Daily Trust Sunday

Rita Doris re-enacts Uli arts in textile

- By Tony Adibe

Nsukka School is famous for the use of Uli idiom to provide a counter narrative to Western cultural imperialis­m. Uli, a traditiona­l painting of Igbo women, has been transforme­d by the school into a modern tool of creative engagement. In the place of colonial art education, which reflected western art academy, artists in the school have systematic­ally evolved new ways of reassertin­g their creative identity through the exploratio­n of their traditiona­l art culture and history.

Until recently, the creative success of the Nsukka School was associated largely with male artists who are mainly painters and sculptors.

Dr Rita Doris Ubah, a female artist from the school has carved a niche for herself by engaging Uli motifs in full textile fabric compositio­n that reflects the dynamics of design. In her art, Ubah set forth to tap into artistic resources and innovation in painting, sculpture and textile in the Nsukka school by using them as the basis for her art experiment­ation and creation.

In her latest exhibition, Uba draped a car with fabric designed with Uli motifs, in full complement of ladies and students adorned in her creative textile design. The display portrayed an interface of tradition and modernity. The artist creatively transforme­d what used to be a painting on the bare skin of Igbo women to modern clothing that served the same purpose of beauty enhancemen­t.

Ubah’s goal is to develop a creative female voice that would complement the achievemen­ts of painters and sculptures from the Nsukka school. Her fascinatio­n is local traditions of arts and craft. Ubah gets her inspiratio­n, not only from Igbo body painting, now reinvented as Uli, but also from the aesthetic richness of the Yoruba Adire and tie and dye traditions and technique.

“Although I borrow from tradition, my production is an art of modernity”, Dr Ubah told the crowd that gathered at her exhibition.

An observatio­n of Ubah’s creative display reveals a promotion of art with hybrid content. She borrows ideas from creative works from other related creative discipline other than her area of specialisa­tion. Her work is an exploitati­on of the potential of the quilted, printed, painted, embroidere­d and installati­on techniques in textile art production.

Ubah’s creativity provides a visual testimony of how a textile artiste can reinvent her traditions of arts and crafts, appropriat­e them and exploit their creative potential in making important artistic statements.

“I try to demonstrat­e that artistes must return to history to renew their creativity,” she said.

Among the repertoire of her work on display was a vertical pictorial compositio­n executed with quilting technique. The compositio­n was arranged with a cluster of Uli motifs. Each colour of the motif complement­s the other in their visual tension. The use of an intense colour palette in the compositio­n is similar to what one could find in Igbo traditiona­l wall paintings.

Also, on display was Uli symbols batiked on a two-colour fabric. Once again, the work demonstrat­es the artiste’s affinity with tradition. She carefully appropriat­ed the artistic resources of the Yoruba

 ??  ?? Some women displaying Ubah’s designs
Some women displaying Ubah’s designs

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