Thursday, 10 September 2015

Princess Olowu of benin

Princess Elizabeth Olowu was born in 1945 as the daughter of Oba Akenzua II . As a small child she worked alongside her mother, learning to sculpt items related to palace life and ritualistic needs. Olowu was enthusiastic
about learning and attended Holy Child
College, where she developed a love for
reading. She continued her education at the Federal Emergency Science School where she majored in botany, chemistry, and zoology, which she later taught at the Anglican Girl’s Grammar school. At age 18 she married a her high school friend, Babatunde Olowu and had her first child in 1964. In 1966 she continued her education by enrolling in the University of Nigeria, however she was persuaded to leave the school after finishing her first year.
Accomplishments
She continued teaching once home and
regularly organized art shows for her female students, which eventually attracted the attention of the director of Benin University’s Creative Arts department, who invited her to
join the Fine Arts program. In 1979 she
graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts and by the year 1981 she had begun to work on her post graduate study, which included her thesis on “An Investigation into Benin Cire Perdue Casting Technique”. This accomplishment
made her the first female recipient of a Master of fine arts, the first bronze caster and bronze founder. In 1985 she received the Bendel State Award for Art and Culture and was later recognized by the Young Women’s Catholic
Association for her contribution to uplifting the status of women in her country.
Career
In 1979 Olowu sculpted an autobiographical sculpture of a young girl sitting at a desk while engrossed in a book. This sculpture was one of the first from her culture that depicted an individual female figure. The year 1983 was also an important year of her life. She explored, in depth, the themes of power from an emotionally diverse perspective. Some distinguished sculptures from this year include
The Oba and Christ Bearing the Sins of
Humanity. The Oba depicts her father, who was instrumental in facilitating her career and her education. The statue is made personal by bearing her handprint as a robe design. Christ Bearing the Sins of Humanity is over seven feet.tall and shows a geometric Christ figure
hunched underneath the weight of the cross. Olowu's most well known work is Zero Hour.
Zero Hour shows a mother during childbirth as she hovers between life and death and exudes the emotions of pain and expectancy. It celebrates the strength of expectant mothers
and the emotions felt childbirth. Olowu herself was pregnant during the creation and work on the sculpture until the final moments of her pregnancy.

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Author is a contributor to www.oriakhideba.com

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