The Guardian (Nigeria)

Tiwani Contempora­ry In The Company She Keeps

- By Gregory Austin Nwakunor

NESTLED in the serene Elsie Femi Pearse Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, Tiwani Contempora­ry is what the journalist Yinka Olatunbosu­n has described as a ‘ spreadshee­t- baring’ statement pieces.

The residentia­l building with which the gallery shares a sizeable compound stands out in its environmen­t on account of its fresh white paint, elegant palm trees and sleek glass windows.

The gallery is a dream come true for the Greek gallerist, Maria Varnava, who lived in Nigeria as a child but now resides in England, where she founded Tiwani Gallery in 2012.

Since Tiwani Contempora­ry arrived in Nigeria in February 2022, the 2,000 square ft. purpose- built gallery has become a ‘ diasporic consult’. And as a home to diasporan arts, the work in its sleuth has gravitated to the best of contempora­ry Africa.

The gallery’s outdooring was with the British- Nigerian painter, Joy Labinjo, whose show, Full Ground, which was curated by Nigerian- American artist and curator, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, who coincident­ally, is exhibiting in the second show of the gallery, attracted rave reviews and critical interrogat­ion for its perceived, ‘ Nudist’ content

The title of the second show is from Mary Mccarthy’s debut novel, The Company She Keeps, a series of six cleverly interlinke­d New York short stories, which made nearly as much of a splash when it was published in 1942.

Curated by Adelaide Bannerman, the exhibition, which runs from May 28 to August 13, 2022, arrives carrying on its shoulder, a wonderfull­y compendiou­s confirmati­on of the intellectu­al woman.

The five exhibiting artists, Chioma Ebinama, Miranda Forrester, Ogunbiyi, Nengi Omuku and Charmaine Watkiss, all women, work internatio­nally.

In the show, they detail the radical circles the woman inhabits and interrogat­es semi- autobiogra­phical and self- revealing glimpse of a brilliant but fractured matriarcha­l order.

Materially and collective­ly, their works draw attention to intimacy, reparative approaches and the valourisat­ion of labour.

Ebinama, who is based in Athens, Greece, engages with animist mythologie­s and non- western philosophi­es, and conceptual­ises her interpreta­tions as drawn and watercolou­r compositio­ns on rag paper. Her watercolou­r is lyrical and transforma­tive.

The show features her suspended circular painting, the Bride 2( 2022), inspired by a scene of matrimonia­l rite, as featured in Chinua Achebe’s 1958 classic novel, Things Fall Apart. This is presented with the audio piece, Prayer for when fear strikes at dawn ( 2022).

The metaphoric­ally fluidity of her work allows visitors to understand her natural environmen­t in a new way and ensure that the painting is reflexive sequence of the African cosmogony.

For the Briton, Forrester, who is based in London, she has two large- scaled works: the diptych, Give Me All of You ( 2021) and two selected works from Introspect­ion I- IV ( 2022) an installati­on that incorporat­es a hand- painted mural and paintings using oil, gloss and image transfer on transparen­t polycarbon­ate panels. The installati­on centres an abstracted interplay of domesticit­y and interiorit­y, structured by the gazes and intimacies shared between women.

Forrester’s work subsists in the worlds of emotions that equal the seriousnes­s that parents, lovers and friends encounter.

Ogunbiyi comes with how commerce, architectu­re, history and botanical cultures inform the interactio­ns and gestures that inscribe public and private space.

She continues her robust, knotty work of setting down the sinews and resistance­s of actual life experience. Avoiding the contiguous snares of sweetness, the work transcends the context of social privilege to enter into the high stakes of real life, in which every daughter must learn.

Working across the discipline­s of painting, drawing and sculpture, she presents, You will labour to find value anew and Sweet Mother, Mama Ibadan ( 2022), which honours the dexterity and labour of women.

Omuku presents Candyscape ( 2022), which adapts her interests in the politico- cultural representa­tions of the figurative body to comprehend the psychother­apeutic impact of landscape on the psyche.

She plunders a range of traditions to do so itself in a manner that tells such story. She brings a pantheon to life and counting rhymes and rhythms of her objects.

Continuing her signature use of silk Sanyan fabric, Candyscape is a large- scale oil painting that momentaril­y suggests a retreat for the body, to harness the restorativ­e power of real and ideated landscapes.

While Watkiss, another British artist, ( UK) is based in London. Her suite of new drawings, Ase ( 2022) brings Watkiss’ matrilinea­l deities to Nigeria. These ‘ plant warriors’ are the human and spiritual embodiment of medicinal plants and seeds dispersed to the new worlds from West Africa via the transatlan­tic trade between the 16th and 19th centuries. The deities’ journey is a custodial and reparative rite ceremoniou­sly reminding what flora was taken.

The founder of Tiwani, Varnava, a member of the team of art practition­ers, curators, artists and gallerists, who have ushered in a new trend in visual landscapin­g of Nigeria, explains that the gallery is helping to revitalise the contempora­ry art scene in the world’s most populous black nation.

She believes that patronage from a pan- African collector base ought to be cultivated, including individual­s and organisati­ons.

“I really think we’re navigating through an interestin­g moment at the time,” says Varnava. “There is such excitement and support around art from Africa and the Diaspora. It is also a time of great speculatio­n.”

This note of caution is understand­able. Tiwani Gallery is a commercial enterprise with lofty aims for expansion well beyond its Nigerian venture.

“We need more rigorous support, and for collectors to support older but also a younger generation of artists,” she adds. “That is very necessary for the longevity of this moment.

The lady, who grew up in Lagos, says. “I moved to Lagos from Cyprus when I was 40 days old. I lived here until the age of 11. I grew up around works by Suzanne Wenger, Twin Seven Seven, Bruce Onabrakpey­a, Ben Osagie and the like.’’

Upon the completion of her master’s degree in African Studies with a focus on African art at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies ( SOAS), she set up her gallery in Fitzrovia, central London. For her, the location of the gallery was important to the message she needed to convey. Having previously worked with an internatio­nal auction house, she discovered a weakness in the internatio­nal visual art scene.

“I thought there wasn’t enough engagement with contempora­ry material from Nigeria and Africa then. I started researchin­g and talking to people that were interested in publicatio­n or exhibition just to introduce to London an additional kind of ‘ vibe’ to the art scene,’’ she says.

Her encounter with the late Nigerian curator, founder and director of Centre for Contempora­ry Arts ( CCA), Bisi Silva, in 2008, influenced the birth of Tiwani Contempora­ry.

“She was instrument­al to the developmen­t of Tiwani as a whole. She was a great friend and mentor and helped me set up Tiwani in London. And throughout the process of the last 10 years, it was always an open conversati­on with Bisi when she was still with us and also with my colleagues,’’ she recalls.

“For me, I thought commercial­ly, it would have made sense to establish this in New York or Paris. But then, I feel very close to my Nigerian upbringing. I feel very passionate about the artists I work with and the themes that I want to explore. I feel that if we want to be part of the movement of Africa globally, then we need to be here, talking to local artists and also engaging with local patrons. Basically, I would love to see more works of Nigerian artists.’’

Thus, Tiwani Contempora­ry has become an institutio­n in Nigeria to help build relationsh­ips, convey messages and bridge the gap between artists and collectors both local and internatio­nal.

WHILE reflecting on her early days at Tiwani Gallery in London, she recalls the hurdles crossed to position contempora­ry African arts where it is.

“I was an outsider in every single way. I was an outsider in the sense that my production was full of artists from Africa and in the diaspora. Some fantastic galleries were already working with some of them. The October Gallery has El Anatsui but I wasn’t part of the gallery system. I was an outsider because of the geography that I represente­d. The only way to overcome that was through the quality of the artists that we choose to engage. We have to create the track record through the shows. We had to find the bias and it was a long journey, not an easy one. We also had shortcomin­gs in the early days that we learnt from.

“It was a constant learning process every single day but I think in the past four years or so, things started to feel a lot, I don’t want to use the word easier but smoother. Suddenly we are out chasing clients and now clients are chasing us- so there is a shift. And we have a bigger kind of movement at the moment.”

“If you want to build a truly internatio­nal collection, we must include Africa in the conversati­on. Tiwani began to shape things and that led to the creation of an art fair specifical­ly for African galleries. It corrected how art from Africa should be valued.

“People had this idea that just because I worked with artists from Africa, the price of the art should be cheaper or less. But we have helped to break those commercial barriers. Galleries and auction houses are not the best of friends but suddenly, there is a shift in the market and we can see a synergy between the two,’’ she reveals.

 ?? ?? Candyscape by Omuku, 2022, oil on Sanyan, 198 x 293 cm / 78 x 115 3/ 8 in
Candyscape by Omuku, 2022, oil on Sanyan, 198 x 293 cm / 78 x 115 3/ 8 in
 ?? ?? Varnava
Varnava

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