#LAGOS
music
Cruel Santino - BEAUTIFUL NOTHING (ft. Gus Dapperton)
Visual world of final heaven. Subaru Boys! Experimental vision of analog and digital vibrations with our amazing team. Experimental reshoots with a use of 6 different cameras, analog screens, 3D transformations, custom 3D frames transformed through reshoots, light layering, printing patterns etc. Huge thanks to Santi for the initiative. Messages through textures and colors. 1-10 - documentation: Mixed media team: Concept: @cruelsantino @savemymind Creative direction: @savemymind @stukovnikov Editing: @stukovnikov @wildkuhn CGI Artists: @wies _boy @razdor.art Analog reshoots: @stukovnikov Mixed Media Artists: @renard oui @po.sox Producer: @sinyusofia Postproduction Producer: @vilchinskii Titles: @wies.

interviews
Dricky | MAFF Tour Lagos (Episode 5)
Episode 5 of MAFF Tour Lagos and we catch up with Dricky, a self-taught graffiti artist responsible for bringing street art to the city. He started by drawing portraits of friends and found his aesthetic by exaggerating their facial features with each new pass. "It is your world. You have the freedom to create a world for yourself, so why not do that?"
interviews
Etuk Ubong | MAFF Tour Lagos (Episode 4)
On the days it’s hard to wake up in the mornings - think of Etuk jamming out on the trumpet, playing music for the pure love of it. Now known as “The Voice of Africa” it was Ubong’s mum who helped him get his start. She took him to the church’s trumpet player and said, “This is my son, I need you to teach him the trumpet.” Since then, he’s never looked back. Etuk Ubong is a trumpeter, composer, bandleader on Episode 4 of MAFF Tour Lagos, Nigeria.
interviews
Ashley Okoli | MAFF Tour Lagos (Episode 3)
When you think of Lagos fashion, think Ashley Okoli. The self-made stylist, designer and creative director made her own path, never assimilating to more conservative Nigerian fashion norms. Okoli introduced a more grunge and gothic style, sharing her outfits of the day on Instagram back in 2016. Despite early naysayers, Okoli pushed through, and was a heavyhitter in the alté fashion movement which lead her to dress the likes of name like Little Simz, Obongjayar, and Arya Starr, to name a few. In short, Ashley's a risk taker and paved her own path for a scene that didn't exist.
interviews
Stephen Tayo | MAFF Tour Lagos (Episode 2)
Stephen Tayo got his start taking photos of people on the streets of Lagos, Nigeria. His photography documents the eccentric characters that make up the city and the fashion they wear. From traditional clothing to hyperlocal streetwear, Tayo captures it all, enhancing the beauty of the juxtaposition of styles covering the cultural renaissance of one of the most prominent cities in West Africa. In this season of MAFF Tour, our travels take us to Lagos, Nigeria to catch up with a few incredibly talented creatives who give us a glimpse into their practice and culture.
fashion
Lagos Space Programme - Aṣọ Fashion as Visual Oríkì
“Aṣọ (Dress) can be conceived as a visual form of oríkì, as the arrangement of patterns, colours, shapes, and textures on a figure can cohere into a powerful gestalt form–a ‘look’ –that is able to trigger an affective response in the perceiver. The Yoruba terms, ojú-inú (inner eye) and oju-ọnà (design consciousness) respectively refer to the intuitive and technical capacities required by an artist to engineer a visual or verbal oríkì that speaks to the subject’s ìwà, and in doing so releases àṣẹ. Ẹwà, meaning beauty, is the result of a work of art that realizes the art object’s essential nature, its inner character, its ìwà. Accordingly, aesthetic beauty cannot exist separately from a deeper ethical truth–a position that refutes dominant Eurocentric framings of aesthetics. The Lagos Space Programme conceives of clothing as oríkì, combining physical matter (colour and sound), non-physical matter (àṣẹ), and aesthetics (poeticism, rhythm, and proportion) to form resplendent pieces that reflect the ìwà of its wearers”. Text by Kojo Abudu, Five Theses on Lagos Space Programme Model: @michael.samuel_ , @90smodelmgmt
interviews
Sheila Chukwulozie | MAFF Tour Lagos (Episode 1)
Our travels take us to Lagos, Nigeria, where we catch up with performance artist, Sheila Chukwulozie. Sheila is a performance artist whose work spans across dance to filmmaking and writing. Sheila's creative outputs are deeply rooted in a spiritual foundation, attuned to the emotions within and around her. Her work has been shown across Nigeria, Ghana, England, Germany, South Africa, Czech Republic and USA. She has worked both on and off screen for art films, music videos and other moving image productions. From August 2017- August 2018, she travelled as a Thomas J Watson fellow studying with traditional mask makers and cloth weavers in eight African countries. Her installation at the Johannesburg Art Fair “Thanks Xenophobia” has been reviewed by Artnet, Frieze, Financial Times and other leading media houses. Her performance as the lead character in the film “Egungun” (dir. by Olive Nwosu) has been nominated for awards at the British Film Institute, TIFF International film festival, Aspen film festival and Sundance.
art
TWENTY THREE
Vimeo
; A visual representation of my state of mind at age 23.