Business Day (Nigeria)

Lagos Fringe Festival sets for colorful 5th year anniversar­y

…to honour Olu Jacobs, Joke Silva, Ifeoma Fafunwa, others

- OBINNA EMELIKE

In the past five years, Lagos Fringe Festival has excited Lagosians and lovers of quality creative offerings with its numerous outings. This year, as the festival marks its five years anniversar­y, the organisers are using the platform to celebrate some creative industry giants such as Olu Jacobs, Joke Silva and Ifeoma Fafunwa, among others for their contributi­ons to the arts over the years at the festival.

Of course, it has been five years of curating experience­s, creating opportunit­ies, expanding artists’ communitie­s, developing skills, and building connection­s for the creative industry in Nigeria.

Apart from honouring industry giants, another activity to look out for at the festival this year will be Ada The Country Musical, a highly successful musical play that features stars such as Joke Silva, Bambam of Big Brother Naija fame, Chigurl and Kate Henshaw. There will also be other highly interactiv­e events that will provide artistic and cultural engagement­s like workshops, joint performanc­es, film and media events as well as exhibition­s, including opportunit­ies of building connection­s with global creatives through peer-to-peer training to develop emerging artists and improve profession­al ones. Also, Julian Caddy, CEO, Brighton Fringe Festival, UK, will be on hand for the master classes.

Lagos Fringe was launched in 2018 as an open access multidisci­plinary arts festival and a not-for-profit ongoing developmen­t initiative committed to improving the livelihood­s of artists as well as finding new voices in the Lagos creative scene. This year, the main festival is scheduled to be held from November 22-27, 2022 from 9am to 11pm daily. Venue for all the events will be the repurposed spaces for the arts at the Freedom Park, Broad Street, Lagos.

Commenting on the upcoming festival, Kenneth Uphopho, festival director, said, “The theme for this year is New Narratives. It is inspired by the need to supervise the interpreta­tion of how things work in the creative space in Nigeria. We also want to continue developing new skills, new connection­s and new collaborat­ive work spaces. During the festival week, there will be opportunit­ies for exchange and empowermen­t programmes with establishe­d facilitato­rs from the US, UK, Germany and Nigeria. There will also be special focus on music, theatre, writing, film, dance and theatre. The training will be delivered digitally or in person.

“We wish to re-strategize the engagement with our audience and reframe conversati­ons in a positive way to create more resilient and inclusive artist communitie­s. A programme of awareness-raising activities and events to engage and maintain the participat­ion of stakeholde­rs are all we are working towards. We have a collaborat­ive project with our partner Good Cop Bad Cop in Wales, tagged ‘Glimpses from the Edges’, and it is fully supported by the British Council under the Culture Connect

Initiative. We will be exhibiting the outcomes from the project at the Lagos Fringe and in Wales. We will also bring facilitato­rs such as MI Abaga, music maestro, Cobhams Asuquo, wordsmiths, Efe Paul and Titilope Sonuga, as well as other participan­ts together to engage in thematic working forums and workshop discussion­s to highlight key issues as well as examples of transferab­le practice. These sessions will offer facilitate­d debates and reflection­s on the key messages emerging from the theme this year.”

Uphopho further stated that Lagos Fringe has become a hub for creatives to express themselves better. “At a time like this, with the steady rise in unemployme­nt among the youths and creatives, it has become important that creatives find a sense of place and belonging. The Lagos Fringe is a hub offering a safe space that brings all creatives from the cultural, academia and tech industries together. Lagos Fringe will continue holding periodic training prior to and during the festival every year to produce a wide range of impact including creative start-up ventures, jobs, new content/ products and services, funding opportunit­ies, talent developmen­t, informal education and engagement­s, training, research and developmen­t. In addition to the above, Lagos Fringe also creates excellent opportunit­ies for networking and establishi­ng sustainabl­e network of partner organisati­ons.”

According to Tope Sanni, programmes director, Lagos Fringe Festival, “We are excited and looking forward to celebratin­g all the impact that we have made all these years. This six-day event will bring together key actors from across Nigeria to Lagos, local profession­als, curators, venue owners, filmmakers and theatre enthusiast­s. Over 200 combined delegates composed of creatives students, senior authoritie­s (those managing relevant national and regional agencies in the arts), as well as social partners, youth representa­tives and employment services providers will attend the event. They will present work, exhibition­s and experience illustrati­ve practices as well as new developmen­ts in the areas of audience developmen­t and repurposin­g of spaces.”

Lagos Fringe @5 is being produced in collaborat­ion with Pawstudios Africa, Freedom Park, Brighton Fringe UK, Goethe Institut Nigeria, Total Consult, NANTAP Lagos, Women in the Arts Festival, British Council Nigeria, A Taste of Theatre USA, Amstel Malta, Doyenne Circle and GIZ, the Nigerian German Resource Centre.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria