Olu oguibe biography
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Olu Oguibe
Olu Oguibe (1964, Aba) is an artist, theorist and curator whose work engages with labour. The former Professor of Art and African American Studies at the University of Connecticut and senior fellow at the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at the New School, New York and Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC has played a significant role in postcolonial theory and the history of non-Western contemporary art studies.
His art has been shown in numerous institutions internationally and his monumental public sculpture, Monument to Strangers and Refugees for documenta 14 won the Arnold Bode Prize in 2017. He has also curated and advised for exhibitions and biennials and his theoretical writings have appeared in key volumes including Theory in Contemporary Art:
From 1985 to the Present (2012), journals such as Texte zur Kunst and his own books such as Reading the Contemporary: African Art from Theory to the Marketplace (2000) and The Culture Game (2004). He has published several volumes including I’m Bound to this Land by Blood (2013).
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Ben Uri Research Unit
Born:1964 Aba, Nigeria
Year of Migration to the UK:1989
Biography
Artist, art historian and curator Olu Oguibe was born in the Igbo city of Aba, Nigeria on 14 October 1964. His first experiences of art came from his father, a preacher, school teacher, wood sculptor and sign painter. However, his childhood was disrupted by the Nigerian-Biafran Civil War of 1967-70. Oguibe then attended the University of Nigeria between 1981-86, receiving a BA in Fine and Applied Arts, graduating summa cum laude and valedictorian. 1983-95 he served as Secretary-General of the University of Nigeria’s Student Union. In 1989 he immigrated to London to undertake postgraduate studies, gaining a PhD in Art History from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London in 1992. His doctoral thesis was published as Uzo Egonu: An African Artist in the West in 1995. Oguibe was inspired by the Black Arts Movement between 1965-75 and the cultural changes impacting practising black artists by the 1990s, also creating artworks influenced by his personal experiences alongside his academic research. After his doctoral studies, Oguibe taught African Literature at SOAS and Critical Theory in the Visual Arts at Goldsmiths, University of London before relocat