L-R:  Robin Sohdi, Lufthansa Regional Manager Sales, Friederike Möschel, Director Goethe-Institut Nigeria, Monsuru Alashe, Nigerian artist, Gabriel Goller, German artist, Emeka Udemba, curator of the ‘Stretched Terrains’ art project before departure of the Molue Mobile Museum road trip with resident artists to DaK’Art in Senegal, one of the continent’s most important biennals for contemporary African art at the Goethe Institute in Lagos on Monday.

 

 

By Sade Williams

 

Lufthansa and Brussels Airlines are supporting “Stretched Terrains – The Mobile Museum on its Way to Dak’Art”, a residency program for young artists from Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Senegal and Germany on the move spanning several countries in West Africa.

 

“’Stretched Terrains’ is a great platform to show the strengths of Lufthansa and Brussels Airlines in West Africa working closely together and supporting the development of young African talents”, says Robin Sohdi, Lufthansa General Manager Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea.

 

On April 11, 2018, starting from Lagos, the artist group will begin a six-week journey with a Lufthansa and Brussels Airlines branded, converted public transport bus, called the Molue Mobile Museum of Contemporary Art. They will cross through Benin, Togo, Ghana, the Ivory Coast and Mali, with a planned arrival in Dakar, Senegal at the beginning of May, right in time for the opening of the13th International Biennial Dak’Art” exhibition.

 

 

The artists will be greeted at every stop by the Lufthansa, Brussels Airlines and Goethe-Institut teams. Furthermore, they will display their artwork at each destination they stop at. Once they reach Senegal, the artists will stay for the Dak’Art” exhibition until May 07, when they will start their journey back to Lagos.

L-R: Emeka Udemba, curator of the ‘Stretched Terrains’ art project, Friederike Möschel, Director Goethe-Institut Lagos and Robin Sohdi, Lufthansa Regional Manager Sales Nigeria before departure of the Molue Mobile Museum road trip with resident artists to DaK’Art in Senegal, one of the continent’s most important biennals for contemporary African art at the Goethe Institute in Lagos on Monday

 

On their way back, they will make stops again at all the previous Goethe-Institut locations they visited on the way to the exhibition, planning to arrive in Lagos on May 25.

 

During their journey, the artists examine diverse public spaces as communication zones of social, economic and political interaction. The project embraces the diversity of practices and perspectives of the participating artists, who will discuss and exchange their artistic interactions as they travel almost 10,000-kilometers on a road trip.

 

The artwork, which will be created in Dakar and during the journey, will be presented and discussed along the way back to Nigeria at the Goethe-Institutes and cultural centers at Dakar, Bamako, Abidjan, Accra, Lomé and Lagos.

 

The Nigerian artist Emeka Udemba, who is living in Germany, is the curator of the project. The whole journey can be followed on the weblog, Stretched Terrains, and on social media with the hashtag #StretchedTerrains “Stretched Terrains – The Mobile Museum on the Way to Dak’Art” is a project by Goethe-Institut Nigeria, supported by Lufthansa and Brussels Airlines.

 

Brussels Airlines is renowned for its Africa-expertise and is now fully integrated in the Lufthansa Group. While Lufthansa is Europe’s only 5 Star airline, and founder of Star Alliance, the largest airline network in the world.

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