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“ALT + SHIFT ENTER “: A Combination of Diverse Artistic Activity

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This exhibition, ‘ALT + SHIFT ENTER,’ urges their audience to consider futuristic possibilities to reconstruct society and how it is manifested through the adoption of a national identity that transcends individual distinctions by combining computer-based works, installations, performance, and sound art.

Opening Reception: March 25; 4PM – 8PM
Exhibition runs till March 31; 10AM – 5PM daily
Venue: So.Nne, 17 Maitama Sule Street, Ikoyi Lagos

From Left; Tosin Oyebisi, Tolulope Ami-williams, Abdulmumuni Mahmud, and Ifedoyin Shotunde. Courtesy ArtBridge Projects

Curated by Tony Agbapuonwu, Art Bridge Project presents, a multisensory experience and social experiment featuring Abdulmumuni Mahmud, Ifedoyin, Shotunde, Tolu Ami-williams and Tosin Ovebisi.

ALT + SHIFT ENTER fuses experiential and material poetics with commentary on social, cultural, and political history as a way to encourage experimentation, reimagine identities and activate liberation. The starting point of the exhibition began with considering ways to shift the mindset of a new generation despite the confines of our present reality where there is a waging war, not too far from many of us, most especially in Nigeria.

Can you imagine a world where skin color, hair texture, national origin, and ethnicity are not determinants of power, class, beauty, or access? What does this world look like? What does it feel like? If you can see it, how do you know when you’ve achieved it? Some don’t want to imagine it; others are highly invested in the impossibility of it all. Unless we see a radical transformation, our motherland-Nigeria as we know it, will likely be recalled as a missed opportunity that became a tool for state-sponsored banditry, inequality, tribalism, political issues and corruption.

Exploring the intersection of desire. hope, and imagination, the exhibition ‘ALT + SHIFT ENTER,’ uses alcohol as a case study to examine the notion of escapism, consumer culture and social inequality. Combining computer-based works, installations, performance and sound art, audiences are invited to reflect on fruturstic ways to reconstruct society. and how it is manifested through the acceptance of a national identity that transcends individual differences.

Installation view of Abdulmumuni Mahmud works. Courtesy ArtBridge Projects

ARTISTIC NARRATIVE FOR ALT + SHIFT ENTER

Abdulmumuni Mahmud draws on the ideas of worldmaking and afro-surrealist storymaking to create a parallel reality where the very nature of life on earth is like a tov. Mahmud reverses overconsumption theories of alcohol and recognises toxic positivity, pain, trauma, fear, rage and ambivalence as inevitable forces shaping our evervday lives and consumption of alcohol. Here, alcohol is an attempt to grapple squarely with our unavoidable realities, emotions and vulnerability. Simultaneously, alcohol triumphantly connects us together. “The interest of this project lies in exploring the role of alcohol in our current society and how the Nigerian society can find alternate uses for alcohol in order to make this already profitable industry, of more tangible use to our current society rather than the current state of just the intangible uses,” says Mahmud.

With an eye for both the humorous and political, Ifedoyin Shotunde mediates and mirrors the strangeness of what’s happening in the world today. The artist investigates the crude nature of alcohol, and alcohol as a preservative and as a means of social security. Shotunde presents eerie and familiar installations that demonstrate his interest in materiality-locally procured and everyday materials. He plays with the concept of illusion by creating an installation with cow eyes in a jar filled with ethanol as its preservative. Also, by observing the post-consumption phase of alcohol, he builds a security wall fence as seen in several streets across Lagos and Nigeria made out of sandcrete blocks with broken bottles on top, instead of barbed or electric wires. Furthermore, he recreates a local liquor store that typically caters to the needs of lower-class citizens. His installations resonate with the works of Marina Abramovié and Richard Serra whose artistic practice provides a bridge between ordinary experience and concepts that transcend the seemingly static nature of an artwork’s physicality. Ultimately, Shotunde’s reformist installation pushes audiences to question their role in the various forms of inequality in today’s world, and the gap between the upper class and the middle class.

Installation view of Ifedoyin Shotunde’s works. Courtesy of ArtBridge Projects

Tolulope Ami-williams and Tosin Oyebisi echo the desire to be more, to be free of societal trends and patterns. Ami-williams stages an interactive performance art titled Je Ka Sa Lo, a Yoruba phrase which loosely translates to let’s escape or let’s run away. The performance addresses movement and distance as it relates to how individuals lose a sense of history and identity. If you change your position, your perspective changes and your narrative suddenly takes on an infinite number of new chapters. The performance sees Ami-williams pounding charcoal into a powder form contrary to the popular process of burning it into ashes, and mixing alcoholic drinks. In doing so, she embodies a journey of escapism where the subject retains its original qualities and takes on a new identity. Her performance captures “how the vehicles for escapism carry subjects through a journey that causes them to either lose touch or get a better sup on their interactions with what they consider to be reality.”

Performance props of Tolulope Ami-williams. Courtesy ArtBridge Projects.

Close your eyes for a moment and listen to the space you are in! Tosin Oyebisi recreates a sonic bar environment with a soundscape titled gurd that blends field recordings from his trip across West Africa, his visit to different bars in Lagos, a call to prayer, football commentary, conversations, busy road noise, bottles clinking and ambient sound. These are sounds of his daily life embedded with themes of communal love, brotherhood, identity and resilience. The vivid mental sonic imagery further delves into the pain shared by Nigerians over the controversies, disentranchisement and violence during the recent 2020 elections. Oyebisi illustrates how the human experience is highly sonic, and the power of sound to instill in people a sense of place and belonging. Close your eyes again. Imagine a space that is not unlike the one described above. Only now, listen to the traditional percussion amplified in Ovebisi’s soundscape. You hear the diembe drum, bata, dumma and the gong accompanied with amapiano vibes.

From Abdulmununi Mahmud’s mythical universe to Ifedoyin Shotunde’s poetic installations, Tolulope Ami-williams’ guide to escapism and Tosin Oyebisi’s soundscape, ALT + SHIFT ENTER is a call for social change by revealing the ways, and looking at how artists of this generation are talking about the future.
How do we get people to think of themselves as creators of tomorrows story?

About the Artists

1. Abdulmumuni Mahmud

Abdulmumuni Mahmud. Courtesy ArtBridge Project

Abdulmumuni Mahmud is an architect and digital artist who recently moved to Lagos. He uses his exploration of the digital/virtual world in parallel to the real world in order to more accurately express universal ideas and concept in a more flexible environment. He has a strong interest in the relationship between man and his immediate, as well as social and physical environment.

2. Ifedoyin Shotunde

Ifedoyin Shotunde. Courtesy ArtBridge Projects.

Ifedoyin Shotunde is a multidisciplinary visual artist based in Lagos, Nigeria. Having studied Architecture at the University of Lagos, he chose to deviate and began taking steps towards practicing art professionally in 2016. His works are generally driven by a strong sense of liberation that cuts across his belief in freedom of expression, and questioning close-ended views on individual and social evaluation.

3. Tolulope Ami-williams

Tolulope Ami-williams. Courtesy ArtBridge Projects.

Tolulope Ami-williams is a Lagos-based performance artist, songwriter and art educator. The vision for Ami-williams’ general practice is to make globally relatable and impactful work, addressing narratives that centre on the factors that influence social change. Considering art as a catalyst for change, she explores the use of her body to stage symbolic statements addressing themes relating to identity, empowerment and self-affirmation where she uses her performances to trigger questioning about stereotypes and conversations on deconstructing the invisible frontiers erected by society. Inspired by the Nigerian contemporary art performance scene, she draws in particular from Jelili Atiku’s political engagement and Odun Orimolade’s performances’ inclusiveness and intentionality. Internationally, she draws inspiration from Marina Abramovic’s mastery of emotional and mental strength.

4. Tosin Oyebisi

Tosin Oyebisi. Courtesy ArtBridge Project.

Tosin Oyebisi is a multidisciplinary artist working as a dancer, bassist and sound artist. Oyebisi engages with dance and sound as a creative and emotional outlet to explore themes of liberation, universal human experiences, and his personal life journey. He further uses his practice to promote cultural heritage, peace and environmental consciousness. He is the artistic director of TANTOLOUN Productions (@tantolounp), a performing arts company in Lagos with a focus on human, cultural and socioeconomic development.

Author

Bardi Osobuanomola Catherine is a budding storyteller. Her academic credentials include a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Benin. She has contributed to numerous Art publications across Africa. She is currently a Writer for Art Network Africa.

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