Okechukwu Ofiaeli | |
---|---|
Nationality | Nigerian |
Known for | sculpture |
Okechukwu Ofiaeli (Okechukwu Okoye Ofiaeli, also known as Okegrass Ofiaeli, or Okey Ofiaeli) is a Nigerian environmental artist based in Queens, New York. [1] [2] [3]
Ofiaeli was born in Lagos, Nigeria into a family of artists. [4] Although he had no formal art training, Ofiaelie began studying local hand crafting in 1983 and studied at the National Gallery of Crafts/Design until 2004. [1] [5]
Ofiaeli's work began when he had no money to by a sun hat to shade his eyes while watching football. He saw the referee wearing a woven straw hat and emulated that hat from coconut tree cuttings from his father's yard. From the popularity of his hat, Ofiaeli was inspired to explore this medium, riding the area between fine art and craft. [4] Witnessing industrial processes in his native Nigeria also inspired his preference for recycling discarded materials as an alternative to the resulting burned landscape and killed their soil. [6]
In 2000 he traveled to the US for the first time to be an artist in residence at 18th Street Art Center in Santa Monica, California. This experience brought attention from Nigeria's Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture to Ofiaeli's work in Lagos where they then built a national workshop for artists. [4]
Ofiaeli's sculptures explore ecological impact using site-specific found materials. [7] He kept a studio in Ebonyi, Nigeria to gather indigenous materials, particularly elephant grass. His studio staff gather grasses that would normally be set afire to hunt and clear the fields. Since this period, the value of this vegetation had shifted and new techniques had been developed to use it as a cash crop. [4] In Santa Monica he used mahogany, palm, and mango seeds. [5] In New York he used primarily fallen Sycamore tree parts. [2]
In 2016 he was the Artist in Residence at Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. [8] He has run workshops to teach students how to up-cycle materials into works of art and utilitarian objects. [9] These workshops have been taught in both his home in New York and in villages in Nigeria where they learn how to make these objects from repurposed discarded materials and sell them for profit. [7]
In 2003 he won an International Fund for the Promotion of Culture grant. [10] In 2011 his work was exhibited at Chashama Gallery in New York. [11] In 2015 Ofiaeli received a Queens Council of the Arts Individual Artist Grant to bring his workshops around the region. [12] [13] One of these workshops was offered alongside his exhibition in the Southeast Queens Biennial in 2018. This exhibition was curated by No Longer Empty at York College and also featured work by Janet Henry, Shervone Neckles and Damali Abrams. [1] [14] Also in 2018 Ofiaeli work was featured at the Korean Cultural Center, New York, to commemorate the winter olympics in PyeongChang. [15] [16]
His work is in the public collections of the National Museum in Badagry, the Goethe Instut in Lagos, the Japan External Trade Organization Lagos and the 18th Street Arts Center. [17]
Ebele Okoye also known as "Omenka Ulonka," is a Berlin-based Nigerian/German independent Animation producer/director, designer, and multi-media artist. She was born on October 6, 1969 in Onitsha, Anambra State, Nigeria. She is recognized as one of the pioneers of African animation and is often referred to as the "mother of African Animation." With over 16 years of experience in the animation industry, Ebele has made significant contributions to the field and is an influential figure in both the animation and poetry film communities. She has lived in Germany since the year 2000
Obiora Udechukwu is a Nigerian painter and poet.
Chike C. Aniakor is a Nigerian artist, art historian, author, and poet whose work addresses philosophical, political, and religious themes relating to Igbo society and the Nigerian Civil War. His artworks are held in major metropolitan museums including the Smithsonian Institution, Nigerian National Gallery of Art, and the Museum fur Volkerkunde in Frankfurt. Aniakor is a prolific writer and has authored over 75 books and articles.
Nnenna Okore is an Australian-born Nigerian artist who lives and works in Chicago at North Park University, Chicago. Her largely abstract sculptural forms are inspired by richly textured forms and colours within the natural environment. Okore's work frequently uses flotsam or discarded objects to create intricate sculptures and installations through repetitive and labor-intensive processes. She learnt some of her intricate methods, including weaving, sewing, rolling, twisting and dyeing, by watching local Nigerians perform daily domestic tasks. In her more recent works, Okore uses plant-based materials to create large bioplastic art forms and installations. Her work has been shown in galleries and museums within and outside of the United States. She has won several international awards, including a Fulbright Scholar Award in 2012. and the Australian Creative Victoria Award in 2021.
Bisi Silva was a Nigerian contemporary art curator based in Lagos.
Jean Shin is an American artist living in Brooklyn, NY. She is known for creating elaborate sculptures and site-specific installations using accumulated cast-off materials.
Lemi Ghariokwu, also known simply as Lemi, is a Nigerian painter, illustrator and designer who is most renowned for providing many of the original cover images for the recordings of Nigerian musician Fela Kuti.
Victor Ekpuk is a Nigerian-born artist based in Washington, DC. Ekpuk came to prominence through his paintings and drawings, which reflect indigenous African philosophies of the Nsibidi and Uli art forms.
The African Artists' Foundation (AAF) is a non-profit organization, based in Lagos, Nigeria. It was founded in 2007 by Azu Nwagbogu, as a platform for contemporary African art and artists working across photography, fine art, video, ceramics, sculpture, performances, writing and curation. The African Artists' Foundation has through the establishment of LagosPhoto festival, National Art Competition and its residency program raised international awareness to African creativity by also collaborating with institutions, foundations, biennales and festivals globally.
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.
Okechukwu Oku, also known as Okey Oku and nicknamed "the Oracle", is a Nigerian film producer, director, cinematographer and occasional musician. He is best known for directing the movies Love and Oil (2014), Burning Bridges (2014) and Bambitious (2014) which featured Belinda Effah and Daniel K Daniel.
Victor Ehikhamenor is a Nigerian visual artist, writer, and photographer known for his expansive works that engage with multinational cultural heritage and postcolonial socioeconomics of contemporary black lives. In 2017, he was selected to represent Nigeria at the Venice Biennale, the first time Nigeria would be represented in the event. His work has been described as representing "a symbol of resistance" to colonialism.
Janet Henry is a visual artist based in New York City.
Ade Abayomi Olufeko, is an American-born designer and technologist primarily active in Lagos, Nigeria. He is known for his international contributions to humanities. Olufeko has given talks and exhibited in the Africa, Asia, United States and Europe. His work evolved from direct interactions and collaborations with consortiums, advocacy groups, and artist collectives. He is the founder of Visual Collaborative, an American platform collaborating with diverse experts on socio-economics.
Jayson Keeling (1966-2022) was an artist who worked in photography, video, sculpture, and installation. Keeling's work challenges conventional norms surrounding sex, gender, race, and religion. Keeling often reconfigured popular iconography, to explore notions of masculinity, and cultural ritual.
Uche Okpa-Iroha is a Nigerian multidisciplinary artist who mainly adopts photography as his preferred medium of artistic expression.
Sui Park, born in Seoul Korea, is a contemporary sculptor, who lives and works in New York City, NY.
Jelili Atiku is a multimedia performance artist and sculptor from Lagos, Nigeria. His performance with drawing, photography, installation sculpture, video and live performance have made him one of the most recognized performance artists from Nigeria around the world. His work is said to have a power which "lies in his use of Yoruba symbols and traditions of his local community"
Sejiro Avoseh is a visual artist based in Essex, United Kingdom]. A painter best known for his signature fusion of abstracted human figures and automobile parts using painting and collaging techniques, Sejiro makes his painted montages from cut-out magazines and newspapers. Sejiro's works are autobiographical, lending critical voices on the poor fate of the indigent underclass in his society, and on the highhandedness and abuse of power by public servants and elected officials. In 2018, he was featured in the Financial Times as one of Nigeria's promising artists.
Chief Muraina Oyelami is a Nigerian painter and drummer of Yoruba descent. He was among the first generation of artists to come out of the Osogbo School of Art in the 1960s. He was a drummer and actor with the theatre company of Duro Ladipo. He taught traditional music and dance at Obafemi Awolowo University from 1976 to 1987. As a musician, he trained in the dùndún and the Batá drum. He was the chief of his hometown Iragbiji.