NCMM, Crimson Fusion partner to document 8,000 years of Nigerian art

The National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Curators to embark on a monumental documentation project, A Window into the Soul of a People: 8,000 Years of Art in Nigeria.

The initiative will trace the unbroken story of Nigerian creativity — from the 8,000-year- old Dufuna Canoe and Nok terracottas, through the luminous bronzes of Ife and Benin, to the bold visions of contemporary artists shaping the global stage.

Projected to span over 750 pages, the archive will be one of the most ambitious scholarly and visual undertakings in the history of Art in Nigeria.

At the MoU signing, Director-General of NCMM, Olugbile Holloway, underscored significance of the collaboration, saying: “This initiative will go a long way in dispelling the misconception of us being primitive or unable to create enduring masterpieces. Even when the Ife heads and Benin bronzes first stunned the world, deliberate efforts were made to deny Nigerians full credit. This partnership is about reclaiming that narrative and presenting our heritage as it deserves to be seen.”

For griot, designer, curator, and publisher, Oriiz U. Onuwaje, the project is the continuation of a lifelong commitment to heritage storytelling. He also created and edited The Benin Monarchy: An Anthology of Benin History — popularly known as The Benin Red Book — which has become a touchstone of Nigerian cultural preservation.

Onuwaje said: “Our art must be properly recorded and presented because documentation is not a luxury — it is cultural survival. When we strengthen our claim to it, we unlock its economic potential and assert our identity as the art superpower we truly are.

In over 35 years in this business, I have not seen an art economy truly blossom in Nigeria — the simple reason is a critical lack of documentation.”

The initiative also builds on the experience of The Intersecting Worlds of Climate Change, the Mangroves and Art — a 2025 exhibition that fused environmental consciousness with artistic expression — underscoring the team’s commitment to using art as a lens for identity, sustainability, and resilience.

To strengthen its scope, Crimson Fusion has assembled leading culture strategists and consultants. In fact, the chief technical consultant, Professor Frank Ugiomoh, affirmed, “when Nigerians take ownership of their narratives, they tell their stories with authority and authenticity.”

The technical consultant on traditional and contemporary art, Prince Olaseinde Odimayo, pledged his “commitment to elevating Nigerian art to the highest possible level” while consultant on design and strategy, Mr. Solomon Ikhioda, projected that “with the right framework, Nigeria will soon see art reach unprecedented levels of market value and investment potential.”

By combining NCMM’s institutional authority with Crimson Fusion’s editorial expertise, the partnership signals a vision of heritage as more than memory. It positions Nigerian art as a living archive — a driver of tourism, education, cultural pride, and national renewal.

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