Friederike Möschel |
The
German cultural centre in Nigeria, welcomes a new director, Friederike Möschel,
to its Lagos City Hall offices.
Ms
Möschel replaces Mr. Marc-André Schmachtel, whose term spanned five years (November
2010 –June 2016). The one-year interval between her arrival and Mr.
Schmachtel’s departure was occupied by Mr. Alfons Hug. A curator and critic,
Mr. Hug had occupied the same position three decades ago.
Born
in Munich, Friederike Möschel grew up in Hamburg, Bonn and the city of her
birth. She completed studies in German and English Literature in Bonn,
Heidelberg and Köln and taught at the German Embassy School in Beijing, China
for two years. Thereafter, she worked for four years in the education sector in
Hamburg before joining the Goethe-Institut.
The
new director comes to Lagos after a five-year term at the Institute’s Dubai
office in the UAE, which she
was instrumental to founding; another two and a
half years as director of the language department at the Goethe-Institut
Tashkent/Uzbekistan, and a two-and-a-half year stint in Kiev/Ukraine, where she
was in charge of the regional co- ordination of the Eastern Partnership fund,
and the implementation of cultural projects in Ukraine. Taken together, Ms
Möschel has now been with the Institute for a decade.
“It’ll
be quite different from my previous experiences,” the director said about her
new office, “but I’m looking forward to an exciting term.”
Since
1962, the Goethe-Institut in Nigeria has been a hub of cultural and artistic
activities, and for Friederike Möschel, who is just shy of a full month in
Lagos, a seamless transition is necessary.
“My
focus is to pick-up from where my predecessors left off,” she said, “and - in a
more diverse and impacting way - tap into the confidence, determination and
drive of the younger generation of Nigerian artists.”
Ms
Möschel is familiar with Nigerian culture products: the country’s literature,
in particular. “Nigerian Literature is big out there,” she said, adding that
she reads Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Chinua Achebe, Helon Habila, Lola Shoneyin
and other Nigerian writers. “It would be ridiculous to say one wants to improve
on Nigerian Literature. But there are always openings for grassroots
development. I’d like to work with as many local art institutions and
corporations as possible at the grassroots level.”
Great news, especially as she is interested in working with young Nigerian artists and promote grassroot development. We hope she will increase publicity for made in Nigeria products.
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