Edo Museum of West African Art (EMOWAA) unveils plans, initiatives

Aindrea Emelife

By IVIE OKOSUN 

  • …construction work progressing on the Research, Archives and Archaeological Centre
  • …Professor Chika Okeke Agulu and Ms. Aindrea Emelife appointed Senior Advisor and Curator of Contemporary and Modern Art, respectively
  • …Collaboration with Open Society Foundation Africa to engage young students and artists, educating them on the career opportunities in the creative economy and heritage management
  • … Digital Lab to advance the heritage economy, education, and creative industries through digital technologies.

 

 

The EMOWAA (Edo Museum of West African Art) Trust has unveiled the plans and programmes for their development in Benin City, as work progresses on the construction of the first building designed by world renowned architect, David Adjaye, OBE in collaboration with Nigerian architects MOE+, which will house a Materials and Digital lab, Archaeology Centre and  Research and Archives Facility.

 

Speaking at an interactive media parley in Lagos on Thursday March 30, 2023, Phillip Ihenacho, Executive Chairman of The EMOWAA Trust,  explained that –

 

“EMOWAA’s initial focus will be on creating an ecosystem for research education and career opportunities for young creatives and professionals in cultural heritage management. The Pavilion is planned as an archives and research centre, providing space for learning and exchange, and archival space for works of art from West Africa and the Diaspora both contemporary and heritage. It will also be a space that will help catalyse the art and culture ecosystem by providing infrastructure for training, residencies, digital production, and growing a pipeline of future artists and researchers. In short it is about building platforms for the study, creation and display of art.

 

EMOWAA’s mission, according to its corporate profile, is to support West African heritage and culture as well as to empower contemporary creatives. EMOWAA intends to do this by providing infrastructure, research and education as well as capacity building opportunities for scholars and creative professionals across West Africa.

 

This first building under construction will provide modern research facilities for artists and academics from across West Africa, and Archaeological and Material Lab. This 4000 sqm facility will provide the digital equipment and facilities to support the storage and study of West Africa’s unique cultural knowledge base and bring to life our imagined futures into 2D/3d reality for global access and engagement.

 

With a major focus on learning and artistic and academic engagement, the Pavilion will house a visitor centre for engaging the local stakeholders through ongoing initiatives and programming. At the heart of these initiatives is a commitment to redefine how research, archives and collections are engaged with, challenging notions of expertise and exclusivity.

An example of one of these programmes launched recently is the Open Learning initiative developed in partnership with the Open Society Foundation in Africa.  The initiative has engaged over 520 students in Benin City, Edo State discussing with them about the rich cultural history of West Africa as well as potential career opportunities within the heritage management and arts.

As well as building the Pavilion, the EMOWAA Trust will serve as facilitator and platform- supporting and maintaining part of a planned cultural district in the heart of Benin City.  The creative district will collaborate with, and boost the success of all existing and planned cultural institutions in Benin City including the future Royal Benin Museum and the existing NCMM museum by facilitating a thriving creative hub and tourism destination in Edo State.

 

By working in collaboration with other museums, educational and cultural institutions and foundations across the world, EMOWAA intends to foster long term partnerships that foster a supportive platform for the creative sector and enhance the vibrant contemporary arts scene in West Africa.  “It is incredibly important that our work supports young creatives, hence our focus also on contemporary and modern art and the recent appointments in this area,” concluded Mr. Ihenacho.

 

 

 

Note to Editors

 

The EMOWAA Trust was established in 2019 as a not-for-profit foundation/trust incorporated as a company limited by guarantee (like many educational and not-for-profit organisations in Nigeria). It is the promoter of the planned Edo Museum for West African Arts (EMOWAA) complex. The Creative District and Pavilion Building which is now under construction has been a result of a collaboration of architects lead by Sir David Adjaye OBE whose other projects include the National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC), a Smithsonian Institution Museum, amongst others.

 

When operational, the EMOWAA complex will collect, preserve, and display works from the artistic heritage of West Africa It will also provide infrastructure, research and education as well as capacity building opportunities for scholars and creative professionals across West Africa.

 

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