Omenka Gallery, Lagos, Nigeria
03 Feb 2018 - 21 Feb 2018
Omenka Gallery presents “Power Show”, a solo exhibition of multimedia works by Ayo Akinwande. The exhibition is curated by Erin M. Rice and it opens to the general public by 4pm on Saturday 3rd February 2018 and runs till the 21st February 2018.
This exhibition, a third solo show for multimedia artist Ayo Akinwande, examines the nuances of the word “power,” in the context of Nigeria where electrical power cuts are a daily occurrence and fuel shortages are common even as the nation is rich in oil. Inspired by Fela Anikulapo Kuti´s song of the same title, the show also examines power in the sense of authority and its corruptibility, especially where these multiple forms of power overlap. The irony is not lost on anyone living in Nigeria without power amidst the humming of generators that the nation is the largest producer of oil in Africa. It may seem even redundant to address an issue so entrenched in daily life in the context of art, but for Akinwande the issue is precisely this entrenchment and the complacency that comes when having no power or waiting in long lines for fuel is so commonplace that it is no longer a source of anger. Rather when the power comes back on it becomes a moment to praise “NEPA”, the nation‟s energy provider.
Akinwande seeks to channel both the frustration and the ordinariness of this situation. The works presented in „Power Show‟ span multiple media and subjects to use the familiarity of found objects, such as the blue generator tanks and the NEPA bill, to expose the ways that a lack of (electrical or gas) power and powerlessness go hand in hand. Works such as “The Shrine” evoke the way that power outages have become so entrenched in life in the city of Lagos and Nigeria at large, that recent architecture factors the presence and constant humming of generators into its design. As the rich find ways to cope with generators and inverters that they have the financial resources to keep running continually, the work serves as a reminder that when the lights go out it is most detrimental to Nigerians who are already vulnerable, who may use chains and cages and other means to protect their source of energy, creating, in effect, a shrine.
„Power Show‟ represents a pivotal turn in the early career of Akinwande and the fruits of an intensively experimental and creative 18 months. In mid-2016, Akinwande made the decision to branch out from the medium of photography in which he was working exclusively at the time. This decision came as a result of his participation in the Centre for Contemporary Art Lagos residency program entitled Àsìkò, which took place in June-July 2016 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Encouraged by Àsìkò faculty to push the concept of the „Fuel Scarcity‟ photographic series in a new material direction, Akinwande returned to Lagos with new ideas, and the motivation to experiment in forms from performance, installation, and sound.
Omenka Gallery
24 Ikoyi Crescent
Ikoyi, Lagos, Nigeria