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Adebisi Akanji

2015

Adunni Olorisha Trust / Adunni Osun Foundation

Adunni Olorisha Trust / Adunni Osun Foundation
Osogbo, Nigeria

Adebisi Akanji is one of the leading figures of the New Sacred Art Movement founded by Susanne Wenger in Osogbo in the sixties. Akanji had been trained as a young man to fashion cement decorations for the elaborate 'Brazilian' baroque building style. He participated in art workshops run by Susanne Wenger, Ulli Beier and Georgina Beier in the early 1960s and showed enormous interest and talent in this new direction. Wenger took Akanji under her wing, and he joined her in creating the monumental sculptures standing in the Osun Grove to this day.
Working with Wenger over several decades allowed the former bricklayer to develop his incredible artistic talent to a very high level, while he also helped her refine her technique in working with cement.
Wenger described their process thus: "I give Adebisi the story, the association he needs. With my hands I express the forms. I never draw a plan. Adebisi then portrays my gestures with the wall and pillars he raises in red mud and cement. I let him work for some hours by himself. Often his work expresses exactly what I have in mind. Sometimes I tell him we must start again. This never upsets him. He is always ready to listen again. He always comes back with new enthusiasm." (The Return of the Gods; Ulli Beier; p.92.)
In addition to the works the Grove, Adebisi Akanji has applied his considerable talent to batiks, sensitive drawings in pen and ink and paintings. Significantly, he developed the talent of his son, Nurudeen, who shares his father’s artistic abilities.

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  • Title: Adebisi Akanji
  • Date Created: 2015
  • Location Created: The Sacred Ọ̀ṣun Groves, Òṣogbo, Nigeria
  • Photographer: Adolphus Opara
  • Date of photography: 2015
Adunni Olorisha Trust / Adunni Osun Foundation

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