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Monday, 17 September 2012

The Artist of our Time..... Nnenna Okore

The talented Nigerian artist, whose works have made an impact in the world of art and design...

 

Nnenna Okore is an Associate Professor and former chair of the Art Department at North Park University, Chicago, where she teaches Sculpture.
She earned her B.A degree in Painting from the University of Nigeria (First Class Honors) in 1999, and an M.A and M.F.A. in Sculpture from the University of Iowa in 2004 and 2005.
She has received several national and international awards and been shown in numerous prestigious galleries and museums within and outside the United States.

Mbembe by Nnenna Okore

Egwuukwu by Nnenna Okore

Igba nkwu by Nnenna Okore

Nnenna Okore ..Earthbound

Twistedambience by Nnenna Okore
 
As a recipient of the 2012/13 Fulbright Scholar Award, she will be spending a year in Nigeria teaching and creating new artworks.

She is a renowned name for her unique way of turning our everyday waste into something that can only be described as epitome of creativity. Having been raised in Nsukka, a city in eastern Nigerian, Nnenna has used her experiences and understanding of her culture to tell stories that only words could not have told. Her works are highlights of her perception of texture, undulating contours and movements that exist within our ephemeral world; and she aims to evoke some reflection about how we can better preserve and care for our earthbound surroundings.

Tune in for more works from Nnenna, as she speaks to C. Hub magazine exclusively of her life as an artist coming up in the next issue of C. Hub magazine out December 1st.





Source: C Hub

Sunday, 16 September 2012

Up-Close And Personal With Nollywood Actor, Ejike Asiegbu...My Wife Saved Me From A Plane Crash

 
He is a Nollywood actor and was a former president of the Actors Guild of Nigeria. In this interview, the actor and his wife, Ogechi, narrate their love story and almost 16 years marriage
 
How long have you been married?
Ejike: 15 going on to 16 years.
 
How did you meet your wife?
Ejike: I met her in Port Harcourt where I went to shoot a movie, ‘Pregnant Virgin’. It was a point in my life when I wanted to settle down and I had asked God to show me my wife. I remember vividly I was even fasting.I just finished my meal and she crossed to my side of the road. I spoke to her and realised that she was part of the cast.
 
So you went after her?
Ejike: I did and it was not easy. I tried to get through other people but it did not work until I took the bull by the horns. To cut the long story short, we became friends and started talking.
 
What were those things you saw in her that pushed to grab her?
Ejike: I told God that as an entertainer, he should give me a woman that would love me, tolerate me as a man, understand and persevere with me in my growth in life. Also, there was one significant thing that happened. It was going to be my birthday and I had to travel back to be with my sisters, who had made plans to host a party for me. I was to fly ADC. As my fiancĂ©e then, she had insisted that if I loved her, I should cancel my trip and celebrate my birthday with her. Reluctantly, I did. But you won’t believe that the plane I was supposed to have flown crashed. That was the ADC plane that crashed in Ejirin on November 7, 1996. That was how she saved my life. I did not need to be convinced any further that she was for me. At that point I did not waste any more time. I went straight to my father and told him I had found a wife.
 
Did you entertain any fears about getting married to someone in the movie industry?
Ogechi: Definitely I did. With what I saw on the screen then, I had serious fears but all that became history. For the one year we dated, I used to go on location with him and that way I was able to familiarise myself with how things work on set. Obviously, I have outgrown whatever fears I had.
 
Was there a formal proposal?
Ogechi: There was nothing like that. From the moment we met and became friends, he had always talked about marriage. Also, meeting his family hastened a lot of things because they all fell in love with me.
 
Fifteen years of marriage, how has the journey been?
Ejike: It has been wonderful. I must say that I am a lucky man in the sense that everything I wanted in a woman, my wife possesses it and more, she is a good manager of resources. I can trust her to pull off anything even if I were not there. I can leave the running of the home to her and go to sleep. If you notice, I go everywhere with my wife because I am proud of her.
 
There must have been some challenges…
Ejike: When we decided to get married, we promised to make it work at all cost. I think one of the challenges we have is that she tells me certain things and I don’t listen because I want to do it my way. Sometimes, I just do things without telling her and when per chance it boomerangs, I now go back to her. The good thing is, she does not turn me back. I get a very warm embrace and a listening ear. We have our little arguments here and there, but you don’t read about them on the pages of newspapers because we are a mature couple.
 
So, who is the first to apologise when you quarrels?
Ogechi: It’s my husband; you know how we women like to pose. Sometimes, when we have not argued for a long time, I just look for a way to bring up an argument so that he can beg me. He just laughs over it because he understands me very well.
 
What do you do when it’s just the two of you?
Ogechi: We have four children and and with my niece make five. So we are busy with them all through the week. We do not joke with our weekends. Even when he can’t come along, I hang out with my friends and he comes to pick me wherever I am.
Ejike: We got married on February 13. It is a must that we spend Valentine’s Day together because it’s a day after our wedding anniversary. We deliberately chose that day because we wanted to celebrate love.
 
Is she also in charge of your wardrobe?
Ejike: Oh yes, she is. She shops for me and chooses what I wear daily. When I am stubborn sometimes, she refrains from choosing my clothes. She knows that I like to dress simple.
 
Are there times you wished he were not a public figure?
Ogechi: Maybe in the early days of our marriage when I had to do certain things alone because of his very tight schedule. Now, my children are grown up and they are a handful, so I don’t feel it again.

Is there anything you would like to change about your husband?
Ogechi: He is too trusting and people exploit that aspect of him. He easily believes people and when I try to dissuade him, he does not listen until everything falls apart.
 
Do you have pet names for each other?
Ogechi: He has always called me mummy because of my organisational skills and I call him honey.
 
What are the secrets of a successful union?
Ejike: Trust is very essential. You have to learn to be tolerant because marriage is about tolerance. You must humble yourself before your wife and believe in the adage, do unto others as you want others to do unto you. Marriage is beyond ego keeping or chauvinism, your wife is your better half. So, whatever you do, put her in mind, most especially because you are from two different backgrounds. A man must learn to forgive. It is not everything a woman says that you give respond to. My wife is hot-tempered and there are times she would bombard me with text messages. In those days, I would get mad and would reply her, she would text back again and the circle will continue like that. Later, I learnt to just ignore her. When she sends any nasty text message, I just pretend like nothing happened. When I get home, she would ask if I got her texts, then I would ask her, ‘which text? and just wave it off. She just gets perplexed.
 
Are you from the same state?
Ejike: Yes. We are both from Umuahia, Abia State, but before marriage, she was from Nkwerre in Imo State.
 
 
 
Source: Punch

PHOTOS AND VIDEO: Is Serena Williams Dating Her Tennis Coach?

 
 
Serena Williams has been seen getting up close and personal with her French coach this week in Paris, sparking rumors that the duo may be a couple.
Serena began working with coach Patrick Mouratouglou, who runs a French tennis academy, after her disappointing first round exit at the French Open.
Mouratouglou said last week, "She said, I want to win Wimbledon, I want to start now." Since the two began training together, Serena won Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and took home gold at the Olympics.

 

 


Saturday, 15 September 2012

PHOTOS: Ireland African Music Awards


The IAMA (Ireland African Music Awards) was held in Dublin on the 7th September 2012. An explosive event featuring performances from artistes of various musical genres.

Here are the award recipients and categories:

Best Male Artiste: Sematecino- Gbasibe

Best Rap Artiste: G Tribe

Best Song: The real thing- Rob Kelly & Rebecca Creighton

Best Video: Peace of mind

Best Gospel Female: Victoria Eniola

Best Gospel Male: Tunde Esho

Next Rated: Tejay Tray

Afro Beat: It is allowed- Young Bros

Best Collaboration: Sematecino Feat Kas

Best Event: Oba nla concert

Upcoming Artiste: Shobiz

Producer: Mathman

Director: Joe Chad

Best Dance Group: Raw Edge

Best Group/Duo: Animators

Best DJ: DJ Wax

Entertainment Personality: DJ Mo-K

Best Hot Spot: Sin Nite club


Congratulations from WomenStyles to all the recipients as well as the nominees! Great job! Well done to organizers of the IAMA!!




 
 
 
 










 

 








Film-Maker Linked To Controversial Anti-Islam Movie Questioned By US Police



A film-maker thought to be behind a crude movie that sparked anti-American riots across the Muslim world has been questioned by police in California, as President Barack Obama vowed to bring to justice those responsible for the deaths of four Americans in Libya.

The developments came after days of chaos that has seen numerous attacks on American and other western targets, ranging from US-branded fast food restaurants in Lebanon to a deadly assault on a consulate in Benghazi that killed the US ambassador to Libya and three others. It is not clear if the assassination was directly linked to anger at the film.

The protests, which appeared on Saturday to be subsiding, were galvanised by the emergence of a crude anti-Islam video called Innocence of Muslims that was made in California.

That movie, according to a lengthy trailer which has spread via YouTube, depicts the prophet Muhammad as a murderous child-molester and appears to be deliberately aimed at inflaming Muslim emotions.

Nakoula said in a brief interview outside his home that he considered Islam a cancer and that the film was intended to be a provocative political statement assailing the religion.

Considerable mystery has surrounded the people behind the film. A film-maker from southern California called Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, was interviewed by federal probation officers at a Los Angeles sheriff's station but was not arrested or detained, authorities said earlier today.

According to the Associated Press federal authorities have identified Nakoula, a self-described Coptic Christian, as the key figure behind the movie and identified him to be "Sam Bacile", the man who claimed earlier this week to be writer and producer of the film.

Police officers said Nakoula went voluntarily with them to the police station and they were investigating to see if he had breached the term of a parole he is serving after being convicted of fraud charges.

A probation order authorized in June 2010 warned Nakoula against using false identities.

US officials, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, have condemned the movie's content as an attempt to denigrate an entire faith.

But the statements have done little to dampen the wave of protests and riots. Over the past few days demonstrations have been reported in Iraq, Iran, Bahrain, Afghanistan, Yemen, Egypt, Jerusalem and the West Bank, Kashmir, Malaysia, Indonesia and Nigeria.

In Tunisia, protesters targeted the US embassy and burned down an American school in the capital, Tunis, and in Sudan, mobs torched the German embassy and targeted other western diplomatic outposts.

Days of rioting across cities in North Africa and the Middle East appeared to give way to calmer scenes on Saturday.

Meanwhile in the US, the fallout from the film, and the violent unrest overseas continued.

The death of US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, has shocked the American political establishment and created a serious foreign policy row in the middle of the hotly contested American presidential election.

Using hardline language, Obama promised in his weekly radio address Saturday that the attackers would be brought to justice.

"As we mourn their loss, we must also send a clear and resolute message to the world: those who attack our people will find no escape from justice. We will not waver in their pursuit. And we will never allow anyone to shake the resolve of the United States of America," Obama said.

Obama, however, also joined the chorus of condemnation of the film's content.

"I have made it clear that the United States has a profound respect for people of all faiths. We stand for religious freedom. And we reject the denigration of any religion – including Islam," he said.

The film was apparently made using actors who have said they had no idea they were making an anti-Islam film.

The offensive language about Muhammad was dubbed in later.

A 14-minute clip of the film appeared on YouTube in July but only began to generate widespread anger this week, when it was promoted by radical Islamophobic Christians in the US and then broadcast in Egypt by Islamic activists.

Nakoula appears to have a criminal record. He was arrested in June 2009, pleaded no contest to bank fraud charges a year later and was released from federal prison in June 2011 after serving a 21-month prison term, according to federal records.

In a 2010 hearing in that case prosecutors sought a longer prison term and noted that he misused some of his own relatives' identities to open 600 fraudulent credit accounts.

According to court transcripts Nakoula's defence said he only got involved in the scheme after losing his job in the gas station industry and had been forced to work for a few dollars a weekend at swap meets to try to support his children and an ailing father.

Nakoula apologized during the proceedings and his attorney James Henderson Sr said Nakoula had learned his lesson. "He's clearly gotten the message," Henderson said at the time during that court hearing. "I can't imagine him doing anything stupider than he did here."









Source: Guardianuk