UI Postgraduate College

TRANSPORTATION CHAOS ON LAGOS STREETS IN SELECTED WORKS OF LAGOS BASED VISUAL ARTISTS

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dc.contributor.author AYEYEMI, Emmanuel Kolade
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-24T07:43:29Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-24T07:43:29Z
dc.date.issued 2023-07
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1907
dc.description.abstract Traffic gridlock is one of the features that define urbanism and complex spatial configuration of the Lagos metropolis. Existing visual anthropological studies on urban transportation system have focused on visual analytic approaches to the visual accounts of travellers, and slogans printed on cars, buses and trucks, particularly commercial vehicles. However, little attention has been paid to the diverse ways’ transportation disorder is represented in artistic works. This study, therefore, was designed to explore the representation of transportation chaos on Lagos roads in the paintings of selected Lagos based-visual artists, with a view to providing an interpretive schema of the selected works. Douglas Kiel and Euel Elliott’s Theory of Chaos, which states that instability and disorder were essential to the evolution of complexity in the universe, was adopted as the framework. The interpretive design was used. Sixteen paintings were purposively sampled for thematic affinity, narrative and symbolic contents. They are Olokada, Keke Marwa, The New Order, and BRT Lane by Festus Adeyemi; Old Oshodi, After the Rain, Rail line Market, and At the River Side by Bolaji Ogunwo; Idumota, Morning Rush, A Place I used to Know I, and A Place I used to Know II by Ishola Matthew, Closing Time at Idumota, Before the Closing Hour, Busy Bus Stop, and Rush Hour in Lagos Island by Dolapo Ogunnusi. The paintings were subjected to visual analysis. Festus Adeyemi’s paintings, stylistically adopted the use of lines in creating forms to depict the chaos associated with Okada and Marwa riders on Lagos streets. Olokada and Keke Marwa depicted the disorder and confusion that pervaded the urban transportation system, while New Order and BRT Lane indicated orderliness. Bolaji Ogunwo, used textured surface of the canvas to showcase the chaotic experiences in the old Oshodi and other areas in Lagos with clumsy driving activities. The shades of colours authenticate the colour value in the works: After the rain and Rail line market. Ishola Matthew creatively used very warm colour of blue and purple to demonstrate the chaos on the streets of Lagos with combinations of light and dark symbolising struggling and perpetual movement of vehicles in Lagos city. Unstable forms and patterns, with heavy painting strokes in Idumota and A Place I Used to Know described not just the population challenges in Lagos, but also the urban decline that had resulted from transportation pressure. Dolapo Ogunnusi’s paintings actualised the complication in urban Lagos transportation with vivid expression to the impatience of drivers and other road users, which resulted in traffic gridlocks by structuring the forms and contents to express Lagos transportation chaos. The theme of periodicity of chaos was well elaborated in all the paintings where overlapping yellow buses conveyed the vivid image of gridlock. Transportation chaos on Lagos roads, and the values, which visual artists have generated through paintings, represent instability and disorderliness in the urban public space. The selected paintings were stylistic pieces embedded with artistic impression of reality. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Visual artists, Paintings of transportation chaos, Traffic gridlocks en_US
dc.title TRANSPORTATION CHAOS ON LAGOS STREETS IN SELECTED WORKS OF LAGOS BASED VISUAL ARTISTS en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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