Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka was 90 in July, and in honour of his legacy, the Committee for Relevant Art, CORA, staged a month long event at the Freedom Park Lagos, and virtually, which featured readings from, and conversations around four of his memoirs, as well as three exhibition projects, including the conceptual interpretation of aspects from his prison memoirs, The Man Died, as curated by the historian, archivist, Oludamola Adebowale of ASIRI Magazine. The Man Died has inspired a recent film, by the same title, directed by Awam Amkpa, and produced by Femi Odugbemi for Zuri24 Media.
The four memoirs through which the Nobel laureate has documented the story of his eventful life and partly his illustrious career as a literary artist and social/human rights activist will also form the fulcrum of The Soyinka90Session @LABAF 26.0 to be staged Monday November 11-14 by members of the CORA Youth Creative Club, CYCC.
Tagged, Conversation between Soyinka and the Younger Generation, the four-day celebration, is to enable a cross-generational conversation between Soyinka and the youths, many of whom may not have been privileged to encounter the story of Africa’s most garlanded literary son.
About 60 youths, mostly undergraduates will gather everyday Monday November 11-Thursday 14 — to read and discuss contents of the memoirs:
- AKE: The years of childhood
- ISARA: A Voyage around SA
- IBADAN: The Penkelemes Years
- YOU MUST SET FORTH AT DAWN
The pilot scheme of the programme, titled #TheKONGI90Season, held every Saturday in July – the birth month, has inspired the #TheSOYINKA90Session at the LABAF. Reports from the pilot scheme were “remarkable and impactful” with the young participants, who asked for a repeat of the experience so they could further probe into the memoirs, and spread words about the Nobel laureate’s career as a public intellectual and activist.”
The daily readings and conversations will also feature at least three exhibitions around the life and career of Soyinka. These will include: exhibitions of his
- Publications – 90 covers of his books and monographs
- Photographs over the years from cradle to adulthood
- The Man Died – a conceptual exhibition of his prison memoirs by same title.
The idea is to convert the entire Freedom Park arena – a former colonial prison – to a site-specific celebration space to commemorate the distinguished life and illustrious career of the enigmatic Wole Soyinka.