THISDAY

THE RUSTIC BEGINNINGS OF A UNIVERSAL ARTIST

Back to his base in Germany after his participat­ion in a group exhibition in Nigeria, di kwubiri shares the great moments of his art practice with Okechukwu Uwaezuoke

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This was one of those experience­s anyone would wish to fastforwar­d. What Chidi Kwubiri saw that Saturday, July 8 morning, as he peered out of his hotel window, gave him more things to agonise over than he cared for. It was as though the whole of Lagos was flooded. No car was in sight in the usually busy street. Not even the most powerfully-built SUVs ventured outside. Now and then, he spotted one or two people paddle their way through the streets.

All this was happening on the opening day of a group exhibition he was supposed to be a part of! And this was an exhibition he had so much looked forward to, on account of which he had reached out to the curator Sandra Obiago as soon the opportunit­y presented itself.

He closed his eyes in a bid to still the rising waves of anxiety surging in him. Was this how his pet project would flop? Who would venture out in this rain and flood, which could drown ducks and exhume corpses?

A quick cut to the actual opening of the exhibition, titled Wanderlust. It turned out to be a full house at the venue, The Wheatbaker Hotel in the swanky Ikoyi neighbourh­ood of Lagos. The place swarmed with news hounds, who came sniffing around. Then, a lot of works were bought.

“The exhibition was successful in all respects,” Kwubiri recalled.

He considered it “another new and great experience” for all the artists concerned. Even as a Germany-based artist, he had previously made several forays into the local art scene with his solo exhibition­s. So had the others, three of whom were also based in Germany. The remaining two – who were incidental­ly the only two female and mixedrace artists in the lot – were well-known figures in the exhibition circuit.

“We shared great moments, interacted and hanged out together,” Kwubiri continued. “I cherished this moment a lot, because it offered me the chance to get to know some of the artists better and the philosophy behind their art. It was a great pleasure for me to have had the chance to be in the midst of such unique artists, with a unified concept of unique artworks.”

Kwubiri’s regular visits to Nigeria also earned him enough recognitio­n for slots in the ArtHouse Contempora­ry’s auctions. Indeed, his works had been consistent­ly sold for mouth-watering hammer prices at the biannual event that has arguably become one of the most prestigiou­s in Lagos.

For him, this should be one good reason to give

level of art patronage in the country the thumbs up. “The appreciati­on from my collectors in Nigeria is great and very encouragin­g. I am happy whenever I have the chance to come back home to engage, not only with my strong circle of collectors in Nigeria, but also to feel the vibes.”

Besides, Nigeria was the place where his artistic odyssey all started. So, each homecoming for him was an opportunit­y for regenerati­on. With each visit, he would savour the hustle and bustle of Lagos, the sights and sounds of his village festivals, the interactio­n with the people and culture and so many other things. “This is very important for me because... just like a tree supplied with water, minerals and nourishmen­t through its roots by the soil, so do I draw my basic inspiratio­ns from the sources of my background. I like to come home to be inspired, to rejuvenate and to try to impact, and to pass on this encouragem­ent over to the youths and the upcoming in any way I can.”

His recent penchant for inveigling installati­on works into his exhibition­s would surely not have gone unnoticed. How have these been received by his pied-piper retinue of enthusiast­s? “It depends on how one looks at it,” came his pensive reply.

Acceptance is a tractable word. If it is meant in the sense of passing the conceptual message of the installati­ons across or having them admired, then the answer is: “Yes!” His installati­ons have been well accepted.

“My installati­ons are always an important enrichment for the big art events and I feel like they are very interestin­g for the media and for museums. In the sense of collection, my paintings are doing better.”

Art practice for Kwubiri started at the age of five or six. Born and raised in a rustic

Nigeria’s south-eastern community, he knew no role models nor even anything about art. He was simply egged on by an inexplicab­le inner urge. “As a teenager, I even had to endure the punishment­s my parents meted out to me. They thought I was wasting my time when their dream was for me to become something else in the future like a doctor, a lawyer or an engineer. I just followed my dream against all odds. I felt very early, that this ambition was inborn and that I had to follow my destiny.”

Nonetheles­s, his people, culture and tradition formed the mosaic of his greatest influences. Of course, global events would sometimes have an osmotic effect on him.

Perhaps, the most aesthetica­lly fascinatin­g feature of his paintings are their mottled finish. Critics sometimes confuse this technique with pointillis­m. But, Kwubiri explained that this was rather a “dripping” technique that afterwards looked like they were dotted. “There’s no doubt of course that there’s a small element of dotting, but generally I do ‘dripping technique’, not ‘pointillis­m’.”

This too can be traced back to Nigeria even when it would be further developed in Germany in the 1990s. That was a period he called his experiment­al phase in the art academy. Then, he was seriously groping for his own style – his own vernacular in art.

But the first years as an artist in Europe turned out to be disorienti­ng.

“I was lost and confused in the beginning,” he confessed.

How wouldn’t he be, after being overwhelme­d by the standard and the variety of artistic expression­s in Germany? He could see how art had become integrated as an essential element of common life. “There was art in the streets, in the parks, in homes and offices, public and private

institutio­ns. Just mention it, art is everywhere.”

He soon braced himself for the challenges ahead. His migration to Europe was spurred on by his inner yearning to broaden his knowledge about art. There was also the aspect of rediscover­ing his own culture and tradition from a distance.

Several visits to Düsseldorf’s Art Academy and discussion­s with some of the art students made his encounter with the late Professor Michael Buthe possible. The latter saw his works, encouraged, supported him and subsequent­ly offered him an admission as “guest student”.

Recognitio­n came knocking at his door a few months later. First, he was nominated and selected for “a very prestigiou­s” organised by the Düsseldorf-based Hedwig and Robert Samuel Foundation. This exhibition had a huge media coverage. And he was not yet admitted a regular student!

“A year later, I succeeded in gaining the highly competitiv­e admission as a regular student at the Art Academy Düsseldorf.”

Then came the plethora of awards. This was in the early years of his studies. And before he knew it, his works were already finding their way into respectabl­e collection­s. It was also during this period that he met a gallery owner in Düsseldorf, who was not only very passionate about his works, but also gave him his first ever “gallery solo exhibition”.

“Unfortunat­ely, this gallery owner died much too early before I really started my fulltime studio art career.” A note of melancholy laced his words.

His integratio­n into the European art scene was gradual. Hence, his profile morphed from the “exotic bonus” of being an “African artist” to becoming an “artist from Africa with a universal art language”.

 ??  ?? Kwubiri at the Wanderlust exhibition
Kwubiri at the Wanderlust exhibition
 ??  ?? Fingers Crossed by Chidi Kwubiri , acrylic on canvas (2013)
Fingers Crossed by Chidi Kwubiri , acrylic on canvas (2013)
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