The exhibition, titled “Delta Bush Refineries and Other Stories” by
Akintunde Akinleye is a collection of life in the Delta. It shed lights into
the activities of the people involved in the vandalization of oil pipeline and
asks the fundamental question, ‘why are they doing it?
The theory of art as expression
seems to be the fundamental concetto of execution in the exhibited works of
Akintunde Akinleye. The works clarified and refined the ideas and feelings that
are shared with the spectator and bluntly tell them the secrets of their own
hearts. He did not set out to criminalize the youths who are engaged in the oil
bunkering but to bring Nigeria’s inability to address corruption to the
limelight. He is concerned about being socially responsible to tell the stories
of burning issues in the country.
It is a known fact that Nigeria
is endowed with enormous natural resources and crude oil has arguably been a
sustaining factor for the country since its discovery in the village of
Oloibiri, Bayelsa State in 1956. It has contributed to the development, growth
and domestic violence that have left unforgettable scars in the country.
Uncountable lives have gone beyond the Aegean in the course of protecting,
vandalizing and inoculating crude oil in the country. These are the results of
the misappropriation of oil proceeds which threatens the country’s peace.
The expectation of the Delta
people was raised at the discovery of this rare commodity. They were promised
that the region will experience accelerated growth, infrastructural
development, and stabilized economy but the reverse is the case as the elites
and the political class carts away the proceeds from oil to acquire material
assets for themselves at the expense of the nation’s collective
development.Ironically, these political class hides under the cloak of
unemployed youths to drain the country of her natural wealth. These were
captured in the photographs of Akintunde Akinleye.
Crude oil, has given the country
a stable position in the global scene and the poverty level of the country is
still nothing to write home about. How do we classify a country whose policies
do not favour the masses?Instead of the country to develop policies that would
alleviate the level of poverty in the country, they develop policies that
criminalize zealous youths who have neglected their various certificates for
menial jobs that sustain them.
Akinleye used this arena to
penetrate into the oil-infected activities of the Delta and the politics of oil
that has expanded the leaking hole of the country’s political bowl.
Nevertheless, the country pours more money into the begging bowl which leaks
into the confines of the political class and the masses are curious to see the
leakages. They want to see facts that challenge cynicism and tell the people
what is effective and what is not. Facts like people want to be free and when
they are free, liberty is usually around the corner.
Thrilled with the works of
Akintunde Akinleye, the Curator of the exhibition, Oliver Enwonwu said“he is an
artist we are very proud of and he is an award winning artist. He has won a
major prize as the World Press Photographer. Showing his works here today is
something that gives us a tremendous pride because not only are the works
aesthetically pleasing but they tackle an issue in the society. You can see
what he is doing with raising awareness of the plight of the people of Niger
Delta. The fact that they do not have an arable land, the fact that their
waters are oil infected, the fact that the indigenous oil companies there are
not doing much to alleviate poverty. These are things that Akintunde has
brought to the fore and that is one of the major functions of art. Art should
critique the society and should bring unnoticed things to the public. He has
not only woven an aesthetic story but talks about major issues that affect
every Nigerian."
Crucially, if the proceeds from
crude oil are wisely spent, there will be debt cancellation, a tripling of
aid and an increase in foreign direct investment which will unlock a whopping
amount of domestic resources and double education complete rates in Nigeria.
This can only be done through the use of the only vaccine for corruption;
transparency. This sets an open battle between the people and the government.
And if the battle continues, the people will win. As Wael Ghonim said, “we are
going to win because we do not understand politics. We are going to win because
we do not play their dirty games. We are going to win because we do not have a
party political agenda. We are going to win because the tears that come from
our eyes actually come from our hearts. We are going to win because the power
in people is much stronger than the people in power.”
Award winning documentary
photographer, Akintunde Akinleye held his exhibition at the Omenka Gallery from
the 17th -31st December 2016. It was a platform that
generated an ambience for societal reflection and took the audience into a
realm that is often intentionally ignored.
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