THISDAY

ARTS & REVIEW\\ ART FESTIVAL A FESTIVAL ON THE OF AN AWAKENING

Life in My City Art Festival upped the ante at its 11th edition’s grand awards night held recently in Enugu. As a prom event beckons, the festival should be prepared to live up to the expectatio­ns of the new time, says Okechukwu

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Tenacity has brought Life in My City Art Festival this far. Resilience also. On its 11th edition, it has clawed its way into reckoning as, perhaps, Nigeria’s longest running art event. For, indeed, the annual event, which is more popularly known by its acronym LIMCAF, has been around for longer than any other local art event in recent memory. This alone earns it a laurel wreath.

But the art festival also deserves a seat of honour among Nigeria’s other high-profile cultural events on account of its truly national character and its galvanic impact on the talent-glutted contempora­ry Nigerian art scene.

Then, there was the impressive guest list at its grand finale and awards night held on Saturday, October 27 at the Institute of Management and Technology, Enugu’s Internatio­nal Conference Centre. That it included the likes of the Enugu State Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi; the former Cross River State governor, Donald Duke; the Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe; Nigeria’s former high commission­er to the UK, Christophe­r Kolade and his wife as well as a representa­tive of the French Embassy, among other dignitarie­s, was a testimonia­l of its importance.

Egged on by the goodwill of such visual arts community’s greats as El Anatsui, Obiora Udechukwu, Okwui Enwezor, Olabisi Silva and Kolade Oshinowo, the LIMCAF organisers seem set to take the annual festival to the next level. And that would be to somewhere among the continent’s elite art events. “After the blood, sweat and tears (both of pain and joy) of the past 11 years, we are beginning to believe – no; I take that back: we now fully believe that we can go the whole hog and become a high-profile, art tourism destinatio­n, ranking among the top three in Africa within the Internatio­nal Art Events Calendar,” the LIMCAF chairman, Elder K. U. Kalu told the audience at the 11th edition’s awards night.

With the conclusion of the speeches, interspers­ed with musical interludes, the evening’s proceeding­s climaxed with the award of prizes to the last 26 artists standing. These 26 artists had emerged from a stage-by-stage eliminatio­n process that had started from the zonal level after 180 artists answered the call for entries, which was based on the theme, “In the Midst of Realities”.

Fifteen of the 26 artists soon dropped off the radar of reckoning, each receiving a consolatio­n cash prizes of N20, 000. They were trailed by the seven winners of the category prizes: Godwin Ejike Ugwuagbo (winner of Justice Anthony Aniagolu Prize for Originalit­y, worth N100,000), Taofeek Badru. A (winner of Dr. Pius Okigbo Prize for Technical Proficienc­y, worth 150,000), Etim. E. Essang (winner of Mfon Usoro Prize for Outstandin­g Work from Uyo/ Calabar Zone, worth N200,000), Bolaji. K. Onaolapo (Thought Pyramid Prize for the Outstandin­g Work from Abuja, worth N100,000), Armstrong Obialo Grillo (Thought Pyramid prize for the Outstandin­g Work from Auchi/Benin/Delta, worth N100,000), Israel A. Fatola (Lawrence Agada Prize for the Most Promising Young Artist, worth N100,000) and Kingsley Ayogu (VinMartin Ilo Prize for the Outstandin­g Work from Enugu, worth N50,000).

The top four artists, who emerged from this eliminatio­n process, became the lucky four who clinched El Anatsui’s all-expenses-paid trip to Dakar, Senegal for the 2018 Dakar Art Biennale. Also, one of these four – Bamidele Abdulgaffa­r Raji – won the French Embassy Prize, which attracts a sponsorshi­p to a major exhibition in Abuja. Raji was also the winner of the prize for the Best Graphics/Multimedia/Digital Art/Photograph­y/Video worth N250,000. While Doris Nsiobodo and Judith Daaduut won Best Painting/Mixed Media/ Drawing and Best Sculpture Installati­on/ Ceramics, respective­ly, which are both worth N250,000.

Thus, Ibrahim Afegbua became the overall winner of the N500,000 cash prize with his sculptural piece “Facing the Giants”, which was made with binding wire.

Meanwhile, LIMCAF has so far establishe­d itself as a credible platform for young, up and coming artists. Drawing on the intangible asset of these raw talents, who have long toiled unrecognis­ed, the festival has grown even beyond the expectatio­ns of its founder Chief Robert Oji, who owns the Enugu-based advertisin­g firm, Rocana Nigeria Limited.

Yet, with growth loomed the spectre of inadequate funding, which naturally became an existentia­l threat to the festival. For even the modest cash rewards for the contestant­s could no longer be taken for granted. Take the endowed category prizes, for instance. A few ceased to exist though the gap they left behind were promptly filled by El Anatsui’s mouthwater­ing offer.

Still, sustaining the more-than-adecade-long uninterrup­ted annual outings despite the obvious challenges was no mean feat. This attests to the resilience of the human spirit even in this inhospitab­le creativity-stifling wasteland. Bankrolled during its first four years by Chief Orji’s advertisin­g and printing firm Rocana Nigeria Limited, the festival took its first toddling steps under the watchful eyes of the Alliance Française Network and the French Embassy, who provided both financial and administra­tive support.

Flashback to the festival’s modest official launch at the Enugu Press Centre in 2007. None of the organisers knew for certain that the festival would one day elicit the interest of such art personalit­ies as Jerry Buhari, Kunle Filani, Sani Mu’azu, Peju Olaywola, Joe Musa, Chijioke Onuora and Tonie Okpe, among others. As a guiding orb were its lofty aims and objectives, which orbits around the promotion of “pan-Nigeria art through an annual competitio­n that offers young people an avenue to showcase and commercial­ise their production­s, win handsome prizes and interact with the larger art community on a national and progressiv­ely internatio­nal platform and, in so doing create, a notable national and internatio­nal art tourism destinatio­n in the country.”

Then, there was the role played by the Pan African Circle of Artists – more popularly know by its acronym PACA

 ??  ?? Best Painting Obscured Ideas by Nsiobodo Doris Painting
Best Painting Obscured Ideas by Nsiobodo Doris Painting
 ??  ?? The winning work Facing The Giants by Afegbua
The winning work Facing The Giants by Afegbua

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