By Tajudeen Sowole
As the creative communities,
at home and Diaspora, mourn the death of a Denver, U.S-based Nigerian artist,
Moyo Ogundipe, the rarely-told activism part of his career creeps in.
Ogundipe, (1948-2017), was said to have been "found
slumped on his desk, unconscious," Wednesday, March 1. He was later "pronounced dead" on arrival at a
hospital.
Moyo Ogundipe, (1948-2017) |
After what seemed like two decades of
self-exile, Ogundipe, in 2008 visited Nigeria to have his first major solo
exhibition, back home, titled Kaleidoscope of Life at Terra Kulture, in
Lagos Island.
Few days before the opening of the exhibition,
Ogundipe and I had a chat about his U.S sojourn. At every point of the interview,
the artist's emotion as a betrayed Nigerian, who was dehumanised by recurring tragedy
of his country's lack of leadership value kept dominating the chat. In fact, he
described his sojourn in the U.S. as "self-exile."
Ogundipe recalled how he was "totally
saddened," for examples, by the dictatorship of former Head of States,
Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Sanni Abacha.
"Growing up in the 1960s here, I thought
Nigeria would, by now, be as great as other developed nations,"
he
lamented his country's state of retrogression. "But the 80s pushed me out
to go and fulfill my dreams outside the country."
Long before then, Ogundipe who, as a staff of
Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) in the 1970s once dared the military government.
He actually had a window to express himself with the work of an equally rebellious
icon, Fela Anikulap Kuti. It was in 1978, a period when government, exclusively
owned and controlled all TV and Radio stations in Nigeria. Officially, Fela's
music was outlawed on all radio and TV stations. As the then controller of
programme at NTA, Ogundipe did the unimaginable. "I was a very rebellious
man. I showed Fela’s performance in Berlin, on NTA, unedited." But
he wasn't exactly alone in that rebellious action, so it seemed. "I could
do that because I had a smart and charismatic General Manager, Dr Yemi
Farounmbi." But how did Ogundipe and his boss, Faroumbi get away with
that? "I heard that the SSS were looking for me but it didn’t
bother me a bit."
Ogundipe had a Bachelor of Arts degree in Fine
Art from the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University ) Ile-Ife, and a
Master of Fine Art degree in Painting from The Hoffberger School of Painting,
Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, U.S.
What texture of art was Ogundipe known for?
Between his two exhibitions, Kaleidoscope of Life in 2008 at Terra Kulture, and the last Mythopoeia
at Omenka Gallery, 2016, there blossomed an artist whose detailed touch in stylised
realism, deodorised Lagos art landscape with Yoruba mythology fragrant.
What makes and who validates contents of
modern or contemporary African art was also part of our chat in 2008. For an
artist that had practised across the geographical divides of Africa and the
west, Ogundipe argued that period, rather than the artist's environment determines
the identity."First and foremost I am an artist. I happen to come from
Africa, a continent rich in art that it helped change Picasso’s
art for good. I don’t see myself as an African artist, but a Yoruba artist
because that is my identity. You may refer to people like Picasso as modern
artist, while contemporary artists are those that are still living."
Being in the U.S,, perhaps afforded him an
opportunity to appreciate his Yoruba value more, particularly, the people's art
and culture. For example, his love for one of the most gifted and biggest
African export to the west, the sculptor,
Olowe of Ise (circa 1873-1938) was rewarded in the U.S. Back in U.S,
coincidentally, the two artists showed in the same space shortly before Ogundipe
had his solo in Nigeria.
Add caption |
. There was a spiritual
connection between the two artists who lived several generations apart. "Though
I traveled out of the country, but not without the spirituality of African art.
I needed to be in touch with home. I could have been on Mars, and yet remains
an Ekiti man, a Yoruba. In fact I got amplified being away. I had always
admired the Yoruba native sculptural works, the spirituality, the Egungun
masquerade; dialogue between the ancestors and the living. So while there, I
had a show that featured works of late Olowe, and I was so thrilled."
His colleagues in the diaspora will surely
miss hum. Artist and Art Historian, dele jegede sent a few words. "It is
immaterial how it came, neither did it matter what you had wished. In its
inexorable lethality, death does not offer us mere mortals any bargaining chips,"
jegede, a lecturer at Miami University, U.S. said few days ago. "Ogundipe, a
quiet but profoundly creative spirit, a dedicated gentleman who breathed and
created art, succumbed to the stealthy visitor on a rueful day. but the victory
was Moyo's: he answered the call right in his own office. that was bravery.
that was dedication. that was a paean to immortality. My condolences to his
family in Nigeria and the black diaspora."
Ogundipe as an artist betrayed by his
generation was highlighted in another tribute. "One of the greatest
painters ever produced by Africa dies, unsung," Moyo Okediji had announced
the passing of his colleague. "The world of African art is a world of
total ignorance. It is a world in which the blind is leading the deaf.
The perfect artist, he was never a hustler.
He knew his job was to make
art. He expected curators, art historians and dealers to do their by seeking
out the greatest artists and promoting them.
"But he did not realize that contemporary
art is not about talent or brilliance: it is about who could shout the loudest,
who sleeps with whom, who knows you, and who you know--it is about mediocrity,
sycophancy and frivolity, wrapped in the cover of racial, gender and sexual
discrimination.
"The death of Moyo Ogundipe makes me
angry not just because he has passed.
I am angry because of the
unjust world of art that he served diligently till his last breath."
Beyond the lamentation, Okediji, a Professor of Art History at The University of Texas, U.S., took solace in
what he described as Ogundipe's career that exposed an unjust world of art.
"But I’m
happy because he has finally proven that the art world is full of back-slappers
and ignoramuses. I’m happy that he left a treasure of work that
represents his great stewardship on earth."
Ogundipe exhibited in Nigeria, Europe and the U S. Among such
exhibitions were thise at The Orlando Museum of Art, the Maryland Museum of
African Art, the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, and, African
Renaissance: Old Forms, New Images at the Denver Art Museum.
In 1996, Ogundipe was awarded
the Pollock-Krasner Fellowship, and in 2005, he was invited to become a member
of Africobra, an organization founded in the 1960s whose membership is
comprised of distinguished African American artists.
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