Ayo Akingbade (born 1994) is an artist, writer and film director. She has directed nineteen short films. [1] [2] Her short films explore the mundanity of urban life in full swing in London's inner-city boroughs and industrial life in her family's hometown in Nigeria. [3]
Akingbade was born in 1994 in London to Nigerian parents and spent her upbringing in the East London borough of Hackney, which is featured as an onsite location in some of her films including In Ur Eye (2015), Tower XYZ (2016) [4] and Jitterbug (2022). [5]
She earned a graduate degree in film at the London College of Communication and subsequently attended the Royal Academy Schools as a student from 2018 to 2021 and is featured on the RA collection website. [6]
Akingbade graduated with the intent to build a career in the film industry and has spoken about her experiences not being taken seriously as a Black woman in the white-dominated field. [4]
Akingbade went on to shoot and release her first short film, In Ur Eye in 2015, which she subsequently entered into the Fourwalls Short Film Project, designed to encourage London-based filmmakers to make films about the reality of the city's housing crisis. [4]
She cites Spike Lee, Ousmane Sembene, Souleymane Cisse, Safi Faye and Steve McQueen as her first major film inspirations. In an interview with the British Film Directory, Akingbade suggests that her vision for her own films resonates with British films such as High Hopes (1988) by Mike Leigh and Burning An Illusion (1981) by Menelik Shabazz. [2]
Akingbade has been supported on three occasions in her filmmaking career by the British Council to attend the Oberhausen Short Film Festival for her film Tower XYZ and to travel to Russia and New York City. [2]
Following her solo exhibition in 2022 with the same title, Akingbade released her first publication, Show Me the World Mister, in October 2023. The book has a specific focus on two of Akingbade's cinematic works, The Fist and Faluyi, illustrating the intrinsic relationship between industrialisation and the family. [7]
Her trilogy of short films, No News Today (2019) provides a commentary on social housing and the response of residents to issues such as redevelopment and gentrification. This includes the film Tower XYZ (2016), which is shot primarily in West and East London on housing estates. Street 66 (2018) is compiled from archival footage and interviews about the 1970s regeneration of the Angell Town estate in Brixton, South London. [8] This includes a portrait of the late housing activist, Dora Boatemah. [9] The trilogy is completed with Dear Babylon (2019), a fictional dystopia that utilises archival footage of street protests. [8]
As Akingbade herself has acknowledged, she "addresses notions of urbanism, power and stance." She places emphasis on the importance of the image to convey broader social and political history and realities. [10]
The form of Akingbade's work varies from narrative shorts, to experimental essays and the documentary. [11] As much a visual media artist as a filmmaker, her form ties into her subject matter, which centres around conveying an emotional and socio-political attachment to a physical space. [3] Her earlier films have served as considerate, truthful portraits of inner-city estates in London. [4] Her most recent works, Faluyi (2022) and The Fist (2022) have tackled the mystical and industrial world of Nigeria. [3]
Year | Title | Director | Writer | Producer | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | In Ur Eye | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2016 | Tower XYZ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2017 | Fallou | No | No | Yes | No |
2018 | Street 66 | Yes | No | Yes | No |
A is for Artist | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
2019 | Dear Babylon | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
So They Say | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
Claudette's Star | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
2020 | Hella Trees | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Akimbo Stylee | Yes | Yes | No | No | |
Deadphant | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | |
2021 | Fire in My Belly | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Sukiyaki | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | |
Red Soleil | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
2022 | Jitterbug | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Faluyi | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | |
The Fist | Yes | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Akingbade has received recognition and praise for her short films and visual media artwork on an international stage with nominations from international film award festivals. This includes winning the 2017 International Competition 'Special Mention' award at the Oberhausen International Short Film Festival for her film Tower XYZ (2016) and another 'Special Mention' award for 2020 UK Short Film Award at the Open City Documentary Festival for her film So They Say (2019). [12]
Alongside this, Akingbade was shortlisted for the 2023 Film London Jarman Award. [13]
Year | Association | Category | Work | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Oberhausen International Short Film Festival | International Competition | Tower XYZ | Won |
2020 | Uppsala International Short Film Festival | International Competition | Dear Babylon | Nominated |
Glasgow Short Film Festival | Best Short | Dear Babylon | Nominated | |
Open City Documentary Festival | UK Short Film Award | So They Say | Won | |
Open City Documentary Festival | Open City Award | So They Say | Nominated | |
2021 | Doclisboa International Film Festival | Best Green Years Film Award | Red Soleil | Nominated |
The Tampere Film Festival is a short film festival held every March, mostly at the Finnkino Plevna movie theatre, in Tampere, Finland. It is accredited by the film producers' society FIAPF, and together with the short film festivals in Oberhausen and Clermont-Ferrand, it is among the most important European short film festivals.
Joy Olasunmibo Ogunmakin, known professionally as Ayọ, is a German singer, songwriter and actress. She uses the Yoruba translation Ayọ or Ayo. of her first name Joy.
Maynard Eziashi is a Nigerian-English actor. In 1991, he won the Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 41st Berlin International Film Festival for his starring role in Mister Johnson (1990).
Jessica Yu-Li Henwick is a British actress, writer and director. She began her career in 2010 and is best known for her roles in Game of Thrones, Iron Fist, Love and Monsters, The Defenders, Silk, The Matrix Resurrections, The Gray Man, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery and The Royal Hotel. Her directorial debut Bus Girl was nominated for a BAFTA.
Nkiruka 'Kiki' Omeili is a Nigerian actress, best known for her role as Lovette in the TV series Lekki Wives. She is also known for her role as Blessing in the 2015 crime caper, Gbomo Gbomo Express alongside Gideon Okeke.
Mother of George is a 2013 drama film directed by Andrew Dosunmu and tells the story of a newly married Nigerian couple in Brooklyn who own and manage a small restaurant while struggling with fertility issues. The film was produced by Patrick S. Cunningham and Rhea Scott.
C.J. Obasi is a Nigerian film director, screenwriter and editor.
Bolanle Austen-Peters, is a lawyer, a multiple award-winning movie director/producer, theater director/producer and cultural entrepreneur. She is the founder and artistic director of BAP Productions and the arts and culture center Terra Kulture in Lagos. She has been described by the CNN as the "woman pioneering theater in Nigeria", named one of the most influential women in Africa by Forbes Afrique and been recognised with several awards for her contribution to the arts.
Emily Wardill, is a British artist and film maker.
Rachel Maclean is a Scottish visual artist and filmmaker. She lives and works in Glasgow. Her films have shown widely in galleries, museums, film festivals, and on television. She has screened work at numerous festivals in the UK and internationally, such as Rotterdam International, Fantasia and BFI London Film Festival. She has received significant acclaim with solo shows at Tate Britain and The National Gallery, London, and she represented Scotland at the 2017 Venice Biennale with her film Spite Your Face. Her work A Whole New World (2014) won the prestigious Margaret Tate Award in 2013. She has twice been shortlisted for the Jarman Award, and achieved widespread critical praise for Feed Me at the British Art Show in 2016.
Alma Bećirović is a Bosnian filmmaker and theatre director born in Sarajevo. She won several awards for her short feature films and documentaries, including Best Screenplay at the Göteborg International Film Festival for the short feature film On Wednesdays in CineBosnia selection and Best Short Feature film at the Torino Film Festival for the same film. Award of Germany Ministry of Culture for the documentary film Survived and Lived Through One More Day at the Internationale Kurzfilmtage Oberhausen.
Remi Vaughan-Richards is a Nigerian filmmaker.
Adunni Ade is a Nigerian American actress and model. She was born on the 7th of June 1976 in Queens, New York to a German American mother and a Nigerian father from Lagos.
Andrea Luka Zimmerman is a Jarman Award winning artist, filmmaker and cultural activist whose work focuses on aspects of working class experience, and that of people margnalised by mainstream society, that are seldom seen or discussed. Andrea works across media in a committed and heightened register that allows those lives portrayed their full representation beyond simple and reductive definitions of economy, geography and gender.
Binta Ayo Mogaji is a veteran Nigerian actress. According to the film critic Shaibu Husseini, Mogaji has been a part of at least 800 films, television shows, and theater productions.
Theodora "Dora" Boatemah was a British Ghanaian community leader and activist based in South London. She founded the Angell Town Community Project in 1983 and was responsible for the regeneration of Angell Town Estate in Brixton, which commenced in 2001.
Ayo Edebiri is an American actress, comedian, and television writer. Since 2022 she has played chef Sydney Adamu in the comedy-drama series The Bear, for which she won a Golden Globe Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Primetime Emmy Award, as well as a nomination for a Directors Guild of America Award for directing the episode "Napkins".
Rachel Anne Sennott is an American actress and comedian. After training at the New York University Tisch School of the Arts and the Stella Adler Studio of Acting, she began her career on the New York City open mic scene with a regular gig on It's A Guy Thing.
Sara Dögg Ásgeirsdóttir is an Icelandic actress. She has had major roles in a number of Icelandic films and TV series, and in 2013 won the Edda Award for Best Leading Actress for Pressa.
Obianujuaku Nwakalor-Akukwe is a Nigerian documentary filmmaker. She is a founder of the Eastern Nigeria Film and Arts Initiative (ENFAI) and the Festival Director of the Eastern Nigeria International Film Festival, which holds annually in southeast Nigeria. Her films focus on cultural heritage. Akukwe is a TEDx speaker and the author of the book, "Nuts and Bolts of Parenting". Her film, Afia Attack, won the Documentary Short Length Award at the 2017 Silicon Valley African Film Festival.