A forum designed to bring artistes together
to form a common front that will cut them a better deal
in the front that will cut them a better deal in the next
political dispensation, artistes would rather berate each
other and talk of something else rather than face the issue
at stake.
Probably irked by the total neglect that
has been the lot of the arts and the culture community in
the current dispensation, the Co-ordinators of the Committee
for relevant arts (CORA), Jahman Anikulapo and Toyin Akinoso,
organised the 46th Art Stampede with the theme, 2003 Elections:
What Artistes Demand From the Aspirants?
It was billed to be a timely intervention
to stall the gradual decline of the Nigerian Culture and
its stakeholders in the hands of contemporary politicians.
It was also meant to bring about an interface between the
politicians and the stakeholders ranging from the authors
to the thespians and even the enthusiasts.
While the politicians, except one, expectedly
boycotted the meet, the artistes on hand left much to be
desired regarding their grasp of the issue at stake.
But for the articulate dispositions of
veterans like Gbenga Sonuga of the International Centre
for the Arts, Lagos (ICAL) and Elder Steve Rhodes, both
of whom at one time or the other had been privileged to
serve governments, the meeting could as well have been turned
to a battle field of intellectually bereft ideas that would
rather waste time than address the main points of discussion.
While the anchor, Jahman Anikulapo did
all within his power to bring the stampede back in track,
his power to bring the stampede back in track, it appears,
from the proceedings of the stampede, that there has to
be a serious in house cleaning first, before the artist
can go ahead to present their demands to government.
For Gbenga Sonuga, the artistes can not
go individually to make demands of any government in power
without first, searching its soul, coming together and forming
an intervention group. This group, according to him, must
comprise of all practitioners and it must have the ears
of someone in the corridor of power, preferably the minister
of culture.
Taking it further, Elder Steve Rhodes, who
has given the better part of his life to promoting arts
noted that this intervention group must be a think-tank
that will be brimming with ideas to move the arts forward
and it must be consulted by the government before any decisions
affecting the well being of the culture sector.
While this in itself is desirable, it would
take a minister of culture with an appreciation for the
arts and culture of the people of Nigeria to make it possible
and met a minister who said the best thing to happen to
Nigeria is the crowning of Agbani Darego as Miss World.
Jahman Anikulapo pointed out that the first
demand should be the making of the ministry of culture a
sacrosanct ministry that must be headed by someone from
the culture sector and not a political appointee like it
is presently done.
There was no surprise that this demand had
to come from the anchor himself, who must have wondered
how the significance of holding the stampede under a tree
in front of the dilapidated structure that is meant to be
the National Theater, but whose status is currently debated,
if not outrighhtly unknown.
Oji Onoko, who have had the privilege of
working for the present government as a member of the drafting
committee of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) was
expected to play the devil's advocate when he mounted the
podium, and though he did it in a commendable manner his
emphasis on lack of funds for a committee that was meant
to provide funds for artistes made most of the audience
to want to ask if it was possible to expect anything positive
from the current government in power.
When it was time for the politicians to
unveil what their plans were for the artistes in the next
dispensation, the only politicians on hand, and Lagos State
Gubernatorial Candidate on the platform of the National
Conscience Party (NCP), Lateef Abasi said he was willing
to do all what the artistes have been demanding as arts
and culture are considered to be under education and his
party was giving priority to education in their programmes.
However, even he committed a blunder as
arts and culture is not in any way under education, though
most of the activities are educative and as such easily
Co-opted into school curriculum to enhance the learning
process of school children.
The anchor even went further to elucidate
on how there has been a war on which word takes precedence
in the Ministry of Culture and Tourism as most would still
consider the ministry to be a ministry of tourism than culture
as the whole activity of the incumbent minister culture.
However, no one seem to blame the politicians
for always wanting to see culture as part of another sector
since the practitioners were yet to start taking themselves
serious.
While the stampede was on, it was more
possible to hold water in a basket than it would be possible
to find an artiste on his seat as most of them were more
interested in milling around and discussing in groups rather
than sit and listen as their fortunes and future are being
discussed.
Little wonder all their contributions were
way off the mark of the main theme even, the anchor had
to remind one of them privileged to talk that a certain
issue he raised had been confined to the thrash can of history
and so it should not be resurrected.
It is only baffling that the culture sector
boast of the most intellectual, creative and articulate
personalities in the population and yet it is neglected.
This is an evidence that something is not
right and it is certainly good to hope that the stampede,
irrespective of its shortcomings, is able to stampede the
powers that be into action, for that is the only time its
objectives would have been fulfilled.