Nigerian Modernism runs at the Tate Modern from Wednesday until 10 May next year, and hopes to illuminate a movement that has long been underrepresented on the global stage.
By Wedaeli Chibelushi

Uzo Egonu’s Stateless People an artist with beret (1981)… The estate of Uzo Egonu
This is “one of the greatest things to have happened, not only to my art, but to Nigerian artwork”, 93-year-old painter and sculptor Bruce Onobrakpeya says as he looks around the rooms at the Tate Modern, one of London’s premier galleries.
“The collection is fantastic and it brings back a lot of memories going back 50, 60, 70 years.”
Onobrakpeya is among more than 50 artists whose work is going on show at the gallery on the south bank of the Thames as part of Nigerian Modernism, an ambitious presentation that spans a period from 1910 to the 1990s.
Bruce Onobrakpeya’s The Last Supper (1981)







