult to market. Subsequently, he
foothold on the international scene rested increasingly on the growing inte
of ethnographic and natural history museums in her work. As her sculpture
shifted away from the initial exploration of form and its possibilities, these
museums came to see her animated dancers and masqueraders as a useful
means to illustrate a make-believe, natural context for their ethnographic c
lections of African art. This was the basis for her exhibition Spirits in Steel: Th
Art of the Kalabari Masquerade at New York's American Museum of Natural Hist
in 1998 (fig. 2). This symbiosis has provided a market for Douglas Camp an
has ensured that she continues to enjoy visibility.
34 SUMMER 1999
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Rotimi Fani-Kayode, certainly the most celebrated Nigerian artist of his
generation, had established himself as one of the most significant photo-based
artists in England by the time of his death in 1989 at age thirty-four. Having
left Nigeria with his family when he was eleven to escape a civil war, Fani-
Kayode grew up in England. He moved to the United States to study at
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and at the Pratt Institute in New
York. After he finished his studies, he returned to England. His choice of art
as a career earned the disfavor of his aristocratic father as much as did his
35 art journal
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rejection, shame, or playful coyness. While offering his present, the white
man bends his head in either penitence or a lover's romantic entreaty. Noth-
ing else is revealed, no opinion betrayed, and the viewer is left to battle with
the challenge of interpretation. As Fani-Kayode crosses the slippery terrains
of race and sexuality in White Bouquet, we find a defining element also evident
in his other works: a rhetoric of ambiguity that reminds us not only of the
highly charged nature of the discourses that he engaged and of his own loca-
tion within them, but also of his adopted guardian principle, the Yoruba deity
Esu, messenger and interpreter to the gods. In The Signifying Monkey, Henry Louis
Gates provides a long list of Esu's qualities, significant among which are "in-
dividuality, irony, indeterminacy, open-endedness, ambiguity, sexuality, dis-
ruption and reconciliation, betrayal and loyalty, encasement and rupture."6
At once the guardian of meaning and the embodiment of indeterminacy,
Esu is the divinity of the crossroads, an apropos location for a gay, black, ex-
patriate Nigerian artist living under the subtle racism of Thatcherite England.
Even Esu's sexuality, encoded in myth in the story of a maternal curse that left
him with an eternally erect penis,7 resonated with Fani-Kayode. In a number
of works he inscribed his own penis as a locus of self-definition and penance,
a trope of salvation and a curse, the ultimate crucifix. Like Esu, he proved
himself a master of the crossroads, a shrewd navigator able to create work
that takes on uncomfortable questions of race and sexuality in a manner that
implicates both his host society and the viewer-work that is nevertheless
powerful, beautiful, and engaging enough to earn the attention and respect
of his contemporaries. Although Fani-Kayode's career spanned only six years,
from 1983 to 1989, his work belongs in the canon of late twentieth-century
British art.8
Ik6 Ude, who lives and works in New York, belongs to a younger generation
of Nigerian artists who have emerged in the 199os. Born in Makurdi, Nigeria,
in the early i96os, he moved to New York in his late teens to study art. After
graduating from college in the late i98os, he began his career as a painter, but
later changed to photo-based work and installation. His installation Cover Girl
at the nonprofit gallery Exit Art/The First World in New York in i994 estab-
lished his place on the contemporary scene. In this space, he constructed a
news agent's kiosk in which he displayed mock-ups of popular magazines,
from Conde Nast Traveler to Vogue, which he designed and produced himself. On
each magazine cover, he combined images and texts that address issues rang-
ing from the absence of black faces in the mass media, to stereotyping and
the misrepresentation of people of color. Each cover addresses and challenges
a theme directly relevant to the magazine's readership. On the cover of Conde
Nast Traveler (fig. 4), for instance, he presented a popular diagrammatic image
of slaves in the body of a slave ship, buried in a background of red as if in
a sea of blood. Through this image, he displaced the magazine's association
6. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., The Signifying Monkey: A with leisure travel and pleasurable adventure with a historical reference to
Theory of African-American Literary Criticism (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1988), 6. forced relocation and cruelty.
7. See Melville J. Herskovits, Dahomey, An Ancient On his cover of Parents he presented a black nanny wheeling a white
West African Kingdom, vol. 2 (Evanston: North-
western University Press, 1967), 205-6.
child in a pram. However, rather than using the stereotype of an old and full-
8. Mercer, "Eros," 109. bodied Aunt Jemima for the nanny, he uses a young black woman in jeans
36 SUMMER 1999
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and T-shirt in a modern U.S. suburb. The image of the young maid threads a
path of ambiguity, at once referencing the prevalence of cheap, Third World
5. Ik6 Ude. Uli, 1998.
C-print. 16 x 14 (40.6 x domestic labor in the contemporary United States, as well as engaging the
35.6). Courtesy the artist. complex issue of race and trust in U.S. society. Such themes have previously
been perceived as the preserve of certain sections
of the U.S. ethnic map. Though an outsider, Ude
nevertheless ventures into them, working squarely
in the terrain of the postmodern, where issues
of race, sexuality, glamour, popular culture, and
representation are broached in one fell swoop. Al-
though his use of magazine covers is not entirely
novel, what is unique is the relentlessness with
which he has used the medium to address these
37 art journal
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include his own innovations.
38 SUMMER 1999
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e~?7~
L-
bS
I-
11~
7.Yinka Shonibare. Diary of a 1970s the material made its transition into the iconography of the Black P
Victorian Dandy: 19:00 Hours, movement in the United States and Britain, and its residues are still to be
1996. Photograph. 72 x 90
(183 x 228.6). Courtesy found in such neighborhoods as Harlem in New York and Brixton in Lon
Stephen Friedman Gallery, In time tourists and exotica hunters bought into the myth of this "African
London.
fabric," with its bright, decorative patterns and flowing, open-ended form
But just how African is this fabric, this mark of African identity and b
authenticity, this cipher of uniqueness and difference? As Shonibare obser
in an essay for Seen/Unseen, the irony of this African fabric is that it is in fa
only "a colonial construction, as its origins can be traced from Indonesia
to Holland (hence Dutch Wax), to Manchester (from where it is) then sold
to Africa where indigenous variations on the fabric have been appropriated
for local use."" While for Westerners, including diaspora Africans, the ob-
vious appeal of the fabric lay in its "authenticity," Shonibare observed tha
this was only a fictive authenticity, whose functional principle was seduct
(fig. 6). By appropriating this fabric, Africans were concerned with establi
a sophisticated mark of identity that derives from the multiple, global hist
and trade routes that have given rise to Africa's modernity. The matter of
authenticity was not at all at issue, and would only arise as a figment of t
Otherizing imagination and desires of the West in search of difference.
I I.Yinka Shonibare, "Purloined Seduction," in
Olu Oguibe, Seen/Unseen, exh. cat. (Liverpool:
Shonibare was fascinated by the processes of seduction, the power of
Bluecoat Gallery, 1994), 15. fiction, and the vulnerability of desire. Double Dutch takes its title from thre
39 art journal
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sources, including the British colloquialism for babble or incomprehensible
talk and the fabric's Dutch origins. In the installation, Shonibare successfully
seduced those who were attracted to the fabric because of its supposed
"African" origin. However, his formal concerns were about the meaning and
possibilities of painting at the end of the century. In the process, he drew
attention to questions of perception, the ineluctable nature of identity, and the
dangers of interpretation and mediated knowledge. He also brought ideologies
of origin and purity under crisis. If fabric produced in Indonesia, printed in
Holland, and marketed through Manchester could take on an African identity
in the minds of adept seekers of authenticity, then notions and ideologies of
authentic origin are nothing but nonsensical babble, after all.
The conceptual sophistication of Shonibare's game of seduction has
made some uncomfortable. As Mercer observes, "English critics have come
away from Shonibare's work feeling that it is not quite African enough."''
This notwithstanding, he has continued to explore seduction and inauthen-
ticity as central themes in his work. In recent installations he has created
lush, make-believe Victorian parlors into which he inserts himself as a lone,
black gentleman among white aristocrats, a character navigating the corridors
of wealth and power in an era of intolerance (fig. 7). Shonibare's new
tableaux are as fictional as they are historically grounded. His aristocratic
settings belong as much to Victorian England as to Victorian Lagos, which,
as records confirm, were not at all distinguishable one from the other.
Shonibare digs as deep into his Nigerian heritage among the nobility of
Lagos as he does into British history and eccentricities. In addition to these
sources, his work is very much informed by his own experiences as a child
in England in the i96os and as a youth growing up in the funk-culture of
urban Nigeria in the 1970s.
Shonibare is savvy and confident as he engages the spaces of the British
mainstream, counting as much on his familiarity with it as on his sound
grounding in contemporary Nigerian culture. At Goldsmiths College he
became proficient in visual languages and discourses in the traditions of
Conceptual and postmodern art, the core of his installations and projects,
which in turn has made his work viable on the international scene. As
40 SUMMER 1999
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orthographic signs in their names. It is a deliberate act of insistence on speci-
ficity and clear identity in the mire of a globalized world.
Even so, these artists do not perceive themselves as cultural ambassadors
any more than do their Western contemporaries. They reject the burden of
ancestry and ethnicity as a matter of fact. Having come through multiple cul-
tural circumstances, they lay claim to the entirety of their experiences and
consider themselves as much part of their societies of relocation as any others.
Among their contemporaries, they suffer the peculiar affliction of never being
discussed without some reference, no matter how benign, to their "stranger"
status. Even the most sympathetic critics seem unable to avoid references to
ethnicity when discussing their work. In an otherwise sympathetic review
in Frieze in 1998, for instance, Jennifer Higgie is compelled to remind us that,
though "of Nigerian descent, Chris Ofili is English [sic], and feels no more
affinity with an African aesthetic than he does with the tradition of American
or European painting."'3 Such defensiveness, which the artists themselves are
often driven to, also, is situated in the context of the inherently treacherous
and demanding nature of the terrain in which they find themselves.'4 To con-
tend with such circumstances, these artists carry with them a pronounced
sense of self-awareness and clarity, and determination to ensure that they are
at home in the world.
Olu Oguibe has taught at the University of London and as Stuart S. Golding Endowed Chair in African Art
at the University of South Florida. His books include Uzo Egonu: An African Artist in the West.
4 I art journal
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