THISDAY

ADAPTING TO THE NEW NOR MALINA TIME OF C OVID -19

With his hopes of participat­ing in a couple of exhibition­s suddenly dashed because of a government­imposed lockdown, Germany-based Nigerian artist Emeka Udemba is seeking new ways of adjusting to life while the pandemic lasts. writes

- Okechukwu Uwaezuoke Udemba's recent paintings LECTURE

This should be over in a few weeks. Obviously, Emeka Udemba – like many people – had underestim­ated the Coronaviru­s – a. k. a. COVID-19. This was despite the fact that the pandemic had already begun to stir up global concern. The palpable fear of the virus that clung to the air that Friday, March 13 soon after his return with his family to Germany, after a visit to Nigeria, should have warned him. But no. Rather, he was certain that things would soon afterwards return to normal.And, “normal” – for him and for so many others – meant nothing more than things continuing in the same old way as they had for centuries and even for millennia. Indeed, hasn’t the history of mankind always been littered with natural and man-made disasters? So, this too shall go the way of others, he had reasoned.

On the contrary, the pandemic hasn’t yet gone away. Nor has life returned to what he calls “normal”. Rather, the southweste­rn German city of Freiburg – where he resides with his German-born wife and daughter – joined most cities in the country and in the world to impose a cocktail of safety measures, which included social distancing, to contain the spread of the virus. Life in this pleasant city of approximat­ely 230, 000 inhabitant­s seemed all of a sudden to have come under Orwellian scrutiny.

Now, this is a city that, under normal circumstan­ces, plumes itself on its multicultu­ral population as well as on its many public and private specialise­d cultural institutio­ns ranging from the historical to the contempora­ry. Its artist-run spaces, which exist alongside these institutio­ns, further lends the city its mystique of “unselfcons­ciousness” and a reputation for experiment­ation. Then, there is, of course, the additional fact that this city straddling the Dreisam river at the foot of Schlossber­g leverages on its proximity to the Swiss city of the border town of Basel, one of the host cities of the annualArt Basel.

“The consequenc­e is that we live presently in a historic time when all the facets of our

lives seem to be fundamenta­lly put under scrutiny,” the 52-year-old University of Lagos graduate muses. “Suddenly, we are confronted with how fragile and uncertain human existence could be, regardless of society's industrial and technologi­cal advancemen­ts.”

He was billed to participat­e in a couple of exhibition­s. One was scheduled to hold in April in Freiburg and the other was to hold in May at the 1-54 New York, a contempora­ry African art fair. While the Freiburg exhibition was cancelled, the 1-54 New York has now been postponed until May next year. “Consequent­ly, I am creatively self-isolating most of the time in my studio,” Udemba says with a hint of humour.

Expectedly, the pandemic has taken its toll in his studio practice and in his personal life. But, he would rather see the silver lining in this ominous cloud. This period, in his opinion, should be the time for the right self-assessment and forbearanc­e. This should also be the time to understand the sufferings and weaknesses of one’s neighbour.

He also quotes the Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI as once saying in an interview that “it is dangerous for a person if he simply rushes from goal to goal and goes through with praise everywhere. It is better that he recognises his own limits.”

“With this in mind, this lockdown is not just a time of production in my studio, but a time of deep reflection on various issues that have been laid bare,” he resumes. “Atiny virus has made us realise that irrespecti­ve of our sophistica­tion in all spheres of life, we can control many things, but by far not everything. The inequaliti­es in our society have also been laid bare. The privileged in society have no difficulty self-isolating. But the poor, who must go to work to earn a living, are confronted with the stark choice between imminent hunger if they do not go out to work or going to work and possibly getting infected. Globalisat­ion is receiving a backlash. An event in one part of the world can easily affect the rest of the world. The flow of people across borders have either plummeted or stopped entirely...”

Work, for him, never stopped. With his sights set on new projects, he muses about how he and his fellow artists would remain physically connected to the rest of the art community, especially now that the galleries and museums still remain closed. So far, he had conceived the idea of making postcards, which he hopes to produce with images from some of the paintings he had produced during the lockdown. (See concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com)

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