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Maritime Exhibition, National Gallery Deepen Coastal Creativity

Maritime Exhibition, National Gallery Deepen Coastal Creativity
The Convener of the African Maritime Art Exhibition, Ezinne Azunna, addressing some of the participants during the event.

The African Maritime Art Exhibition, in collaboration with the National Gallery of Art, has deepened its coastal creativity and ocean literacy campaign with an outreach in Makoko, Lagos, where artists led children and youths in painting and drawing the waterfront community’s seascape directly on water while engaging in live mentorship sessions.

In a statement on Tuesday, the organisers explained that the Makoko engagement formed the second phase of the “Paint Your Coast” initiative, which was flagged off earlier in Akodo-Ise, also in Lagos State, where coastal children were introduced to marine-themed art, environmental awareness, and blue economy opportunities.

“Unlike conventional classroom-based art training, the Makoko edition unfolded in an immersive waterfront setting. Professional artists from the National Gallery of Art worked alongside trainees on floating platforms and canoes, sketching and painting the dense stilt settlement and its surrounding lagoon environment in real time. The result was a living canvas of Makoko’s seascape captured on water as much as on paper,” the statement read in part.

Earlier, the Convener of AMAE, Ezinne Azunna, said the programme is designed as a structured, multi-stage creative intervention aimed at long-term skills development for children in coastal communities.

“After the one-day training at each location, we gave them art materials to paint their coast either via drawing, painting, or tie and dye. They entered a one-month competition stage, and the schools will submit their artworks to an independent jury. The best 10 works will be featured at the AMAE 2026 later this year,” Azunna said.

Azunna added that the initiative is intended to reposition how coastal children perceive their environment, not as a limitation but as a source of opportunity and creative capital.

Also speaking, the Director-General of the National Gallery of Art, Mr Ahmed Sodangi, described the programme as a transformative exposure for children in Makoko.

Sodangi, who was represented at the event by Mr Babalola Oladipo-Adetayo, noted that coastal living offers untapped cultural and economic potential.

Chairman of the occasion and Director of the International Ocean Institute Nigeria Centre, Dr Akanbi Williams, commended the initiative for linking art, environmental education, and ocean awareness.

He said such programmes help children articulate their maritime identity while strengthening stewardship of fragile coastal ecosystems.

He also highlighted ongoing collaboration between the International Ocean Institute Nigeria Centre, AMAE, and the Eco Restoration Mangrove Sanctuary and Research Centre in advancing ocean literacy, coastal conservation, and community engagement across Nigeria’s shoreline settlements.

The Lagos Area Manager of the National Inland Waterways Authority, Engr. Sarat Braimah, who was represented by Mr David Otonoku, urged residents to prioritise life jacket usage, describing it as a critical safeguard in water transport.

The President of the Africa Women’s Fish Processors and Traders Network, Nigeria Chapter, Oluwafunmilola Shelika, represented by Mrs Mgbeoma Kuye, encouraged participants to view artistic skills as viable income pathways within the maritime value chain, noting that creative expression can complement existing coastal livelihoods.

Organisers said the “Paint Your Coast” initiative, already implemented in Akodo-Ise and Makoko, is structured as a competitive development pipeline.

The initiative, according to the organisers, forms part of broader efforts to expand Nigeria’s blue economy narrative by equipping coastal youth with creative and environmental skills while reframing waterfront communities as hubs of innovation, culture, and sustainable opportunity.

By MMS Plus

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