Nigerian
Pavilion at Venice Art Biennale in 2017 may come to pass courtesy of unnamed
groups and individuals, with the support of government.. The 57th edition of
Venice Art Biennale opens in May this year and ends November at the over a
century-old global art gathering, where as many as 80 countries converge every
two years.
In 2015, Nigeria took a step towards breaking
the elusive jinx when artist and architect, Ola-Dele Kuku, with the support of
Federal Ministry of Information and Culture and contribution of Lagos-based
Arthouse Contemporary, gave the country its first national Pavilion
presentation at the Venice Architecture Biennale. But the Art exhibition
part,
which is the central event, remains a dream to be realised for Nigeria’s
creative industry.
Installation
work of Ola-Dele Kuku shown at last Venice Architecture Biennale 2015.
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The fact that Nigeria, either as
non-governmental or collaborative effort with government agency, has been
making efforts to have a pavilion in the last three editions confirmed the
global importance of participating at the event. And why not? The volume of
participants and visitors to Venice Biennale every two years make the event
Art’s own Olympic.
African countries such as Kenya, South Africa,
Angola, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, among others have had pavilions at Venice
Biennale, except, ironically, Nigeria. has never been officially represented.
The last
edition, which had a Nigerian, Germany-based historian, Okwui Enwezor as
artistic director with the theme, All The World’s Future, offered an
opportunity for Africans to expand the continent’s art. Indeed, the 2015 edition had 35 black artists from
Africa, the U.S and Europe.
For 2017,
French art historian, Christine Macel is the artisitc director of 57th
International Art Exhibition with theme Viva Arte Viva. Traditionally, the
biennale holds from May - November.
If the unnamed Nigerian group gets support of
Federal Government and necessary sponsors for the 57th edition, perhaps more
laurels would come to African art. At the 56th edition, Africa confirmed its
growing status on the global art space
when Ghanaian master El Anatsui was given Golden Lion for Lifetime
Achievement.
Also at the 55th edition, a debutant, Angola,
picked the Golden Lion prize award for the best national pavilion courtesy of
the work titled ‘Luanda, Encyclopedic City’, a photography composite by Edson
Chagas.
A curatorial note from Macel may be of
interest to whoever is showing interest in taking Nigeria to its first Venice
Art Bienniale.
“In a world full
of conflicts and jolts, in which humanism is being seriously jeopardized, art
is the most precious part of the human being,” she explains the theme. “It is
the ideal place for reflection, individual expression, freedom and fundamental
questions. It is a “yes” to life, although sometimes a “but” lies behind. More
than ever, the role, the voice and the responsibility of the artist are crucial
in the framework of contemporary debates.
“Viva Arte Viva is also an exclamation, an
expression of the passion for art and for the state of the artist. Viva Arte
Viva is a Biennale designed with the artists, by the artists and for the
artists. It deals with the forms they propose, the questions they pose, the
practices they develop and the forms of life they choose.
“The Exhibition organically evolves in a
sequence of pavilions, rooms and stanze, offering the spectator an experience,
i.e. a journey, from the interiority to the infinity.”
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