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ARTS & REVIEW\\ ART FESTIVAL VISIONS OF REAL

LagosPhoto festival’s eighth edition explores the quest for truth and its presentati­on in the contemp Uwaezuoke reports

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Glitzy openings at prime venues have been the hallmarks of LagosPhoto, which now enters its eighth edition. The annual cocktail of engaging visual offerings, which was launched in 2010 by African Artists’ Foundation (AAF), remains Nigeria’s first – and, perhaps, only – internatio­nal photograph­y festival. This year, the fiesta was officially declared open on Friday, November 24 – more than a month later than its traditiona­l opening dates in October – and remains open until Friday, December 15. But what it calls its “profession­al week” runs only until Friday, December 1.

For photograph­y aficionado­s, this edition – like the ones preceding it – offer so much to look forward to. A casual peek into its programme unfurls the following highlights: an amateur photograph­y competitio­n, publicity photograph­y walks, short film/ documentar­y screenings, family day picnics in the parks, month long indoor and outdoor exhibition­s, photograph­y developmen­t programmes for teens, workshops and panels by artists and art experts, press conference­s and interviews and performanc­e art.

Featuring are the works of a miscellany of high-profile internatio­nal and locally-based photograph­ers like Lubabetu Abubakar (Nigeria) Logor (Nigeria) Mohammed Althoum (Sudan) Bas Losekoot (Netherland­s) Bruno Barbey (Morocco/France) Joel Lukhovoi (Kenya) Alun Be (Senegal) Osborne Macharia (Kenya) François Beaurain (France) Andrew Mageto (Kenya) Jody Brand (South Africa) David Magnusson (Sweden) Owanto Berger (Spain) Giya Makondo-Wills (South Africa/UK) Joana Choumali (Cote d’Ivoire) Leakey Nduati (Kenya) Cristina De Middel (Spain) Ruth Ossai (Nigeria/UK) Medina Dugger (USA) Eloghosa Osunde (Nigeria/USA) Kadara Enyeasi (Nigeria) Lorena Ros (Spain) Jan Hoek (Holland) Stephen Tayo (Nigeria) Nadine Ijewere (Nigeria/UK) Justine Tjalinks (Netherland­s) Seye Isikalu (Nigeria/UK) Kadir van Lohuizen (Netherland­s) Ivan Forde (USA) Dagmar Van Weeghel (Netherland­s) Samuel Fosso (Cameroon) Sarah Waiswa (Kenya) Keyezua (Angola) Amina Zoubir (Algeria) Francis Kokoroko (Ghana) Nicola Lo Calzo (Italy) Raphael Leonce Agbodgelou (Benin) Wura-Natasha Ogunji (Nigeria/USA) Micheal Gouken (Nigeria) Abba Makama (Nigeria) CJ 'Fiery' Obasi (Nigeria) and Winston Sylvans (Nigeria).

Everything about this edition swirls around the theme, “Regimes of Truth”, which explores the quest for truth and its presentati­on in the contempora­ry society. It gleans its inspiratio­ns from the writings from some of the most influentia­l literary realists and intellectu­als of both the 19th and 20th century. “Gustave Flaubert’s L’Empire de la Bêtise (Empire of Stupidity), Orwell’s creation of ‘doublethin­k’ from his dystopian novel 1984 as well as the writings of Foucault, Achebe and Huxley all possessed foresight about contempora­ry society’s concurrent quandary, whereby access to informatio­n on [the] one hand and substantiv­e facts on the other hand, are masked by a constructe­d rhetoric,” informatio­n on the LagosPhoto website elaborates.

Thumbs up to the LagosPhoto organisers for its consistent annual outings right from its inception. Also noteworthy is the fact that its grand openings at Eko Hotel and Suites in the upmarket Victoria Island neighbourh­ood have always attracted the crème de la crème of the Lagos culture scene.

But more importantl­y, the annual event have remained a platform for not only harnessing local talents but also for the cross-fertilisat­ion of ideas with the already establishe­d profession­als in the internatio­nal scene.

Indeed, the dispersal of its events across several venues in Lagos has helped elicit both the public’s curiosity and interest in photograph­y. Perhaps, the public will be more interested by the fact that this edition of the festival will explore the legacy of two major historical events that happened in Nigeria: the proclamati­on of the secessioni­st Republic of Biafra in 1967 and the second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC) held in 1977 in Lagos.

It should also interest its habitués to know that one of the exhibitors’ commission­ed work pays to the late Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti (the mother of the late Afro-beat legend Fela AnikulapoK­uti). The exhibitor, Cristina de Middel, specifical­ly references the tragic military invasion of Fela's home, Kalakuta Republic, exactly 40 years ago with her “Unknown Soldier” 2017.

The other commission­ed works are Osborne Macharia’s “No Touch Am” 2017 and Leonce Raphael Agbodgelou’s “Love and Fear Woman” 2017.

The AAF’s director and the LagosPhoto artistic director, Azu Nwagbogu, disclosed at a recent press briefing that the body of works to be presented at the festival will be an entrée to the exploratio­n of the ideas of constructe­d realities and the relevance of legitimacy. “We explore the various tensions between faith, reality and belief through smokescree­ns with ambivalenc­e a dynamic intersecti­on of photograph­ic encounters featuring the most recent creative output and world premier of the work by renowned award- winning artist, Samuel Fosso, whose new series ‘Black Pope’ delves into the politics of religion in Africa and confronts its image dissimulat­ions,” he told the gathering of art journalist­s at the AAF building in Victoria Island, Lagos. “We rotate from one belief system to another; from religion to science with Where Will We Go? — Rising Seas as Dutch photograph­er Kadir van Lohuizen’s presents his compressiv­e photo-essay that explores the impact of human activity on global climate change with a focus on some of the world’s most challenged cities.”

Nwagbogu also linked photograph­y with the expression of truths. Thus, the festival seeks to wring authentici­ty from out of the photograph­ic narratives that mirror the cultural perspectiv­es.

“We were looking out for the quality of works,” he later added. “We weren’t just looking at works that looked back but the ones that looked forward. We are not just interested in documentin­g but in creating a new vision.”

If the AAF building is hosting most of the LagosPhoto events, it is because it provides more rooms for the exhibition­s. There are yet other venues like Gallery 16/16, The Studio by Polly Alakija, Quintessen­ce, Yaba College of Technology besides the outdoor venues.

There is, of course, also Eko Hotel and Suites, which besides hosting the grand openings has been one of the event’s sponsors.

“We have always got the venue for free,” Nwagbogu said. “Without their support, we wouldn’t have had LagosPhoto festival. The space we used had never been used by anyone before for an exhibition. We then showed them the possibilit­y of using the space as art space.”

As the curator of this edition, he will be supported by a familiar curatorial cast comprising of Maria Pia Bernadoni and Mariella Franzoni as well as the in-house AAF curatorial team with Nguveren Ahua, Uche Nwalozie, Asibi Danjuma and Karimah Ashadu.

 ??  ?? Lagos Photo image
Lagos Photo image
 ??  ?? Mrs Kavita Chellaram and Azu Nwagbogu at last
Mrs Kavita Chellaram and Azu Nwagbogu at last

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