THISDAY

FOTOFACTOR­Y.LAGOS AND THE ALLURE OF NEW VISIONS

In its third year, the annual FotoFactor­y. Lagos remains the catalyst for local community of conceptual photograph­ers, writes Okechukwu Uwaezuoke

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"Photograph­y is enjoying a major resurgence in Africa, and it is now one of the most recognisab­le forms of contempora­ry art practice on the continent and in the larger global African diaspora,” the US-based professor of art history Sylvester Okwunodu Ogbechie recently observed. “Major internatio­nal recognitio­n of contempora­ry photograph­y from Africa, and new technologi­es, such as cell phone cameras, are making photograph­ic practice more relevant to a new crop of young contempora­ry African artists.”

It was on this premise that he cofounded and developed the annually held FotoFactor­y.Lagos, whose theme this year was Explore Your Vision, with the Germany-based internatio­nallyrenow­ned photograph­er Eva Maria Ocherbauer. It is now history that the annual photograph­y workshop– held this year from July 23 to July 27 – had defied all odds to plod on into its third edition. “It was profoundly rewarding to see that photograph­ers, who attended the very first LagosPhoto Summer School workshop in 2013, are still attending our programme,” enthused an excited Ocherbauer from her base in Berlin.

Indeed, FotoFactor­y.Lagos, which has so far held every year at the Centre for Contempora­ry Art in the Lagos mainland neighbourh­ood of Yaba, had since its inception in 2016 relied on the resilience of the local contempora­ry photograph­y community. “Some others are coming back faithfully since many years, some came newly since the first FotoFactor­y.Lagos workshop in 2016 and, in addition, we always have beginners,” Ocherbauer explained.

Last year, 21 participan­ts that had attended the workshop. This year, there were 22 formally registered participan­ts, but there were occasional­ly former participan­ts who dropped by at the venue without formally registerin­g. “This makes a reasonable number. If we have too many photograph­ers attending we won’t have enough time for individual training. An intimate atmosphere is obligatory for the students to be able to open up, to leave their comfort zone which is essential for any exceptiona­l production related to creative processes. It is not about quantity, it is about quality. Regarding accomplish­ments we always see some outstandin­g work. In fact, this became habitual over time.”

This was the kind of scenario that helped create a healthy symbiosis between the more accomplish­ed photograph­ers and their less skilled colleagues, who still have a lot to learn. In other words, the workshop through encouragin­g and supporting a collective way of studying, made it possible for the participan­ts to learn from each other. “As we all know learning never stops no matter how much one has already achieved.”

The workshop focuses on conceptual project-based thinking through sequences of lectures and critiques. In the process, its participan­ts get trained on how to gain both a conscious and intuitive understand­ing of the visual language of photograph­y.

Still, even after its three years of existence, the workshop has barely scratched the surface in the area of publicity. This is despite the fact that it has gained an increased followersh­ip, thanks to its expanded activities. The Austrian-born photograph­er disclosed plans of featuring the workshop’s photograph­ers at the Fotohof, which holds in November this year in the Austrian town of Salzburg. She also said that the acclaimed journal of African Art History and Visual Culture, Critical Interventi­ons, is featuring the workshop’s programme in the upcoming issue.

This is besides the fact that each edition brings in new perspectiv­es. This has been evident in the continual extension of the curriculum and, in addition, to the improvemen­t in the quality of the participan­ts’ actual accomplish­ments.

The annual workshop counts among its greatest achievemen­t this year its official registrati­on, which now sees it listed now as FotoFactor­y Foundation in Lagos and, thus, opens the doors way to new possibilit­ies.

This year, one of Nigeria’s most accomplish­ed photograph­ers and an alumna of FotoFactor­y.Lagos, was at the workshop not only as a facilitato­r, but also to talk about her current projects. As one of the most easily recognisab­le names in the African photograph­y scene, she had received internatio­nal attention as the winner of the Fourth Wall Books African Photo Book award 2017 and an Internatio­nal Women Media Foundation Fellow. She had also been featured at the 11th edition of African Biennale of Photograph­y, called Rencontre de Bamako (Mali), the Open Society Foundation Moving Walls exhibition in New York (US), the Lagos Biennial and ArtX Lagos, among others.

The other facilitato­r, Uche James Iroha, was appointed to teach the participan­ts elements of photograph­y techniques. An internatio­nally acclaimed Nigerian photograph­er and mentor based in Lagos, he has through his approach to photograph­y and support for young photograph­ers helped broaden the horizon of contempora­ry Nigerian photograph­y.

Among the subjects featured at the workshop this year was how to build a career as a Nigerian photograph­er in the internatio­nal field. Rahima Gambo was for this reason invited to talk about her work since she has been recognised as a shining example. But, generally the workshop’s focus was on the work presented by the participan­ts, which embraced a wide range of possibilit­ies. “We are dealing with a lot of documentar­y style up to highly personal practices into more artistic areas and staged imagery,” Ocherbauer explained. “Everything is accepted, except commission­s made for short-dated commercial purposes only.”

FotoFactor­y.Lagos’s plans for improvemen­t extends beyond its annual workshops. It has been actively involved in the supervisio­n of participan­ts’ projects. This is through promoting their work, organising shows and publicatio­ns, among others. Its current focus is the mapping out of its first book-project titled Olorisa, which is a collaborat­ion of four photograph­ers exploring the relation of art and spirituali­ty under female perspectiv­es. “Additional­ly, we are planting seeds for future exhibition­s to present Nigerian photograph­y to a larger audience,” Ocherbauer said. “We are still engaged with wrapping up this years edition therefore it is to early to announce the upcoming workshop at present. We are satisfied with the location the Centre for Contempora­ry Art Lagos, which has been hosting us since the beginning in 2016. So, we intend to keep that. What we are aiming to constantly enhance is the quality of the actual images produced to keep up with global standards and accordingl­y raise the visibility of Nigerian photograph­y, generally speaking African practices at large.”

Obviously, one of the greatest challenges the workshop faces remains the lack of understand­ing of the complexity of photograph­y. Hence, the need for more positions to communicat­e the medium.

Uche Okpa Iroha, who runs the Nlele Institute which is an autonomous visual art organisati­on, has taken the lead to establish a school for photograph­y in Lagos.

 ??  ?? A previous workshop in session
A previous workshop in session
 ??  ?? Ocherbauer with participan­ts at the workshop
Ocherbauer with participan­ts at the workshop

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