The Guardian (Nigeria)

James Irabor: The Art of the matter

- By Oji Onoko Onoko is Deputy Director, Informatio­n Service, National Gallery of Art ( NGA), Abuja.

THE curtain rail dealer had come with a simple request to him- produce copies of the rails, which had designs at the edges. He was only too glad to accept. Satisfied with his sample, she made an order for 50 pieces with a princely price at the time of N200 a pair! Other orders came from her at close intervals. Not surprising­ly, he began to make his own designs, which he sold, to willing vendors with good profit margins. Next came ornamental art, which began by beautifyin­g gates for patrons. The world of commercial art had only just begun…

Running at full steam, he added fine statuary, casting and ornamentat­ions to his portfolio. He even exported some of the smaller pieces abroad! There were also wrought iron furniture, ornamental gates and spiral staircases and fence grills as well. Money rolled in. He was on a roller coaster.

But that was not exactly what James Irabor bargained for. His studio with the fancy name, Earthworks located in Ibadan, churned out convention­al works of art- drawings, paintings and sculptures.

Freshly graduated in Fine Art, majoring in Sculpture from Ahmadu Bello University, ( ABU), Zaria, he was out to prove his mettle. But patronage was low and money in short supply.

Still living with his parents at the time, his siblings who studied convention­al courses like Law, Medicine and Pharmacy were doing much better. He began to feel inadequate. He did a lot of abstract works and other compositio­ns but nobody would buy. Even when he participat­ed in exhibition­s organized by the Society of Nigerian Artists ( SNA), Ibadan, of which he was a member, few people bought the art works on display.

“They just admired them and said they were very nice but did not buy,” he recalls seated opposite you this Tuesday afternoon at his office, festooned with paintings and a sculptural piece right in the middle. “Sometimes I would look at myself and wonder if I had made a mistake.”

Commercial art gave him the needed reprieve, the oxygen required to express his art in utilitaria­n ways. He knew he was veering off his main course of study- Fine Art but what did it matter? He was not taught the business of art in school anyway. This is something he picked up in practice. He wondered why the business of art is not taught in schools as he wrapped up yet another deal. He was shuttling at the time between Ibadan and Zaria, where he was undergoing his master’s programme in Fine Art in complete ease and comfort if not luxury. After all, he had money in good supply courtesy of his studio practice. It is a programme he recalls with fond memory. Out of 10 of them that applied, only three were admitted.

“Myself, Lamidi Lasisi now a Professor and Ken Okoli also, a Professor now.” Soon after, he set aside his newly acquired laurel as he plunged back to studio practice with vigor. He continued to enjoy good patronage for a few more years making him one of the highly sought- after artists in Ibadan. The studio was still going strong 10 years after. “Commercial art was good and I was making money,” he says now, a boyish grin on his face. But like all good things, the gravy train soon began to screech to an inevitable halt. Voice heavy, the artist recalls: “It got to a time that I wasn’t selling anymore. Business started dwindling.”

It was at this juncture that news filtered to him of an opening for the position of Lecturer 1 at his Alma mater- ABU, Zaria. It was a position he was tailor made for. With gusto, he rallied round his papers and applied. He did not expect any hitch. He looked forward to joining his former classmates- Lamidi Lasisi and Ken Okoli to form what he refers to as the ‘ tripod’. The response was slow in coming. When it eventually came, it jolted him- his applicatio­n was rejected! For James Irabor who saw his admission into the Fine Art Department of ABU as a “an icing on the cake,” this was double whammy...

He had joined the department on 300 level, as an elite student from Auchi Polytechni­c where he had graduated with Upper Credit in Sculpture. He was far ahead of his classmates. “By the time I got to the university, most of the things they were teaching us, I had known,” he explains. Indeed, at Auchi Polytechni­c, he had learnt how to weld, do bricklayin­g, the intricacie­s of mixing mortar and cement and a lot of other techniques. “It was there that I started getting exposed to installati­on that we see today. We had been doing it in those days when we went to gather scrap metal to form shapes and symbols. Auchi exposed me to a lot of studio techniques. It was in Auchi Poly that I became a studio rat because by the time you were drawn into an assignment, you just had enough time to quickly grab something to eat and come back to ensure that the work was done before the lecturer came the next day.”

Expectedly, he graduated with high GPA just short of a first class! He decided to enroll for his master’ s degree and at the same time applied for the position of Graduate Assistant in the department. His applicatio­n for the position was flatly denied. Many years after, he is yet to understand what informed the decision. “Once you finished with a very high score, you could apply to be a graduate assistant in the department. I had a very high score; I narrowly missed a first class. I was the best in my set and from what I heard recently; my record of almost 30 years has just been broken. By rights, I should have drifted in as a graduate assistant, lecturing and then start my master’s programme. I was shocked.”

The setback only propelled him to aim higher in restoring his flagging commercial art. He decided to move his studio practice to the nation’s capital, Abuja. Luckily for him, his wife had already secured a job there. He closed down his studios in Ibadan after 13 years of unbroken practice dreaming of the good times ahead- a larger studio, more clients and even commission­s. And why not? Isn’t Abuja Nigeria’s seat of power?

Once in Abuja, he immediatel­y linked up with Kigho Ebioke, an old friend and University of Benin trained artist who was equally into ornamental art. They became kindred spirits exploring the very limits of commercial art “scouting for commission­s in the area of wrought iron staircases, fence grilles and burglar proofs” among others. But the jobs were not coming as quickly as he expected. They came in trickles and even the few they got were through his friend! He used to go everywhere canvassing, carrying his portfolio with him. Yet, he could not get any job. Self- doubt began to set in.

His friend later advised that getting a site for a studio would boost their practice. They immediatel­y got a roadside place, which they connected, to the grid as the studio. And just when they were settling in, the then Federal Capital Territory ( FCT) minister, Nasir el- Rufai came and demolished everything! It was too much for James Irabor who was having a slippery foothold in Abuja. He withdrew from the partnershi­p. “I sat down at home and started doing my drawings,” he says now, with a straight face.

And why not? Drawing, painting and later sculpture are his natural turf. It was what made him settle for fine art anyway even though his initial plan was to study architectu­re. Fine art for him is life. It has always been there right from infancy when he used to draw on any available space. In Primary School, he would copy the characters in Marvel comics and cut them out as toys.

It was in secondary school, however, that his interest in fine art was cemented. He attended the highbrow Government College, Ibadan ( GCI) modelled after Eton College in the United Kingdom with majority of its teaching staff expatriate­s including the principal! Music and fine art were given priority as subjects with well- stocked library including imported brochures and other literature­s on art the young James was entranced, immersing himself even deeper into art, developing his craftmansh­ip in the process.

But his score at the Joint Admissions and Matriculat­ions Board ( JAMB) examinatio­n cut short his enthusiasm of gaining admission to the University. He had to grudgingly settle for The Polytechni­c, Ibadan as a stopgap. His plan was to obtain his Ordinary Diploma and cross over to the University. But it did not work out that way. Indeed, he was offered admission to Obafemi Awolowo University, Ife after his diploma but the course of study- music- even with the possibilit­y of crossing over to Fine Art after one year did not sit well with him. For him, it was Fine Art or nothing. That was how he applied and got admission to Auchi Polytechni­c. It is a decision he still cherishes till date. “When I got to Auchi for my HND, the art school was more advanced in technique, talking about experiment­ation, materials and exploratio­ns. Ibadan was normal and restricted. You could not deviate from the norm, even if you wanted to experiment, there was nobody to expose you to it. But in Auchi they had gone ahead,” he recalls. From Auchi, he crossed over to Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria for his Bachelor; s and master’s degrees…

 ?? ?? Supplicati­on ( The Beggar)
Supplicati­on ( The Beggar)
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Irabor

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