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Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede

Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede
Born June 1943
Ayegbaju Ekiti, Nigeria
Nationality Nigerian

Emmanuel Taiwo Jegede (born June 1943) is a Nigerian poet, storyteller, painter, printmaker, and a sculptor (in wood, bronze and ceramic).

He is the father of musician and composer Tunde Jegede.

Jegede was born in Ayegbaju Ekiti, a Yoruba-speaking region of Nigeria. He undertook an apprenticeship with sculptor Pa Akerejola in Ekiti before going on to the Yaba School of Technology in Lagos, where he studied with Edo sculptor Osagie Osifo. In 1963 he travelled to the UK, where he attended Willesden College of Technology and Hammersmith College of Arts, studying the decorative arts, interior design, sculpture and bronze casting. His first exhibition took place in 1968 at the Woodstock Gallery, London. In 1970, he set up a studio and foundry at Riverside, London.

In 1977, he was among the Black artists and photographers whose work represented the UK at the Second World Festival of Black Arts and African Culture (Festac '77) in Lagos, Nigeria (the others being Winston Branch, Ronald Moody, Mercian Carrena, Armet Francis, Uzo Egonu, Neil Kenlock, Donald Locke, Cyprian Mandala, Ossie Murray, Sue Smock, Lance Watson and Aubrey Williams).

Also in the 1970s, Jegede was artist-in-residence at the Keskidee Centre (the UK's first arts centre for the Black community), where meetings in 1978 led to the founding of an initiative called the Rainbow Art Group (members included Indira Ariyanayagam, Uzo Egonu, Lancelot Ribeiro, Errol Lloyd, Yeshwant Mali, Gordon V. de La Mothe, Durlabh Singh, Suresh Vedak, Ibrahim Wagh, and Mohammad Zakir, as well as Jegede) that mounted its first exhibition the following year — Paintings and Sculptures at Action Space, London.

Among other exhibitions that included Jegede's work were Afro-Caribbean Art (27 April – 25 May 1978 at the Artists Market, London), organised by Drum Arts Centre, and Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 - 1996, curated by the Caribbean Cultural Center, New York City, in 1997–98. Most recently, Jegede's work features in the 2015 exhibition No Colour Bar: Black British Art in Action 1960–1990 at the Guildhall Art Gallery, City of London, which is inspired by the papers held at London Metropolitan Archives of Jessica and Eric Huntley and the publishing company they founded, Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications.


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