
The Art Angle The Dramatic Story of Nigerian Modernism
Nov 6, 2025
Chika Okeke-Agulu, an art historian and Princeton professor, dives into the rich landscape of Nigerian modernism. He reveals how artists navigated the turbulence of postcolonial identity through innovative styles. From Aina Onabolu's tension with European realism to Uche Okeke's theory of natural synthesis, the conversation explores the revival of ancestral forms in contemporary art. Chika also addresses the impact of the Civil War on artistic expression, highlighting powerful works that emerged from this challenging period.
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Curating Uche Okeke Changed His Path
- Chika Okeke-Agulu recounts being asked in 1992 to curate a retrospective for Uche Okeke, an artist he had never met.
- He accepted, organized the comprehensive 1993 retrospective in Lagos, and that project launched his study of Nigerian modernism.
Colonial Education Preempted Modernity
- Colonial education in Nigeria intentionally limited historical and civic instruction, hindering intellectual sovereignty.
- Decolonization forced artists to seek cultural and artistic sovereignty outside colonial curricula.
Modernism Emerged From Nigerian Experimentation
- Okeke-Agulu argues modernism in Nigeria did not come from colonial teachers but from Nigerians who sought out foreign forms to invent new practices.
- He compares their experimentation to European avant-gardes who looked to other cultures for new visual languages.


