By
Tajudeen Sowole
A
combination of Dr Bruce Onobrakpeya's print technique and his son, Ufuoma’s evolving
styles dominate the body of work at the just held solo art exhibition.
On a quiet afternoon, the paintings,
relief foil prints and mixed media pieces of the young Onobrakpeya, under the
title My Journey So Far are deserted inside the conference hall at Ford
Foundation, Banana Island, Ikoyi, Lagos.
The exhibition had opened to the public, formally, about a week earlier,
perhaps with traffic of guests who viewed the works.
Tribute to Fela (deep etching print) by Ufuoma Onobrakpeya
|
But this afternoon, My Journey So
Far had only one guest who was being received by a security officer inside
the room where the works were being displayed. Not exactly a regular art
exhibition atmosphere, but the beam of daylight, through the glass doors, onto
the works mounted on room dividers diffuses the sternness of the space.
A series titled Ekenwa Landscape, A Tribute
to Fela Anikulapo Kuti and Fish Market in Dakar are some of the
pieces engaging one's attention. "The body of work represents my
environment and culture," Ufuoma tells his guest as he comes in, breaking
the serenity of the room. The
contents of the show summarise the artist's career of over a decade of
post-training practice. "It's about my paintings and prints spanning 12 years
since graduation from University of Benin, Edo State in 1995."
There is something about the 12 number
and Ufuoma exhibitions: when he had his debut solo show titled. My
Environment, My Culture at Terra Kulture, Victoria Island, Lagos, in 2011,
the works, according to him were "compiled over a period of 12
years." And as the first and
second of the 12 years roll into each other, the tone of the works suggests
that the artist has quite a pool of experimental deliveries. While the debut
solo had deep etching and lino prints competing for space, his Journey So
Far has paintings and relief foil prints seeking the artist’s preference.
Ufuoma’s
Journey
offers a clue about which side of the medium - painting or print - his practice
has allegiance. For painting, his strokes, as fragile as they appear, may still
be accepted as style if the consistence is sustained. His heart, perhaps
passion too, goes for painting, but something else indicates that the artist is
unconvinced. "I see myself more as a printmaker than a painter."
The Ekenwa
Series, he recalls, were done in his university days while the tribute to
Fela, a foil print is dated 1996.
Other
works, he says, are based on “my daily travels within the city and events.” And in far away Senegal, comes Fish Market in Dakar. He recalls how
the environment inspired the work. “Every morning at a beach in Dakar, there
were so many activities relating to fish such that I could not resist
expressing part of it in my art.” In fact, there are series of the Dakar
fishing scenes of which “one was sold at the last Bonhams auction.”
After obtaining a degree in Fine Art
specializing in Painting, Ufuoma has also bagged a Masters of Arts degree specializing
in Printmaking from Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts, London,
U.K in 2002.
He is currently a lecturer at the
Department of Fine Art, School of Art, Design and Printing in Yaba College of
Technology, Yaba, Lagos.
His solo and group exhibitions include My Genesis (Lekki Restaurant Gallery, Chevron
Nigeria,Limited in 1997); New Trends in
Nigerian Art, organized by Texaco Overseas (Nigeria) Petroleum Unlimited in
1998. Promoter of Nigerian Art: Bruce Onobrakpeya arranged by Goethe Institute
Lagos (1999).
Art on chessboard with Tunde Onakoya, Lanre Olagoke
Onyeka Onwenu's last major honour in Art of Afrobeats award
Soyinka at 90...revisiting Maya Angelou, superlatives of Nobel Prize
Separating Yoruba religious tradition from Isese (2)
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