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Spanning two sites across Lagos and the Ecology Green Farm in Ijebu, the non-profit cultural centre provides public programs, exhibition opportunities, and workspace for artists.

G.A.S Foundation Lagos Street View, Photography by Andrew Esiebo. Courtesy G.A.S Foundation.
G.A.S Foundation, Lagos, Street View. Photographer: Andrew Esiebo. Courtesy G.A.S Foundation.

Guest Artists Space (G.A.S.) Foundation opens its doors to the international community for the first time in November 2022, coinciding with ART X Lagos, West Africa’s leading commercial art fair. The Foundation’s international launch is marked by a series of intimate and celebratory events with leading figures from the international art world, strengthening Nigeria’s position as a cultural powerhouse. It also offers the opportunity to see the Foundation spaces activated and showcasing the outcomes of the first residencies.

Originally conceived in 2019 by artist Yinka Shonibare CBE RA alongside an esteemed board of Directors, G.A.S is an ambitious non-profit project. With two major new Nigeria-based creative hubs completed in early 2022, it provides opportunities for those working in the fields of contemporary art, design, architecture, agriculture and ecology by giving space and resources to research, experiment, share, educate and develop work.

The first G.A.S. building located in Oniru, Lagos is a modern structure fusing Brutalism with traditional Yoruba architectural principles, that wraps around a central courtyard. Designed by Ghanaian British architect Elsie Owusu in collaboration with Lagos-based Nigerian Architect Nihinlola Shonibare of NS Design Consult who were additionally commissioned to execute the interior design concept and delivery, it intends to support international cultural exchange by establishing connections between Africa’s art markets and the international art community. The space comes equipped with live/work units and an adaptable multi-use studio/project/gallery space. Since its completion in spring 2022, the site has hosted its inaugural G.A.S.

Fellows and residents, including Lynhan Balatbat Helbock, Femi Johnson, Emma Prempeh, Portia Zvavahera and Gideon Gomo. From exhibition-making to cooking salons and research on new technologies, this first cycle demonstrates the rich variety of creative practices facilitated at G.A.S.

Ecology Green Farm. Courtesy of G.A.S Foundation.

The second G.A.S. site sits on the lush 54-acre Ecology Green Farm in Ijebu, a working farm that produces crops ranging from cassava and cashew to pawpaw, peppers and maize, offering a new and regenerative model for artist residencies globally. Its building, designed by Papa Omotayo of MOE+ with interior design by Temitayo Shonibare, provides space for artists, scientists, agriculturists, and researchers and was created with sustainable infrastructure and food security for the local community in mind. The build has stayed true to the farm’s guiding ‘sustainability first’ ethos by only using local artisans and materials for construction; they include 40,000 bricks made from soil dug up for the foundations. The site will undergo further expansion with construction starting in 2023 on four workshop buildings dedicated to craft practices including weaving and ceramics.

The Ecology Green Farm is part of the World Weather Network: a constellation of weather stations with 28 art organisations around the world, formed in response to the climate crisis. Raqs Media Collective will be the G.A.S. weather reporters and will be stationed at the farm from early 2023, where they will work with other residents, visiting artists and researchers whilst engaging with a wider network of peers, artists, scientists and farmers across the very different geological regions of Nigeria.

With important library donations from John Picton, Emeritus Professor of African Art in the University of London, and professorial research associate in the Department of History of Art and Archaeology at the School of Oriental and African Studies, the Foundation is building an exhaustive research library, with volumes ranging from sociology, anthropology, arts, and more. G.A.S has appointed an archivist to manage the inaugural 1,500 volumes in its collection, with the aim of becoming a resource accessible to the public through library and research memberships. The collection also has ambitions of undergoing a process of digitisation over the next two years.

Yinka Shonibare CBE RA, comments: “The art world needs to evolve – there is a rich vein of talent out there, but we might lose them if the status quo of the last thirty years remains. We are working with the local community, whilst opening doors for the next generation, equipping them to thrive not just survive”

Leading Yinka Shonibare’s vision is a board of directors comprising leading cultural figures from Nigeria and its diaspora. It includes Managing Principal of W8 Advisory, Adebimpe Nkontchou; entrepreneur and Founder and CEO of Art X Lagos, Tokini Peterside; Nigerian American artist and curator, Temitayo Ogunbiyi and Executive Director of VFD Group Plc, Adeniyi Adenubi.

G.A.S. Foundation is an evolution of Guest Projects, Yinka Shonibare CBE RA’s long-standing, London based artists residency project. It receives strategic and fundraising support from the Yinka Shonibare Foundation led by it’s Executive Director Belinda Holden, a charity registered in England and Wales (Charity No.1183321).

For more information, please visit the G.A.S Foundation.

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