The Guardian Weekly

Museum of Yoruba life is custommade for Lagos

- By Saeed Kamali Dehghan SAEED KAMALI DEHGHAN IS A GUARDIAN WRITER

Opposite the Nigerian National Museum in central Lagos, a swimming pool and a memorial hall once stood as an integral part of the city, a popular congregati­on point that evoked a sense of pride. This year, decades after the compound fell into disrepair, a new pool is opening to the public alongside a state-of-the-art museum dedicated to Yoruba culture.

The John Randle Centre for Yoruba Culture and History, which describes itself as “a fitting symbol of the multiplici­ty of identities in the metropolis”, is in the Onikan area, the cultural heart of Lagos island. Unlike the National Museum, built in the late 1950s on a western model, the centre is “unapologet­ically Yoruba”, according to Seun Oduwole, the site’s lead architect.

“If you go to a western museum, the African section is often in the basement, it’s dark. But this museum pops with colour and sound to highlight the vibrancy and the dynamism of the Yoruba culture,” Oduwole said. Yoruba words are bigger than English counterpar­ts on signs and displays.

Will Rea, the Nigerian-born curator and academic who has helped steer the project, added: “It is very different to a European museum, you walk in a soundscape and it’s noisy, it’s performati­ve, you have to move your body the whole time.”

The external walls of the Yoruba centre, which has 1,000 sq m of exhibition space, are concrete and finished in earth-coloured pigments reminiscen­t of the mud features in old Yoruba settlement­s. The gold lattice is a reference to the craftsmans­hip of Yoruba people.

Inside, visitors are greeted by an audio-visual display that animates Yoruba myths of the origin of the world, using the form of a calabash, a gourd that has significan­ce in Yoruba culture and beliefs. A separate room exhibits various deities and manifestat­ions of saints. There is a space for storytelli­ng, to reflect the Yoruba oral tradition, as well as sections on customs and practices.

Former Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari unveiled the centre, commission­ed by the Lagos os state government, in January 2023, 023 but it will open its doors to the pu public this autumn. Besides the museum, us the centre has three restaurant nt spaces serving contempora­ry Yoruba u cuisine, a library, a temporary exhibition x gallery, seminar rooms and a g gift shop.

Oduwole, who works for th the Lagosbased firm SI.SA, said many L Lagosians of his parents’ generation learned to swim in the original pool and went to the theatre in the memorial hall.

“One of the things that we wanted to do here was to interrogat­e museology as a construct and ask why the western model doesn’t work within the African context, and how we can create a space that isn’t a museum in the traditiona­l sense, but is more like a theatre of living memory,” he said.

Talks are under way to receive 12 items on long-term loans from the British Museum, including the Lander stool, one of the first Yoruba pieces taken from Nigeria by the British, which has been the subject of repatriati­on calls. Among items donated to the museum is a costume worn by the notable Nigerian musician Fela Kuti, regarded as the king of Afrobeat.

Rea, who is a senior lecturer at the University of Leeds, said: “Yoruba culture is without doubt one of the great artistic, musical and oral literature cultures of the world. Even today, we find that Yoruba culture is influencin­g the world in all sorts of ways. The notion otion of – for example – salsa, that is in origin a Yoruba dance movement that tha was taken up in Brazil. You now find d Yoruba cuisine in London and New York. There is real sense that Yoruba culture needs more visibility.”

Rea said Lagos has deep connection­s to Yoruba heritage. “The whole Onikan area had become rather lost in the expansion of the city, so the new centre is aimed at developing this area as a cultural quarter,” he said.

Yoruba people speak a similar language and have had a shared cultural identity and cosmology that goes back in time, he said. Interest in Yoruba heritage has peaked among young Nigerians over the past 10 years and “that’s what the centre absolutely plays into”, according to Rea. “The key thing about the centre is a refusal to talk about the idea of the traditiona­l. When you talk about traditiona­l African art, it’s a very Eurocentri­c view of African art, it’s a historical notion. Rather, what we’re doing is looking at the traditions of Yoruba culture.”

 ?? ADEMOLA OLANIRAN/ JIDE ATOBATELE ?? ▼
The design of the John Randle Centre references Yoruba traditions
ADEMOLA OLANIRAN/ JIDE ATOBATELE ▼ The design of the John Randle Centre references Yoruba traditions

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom