CCA
Archives and Memories | A Group Exhibition
Archives and Memories | A Group Exhibition
Archives and Memories | A Group Exhibition
CCA Lagos reopens with Archives and Memories since its closure in 2022, a heartfelt tribute to Bisi Silva’s lasting impact on contemporary African art. Curated by Favour Ritaro, the exhibition showcases works by six Nigerian artists alongside selections from Silva’s curatorial archive. This exhibition features the work of six Nigerian artists: Ndidi Dike, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, Odun Orimolade, Ngozi-Omeje Ezema, Taiye Idahor, and Wura-Natasha Ogunji. Centred on the curatorial archives of the late Bisi Silva, founding director of the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Archives and Memories interrogates the interplay of personal and collective memory. Through archival materials, personal histories, and artworks, the exhibition examines how memory is revisited, reconstructed, and transformed.
CCA Lagos reopens with Archives and Memories since its closure in 2022, a heartfelt tribute to Bisi Silva’s lasting impact on contemporary African art. Curated by Favour Ritaro, the exhibition showcases works by six Nigerian artists alongside selections from Silva’s curatorial archive. This exhibition features the work of six Nigerian artists: Ndidi Dike, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, Odun Orimolade, Ngozi-Omeje Ezema, Taiye Idahor, and Wura-Natasha Ogunji. Centred on the curatorial archives of the late Bisi Silva, founding director of the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Archives and Memories interrogates the interplay of personal and collective memory. Through archival materials, personal histories, and artworks, the exhibition examines how memory is revisited, reconstructed, and transformed.
CCA Lagos reopens with Archives and Memories since its closure in 2022, a heartfelt tribute to Bisi Silva’s lasting impact on contemporary African art. Curated by Favour Ritaro, the exhibition showcases works by six Nigerian artists alongside selections from Silva’s curatorial archive. This exhibition features the work of six Nigerian artists: Ndidi Dike, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, Odun Orimolade, Ngozi-Omeje Ezema, Taiye Idahor, and Wura-Natasha Ogunji. Centred on the curatorial archives of the late Bisi Silva, founding director of the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Archives and Memories interrogates the interplay of personal and collective memory. Through archival materials, personal histories, and artworks, the exhibition examines how memory is revisited, reconstructed, and transformed.
CCA Lagos reopens with Archives and Memories since its closure in 2022, a heartfelt tribute to Bisi Silva’s lasting impact on contemporary African art. Curated by Favour Ritaro, the exhibition showcases works by six Nigerian artists alongside selections from Silva’s curatorial archive. This exhibition features the work of six Nigerian artists: Ndidi Dike, Temitayo Ogunbiyi, Odun Orimolade, Ngozi-Omeje Ezema, Taiye Idahor, and Wura-Natasha Ogunji. Centred on the curatorial archives of the late Bisi Silva, founding director of the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, Archives and Memories interrogates the interplay of personal and collective memory. Through archival materials, personal histories, and artworks, the exhibition examines how memory is revisited, reconstructed, and transformed.






Archives and Memories | A Group Exhibition
Archives and Memories | A Group Exhibition
Revisiting the late Bisi Silva’s curatorial projects from 2008 to 2018 at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, the exhibition foregrounds the passage of time, exploring how time transforms archival records, artistic works, and memory itself. Often, the time gaps between when events occur, when they were documented, and how they are later remembered shape both the authenticity and interpretation of archives, influencing how history is constructed. Rather than viewing these temporal distances as mere obstacles to historical accuracy, Archives and Memories positions the passage of time itself as a critical tool for examining archival credibility. As time progresses, it not only reveals the biases and omissions inherent in archival records but also provides new perspectives and contexts through which to evaluate both the archives themselves and the memories they preserve. The shifting perspectives through time allow us to understand archives not as fixed repositories of truth but as dynamic entities whose meanings evolve. The participating artists engage with the past, recontextualising it within the present. Through diverse mediums, including drawings, paintings, sculptures, ceramics, installations, and mixed media, they collectively challenge conventional approaches to archiving and memory-making. Drawing from personal experiences, archival materials, and broader historical contexts, their works create layered interpretations that invite reflection and dialogue. By re-presenting these works, the artists uncover traces of transformation, erasure, and reinterpretation, giving them fresh relevance.
Revisiting the late Bisi Silva’s curatorial projects from 2008 to 2018 at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, the exhibition foregrounds the passage of time, exploring how time transforms archival records, artistic works, and memory itself. Often, the time gaps between when events occur, when they were documented, and how they are later remembered shape both the authenticity and interpretation of archives, influencing how history is constructed. Rather than viewing these temporal distances as mere obstacles to historical accuracy, Archives and Memories positions the passage of time itself as a critical tool for examining archival credibility. As time progresses, it not only reveals the biases and omissions inherent in archival records but also provides new perspectives and contexts through which to evaluate both the archives themselves and the memories they preserve. The shifting perspectives through time allow us to understand archives not as fixed repositories of truth but as dynamic entities whose meanings evolve. The participating artists engage with the past, recontextualising it within the present. Through diverse mediums, including drawings, paintings, sculptures, ceramics, installations, and mixed media, they collectively challenge conventional approaches to archiving and memory-making. Drawing from personal experiences, archival materials, and broader historical contexts, their works create layered interpretations that invite reflection and dialogue. By re-presenting these works, the artists uncover traces of transformation, erasure, and reinterpretation, giving them fresh relevance.
Revisiting the late Bisi Silva’s curatorial projects from 2008 to 2018 at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Lagos, the exhibition foregrounds the passage of time, exploring how time transforms archival records, artistic works, and memory itself. Often, the time gaps between when events occur, when they were documented, and how they are later remembered shape both the authenticity and interpretation of archives, influencing how history is constructed. Rather than viewing these temporal distances as mere obstacles to historical accuracy, Archives and Memories positions the passage of time itself as a critical tool for examining archival credibility. As time progresses, it not only reveals the biases and omissions inherent in archival records but also provides new perspectives and contexts through which to evaluate both the archives themselves and the memories they preserve. The shifting perspectives through time allow us to understand archives not as fixed repositories of truth but as dynamic entities whose meanings evolve. The participating artists engage with the past, recontextualising it within the present. Through diverse mediums, including drawings, paintings, sculptures, ceramics, installations, and mixed media, they collectively challenge conventional approaches to archiving and memory-making. Drawing from personal experiences, archival materials, and broader historical contexts, their works create layered interpretations that invite reflection and dialogue. By re-presenting these works, the artists uncover traces of transformation, erasure, and reinterpretation, giving them fresh relevance.
The Centre for Contemporary Art,-CCA, Lagos is an independent non-profit making visual art organization founded in December 2007 by Bisi Silva (1962 – 2019). The centre provides a platform for the development, presentation, and discussion of contemporary visual art and culture. It seeks to create new audiences and to prioritise media such as photography, film and video, performance and installation art which have been under-represented in Nigeria.
The Centre for Contemporary Art,-CCA, Lagos is an independent non-profit making visual art organization founded in December 2007 by Bisi Silva (1962 – 2019). The centre provides a platform for the development, presentation, and discussion of contemporary visual art and culture. It seeks to create new audiences and to prioritise media such as photography, film and video, performance and installation art which have been under-represented in Nigeria.
The Centre for Contemporary Art,-CCA, Lagos is an independent non-profit making visual art organization founded in December 2007 by Bisi Silva (1962 – 2019). The centre provides a platform for the development, presentation, and discussion of contemporary visual art and culture. It seeks to create new audiences and to prioritise media such as photography, film and video, performance and installation art which have been under-represented in Nigeria.
The Centre for Contemporary Art,-CCA, Lagos is an independent non-profit making visual art organization founded in December 2007 by Bisi Silva (1962 – 2019). The centre provides a platform for the development, presentation, and discussion of contemporary visual art and culture. It seeks to create new audiences and to prioritise media such as photography, film and video, performance and installation art which have been under-represented in Nigeria.
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Memory is not static. It is tactile, layered, and ever-shifting; etched into the surfaces of our lives through material, texture, and form. Material Memory brings together the works of Anthony Azekwoh, Gbemileke Adekunle, and Saheed Adelakun, three artists who engage deeply with the physicality of memory, using material as both a medium and a metaphor for personal and collective histories.
Memory is not static. It is tactile, layered, and ever-shifting; etched into the surfaces of our lives through material, texture, and form. Material Memory brings together the works of Anthony Azekwoh, Gbemileke Adekunle, and Saheed Adelakun, three artists who engage deeply with the physicality of memory, using material as both a medium and a metaphor for personal and collective histories.