Education
Stakeholders Want Investment In Arts Education For Employment Generation
Some stakeholders in the arts industry have urged government at all levels to invest in arts education for economic gains and employment generation for the youth.
They spoke in Ibadan on Friday at the award ceremony of an art competition organised by Gessomate Professionals Arts Society.
The event. which took place at the Department of Art, Design and Printing Technology (ADPT) of The Polytechnic Ibadan. was entitled: “A Tour to the Root’’.
The Gessomate Professional Art Society President, Mr Abiola Olugbile, said the competition was to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the association and to give back to their alma mater, The Polytechnic Ibadan.
Olugbile enjoined students of the institution to take whatever opportunity that comes their way with all seriousness and put in more efforts toward a brighter future.
“Government should still do more, art is a good business in Nigeria that is not well harnessed as it should be.
“If the government put more into this, a lot will still be done. We have so many tourism attraction sites and so many other things that are untapped in this nation.
“So, let the government do more to encourage the younger ones coming, so that we can be able to meet up and attract arts patronage from the outside world,’’ he said.
In his address, the Director Centre for Africa Arts and Design, Ibadan, Dr Ellis Oyekola, emphasized the need for arts education to harness the gains in the industry and develop Africa’s cultural heritage.
“The passion for art in this country is very low as people are always after money. But sometimes, art can generate funds because in the western countries, art serves as a treasure.
“When you are broke you carry your artwork, the treasure that you have collected and auction them then get a lot of money.
“The artistic tempo in Nigeria generally is very low, may be due to foreign religion that we embraced and the initial notion that African arts are fetish.
“But a contemporary African art is not fetish. We are there for functional purposes and economic purposes,’’ Oyekola said.
He noted that art could stand on its own as a means of employment by owning arts galleries of their works and also collect works of other artists and sell.