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Showing posts from July, 2017

The Ogiamien family in Benin City: about wood and history

Roland Ogiamien in his wood-carving workshop Wood Roland Ogiamien is a renown wood carver. He is now retired in his home town of Benin City and is now in his 80s. We met him in his simple workshop, a barn opened on the surrounding greenery. A part of the studio is used to store wood pieces and make sure they are well dried. He is using a collection of german ustensils to carve and polish the wood. He spent most of his career working out of Lagos before relocating to Benin. Roland was explaining that the wood he uses today is different that the one he worked on in his early days. Ebony has become rare and wood carvers have had to switch to other types of wood. Traditional heritage is a large part of his inspiration which he translates on wood with his own particular style, exploring various techniques for the finish of his pieces. Roland Ogiamien and two of his favourite masks History Ogiamien is the name of an important royal family in Benin Kingdom. Towards the end of the

Benin City, at the heart of the Benin Kingdom and its great past

Benin City's popular fashion Benin City is one of the largest cities in Nigeria. It is the capital of Edo state. It probably shines less than it used to a few centuries ago when it was a powerful and advanced kingdom, lauded for its administrative and military strengths by the first Europeans who came to trade in the 15th century. Nowadays modern Europeans hear more about Benin City because Edo's gangs export girls for prostitution and compete with the mafia in Sicily on some markets. Traces of the past are very present, for instance the Oba's palace is still surrounded by a large mud wall. The city has sprawled in all directions. Trading buildings, administration buildings are among the tallest, most of them worn out by time, dusty winters and strong rainy seasons. Large avenues are running through the city, but as soon as one leave them to adjacent roads, potholes and dirt roads slow down navigation. Easier for motorbikes. Market areas are usually buzzing with peopl

Idanre city: Just Dare going past the Dark Sailor

main street of Idanre I danre is famous for its rocky hills popping out of the surrounding plain . The first inhabitants came there from Ile Ife and settled on the hills' plateau. Then in 1928, Christians left under pressure from the Traditionalists to settle outside of the hills in Alade. Later in 1933, some Traditionalists followed the Christians and built their houses at the foothill, which is now known as Idanre city. There are a few recent buildings and a lot of brazilian style houses that have weathered through the years without much maintenance. Like everywhere in Nigeria, roofs of corrugated iron are the norm, recognisable at the rusty colour they soon develop after a few rainy seasons. Red soil and rusty red roofs give the city its colour tones. The hills, visible from any corner of the recently created city, are like an intermediary between the earth and the sky. old brazilian-style house with modern extensions The city is stretching, between the hills, like a l