As an official part of the London Gallery Weekend 2025 programme, the exhibition is inspired by the rich pageantry of the Ojude Oba festival. Held annually in Ijebu-Ode, Nigeria, the festival is a vibrant celebration of Yoruba heritage, honouring the Awujale, the paramount ruler of the Ijebu people. Known for its elaborate equestrian processions, resplendent attire, and deeply rooted communal traditions, Ojude Oba stands as a powerful symbol of identity, unity, and cultural continuity. For Modupeola Fadugba, the festival becomes both subject and starting point – a site of gesture, history, and living tradition. Her latest body of work reflects a shift in her practice, from water to land, from solitary swimmers to collective choreography, offering a personal yet expansive reflection on heritage and transformation.




Drawing inspiration from the grandeur of Ojude Oba, Fadugba translates its essence onto canvas through her signature mixed media approach, incorporating gold leaf, layered textures, and a palette as vibrant and rich as the festival itself. Intertwining traditional Nigerian motifs with the compositional influence of Islamic miniature painting, she layers shimmering hues of coral, magenta, and bronze to evoke the festival’s electrifying atmosphere. Through visible pencil strokes, deliberate shading, and unfinished elements, she preserves the raw creative process – echoing not only the evolving nature of Ojude Oba but also her ongoing inquiry into cultural memory and lived experience.

The series introduces Fadugba’s expanded beading practice, a continuation of her long-standing interest in materiality, memory, and community. More than embellishment, these works speak to heritage, to the tactile wisdom passed between generations, and to the role of artisanal knowledge in sustaining local economies. By collaborating with community-based artisans, Fadugba creates work that is both an aesthetic expression and a gesture toward economic empowerment – transforming beading into a method of engagement.




At the heart of this series lies a journey of return and reorientation. Though her ancestral ties are to Osun, Fadugba finds resonance in the spirit of Ojude Oba – its fusion of past and present, its collective celebration of identity, and its embodiment of movement as both metaphor and method. Through intricate detailing and layered surfaces, her works capture the rhythm of the drumming, the choreography of the riders, and the brilliance of the attire, inviting viewers into a space where cultural inheritance is not static but a flowing stream of story, ceremony, and renewal.


As Modupeola states: “What does it mean to archive the present? To document not just artefacts but voices, gestures, festivals, failures, and laughter? How do we, as artists, avoid merely appropriating culture and instead become part of its evolutionary arc—its renaissance? Museology, I’ve come to believe, isn’t confined to vitrines and climate-controlled rooms. It happens in the streets of Ijebu-Ode, in family compounds, in the cadence of oral history, and in the handed-down knowledge of women who string beads with ancestral precision. The artist, too, can be a kind of curator—of feeling, of folklore, of form.”



Modupeola Fadugba is a multimedia artist known for her work in painting, drawing, and socially engaged installations. With a multidisciplinary background in engineering, economics, and education, Fadugba’s art explores intersections of cultural identity, social justice, game theory, and the socio-political dynamics of Nigeria within the global economy.


Her acclaimed project, The People's Algorithm, a game-based installation fostering dialogue on improving Nigeria’s education system, earned her the Outstanding Production Prize from El Anatsui and the Grand Prize at the 2016 Dakar Biennale. Dreams from the Deep End (2018), her recent multimedia exhibition, delves into the collective experiences of swimmers, examining America’s racialized swimming history and exploring themes of collaboration and resilience. The project was exhibited at Gallery 1957, Accra, and documented in a film that received an Emmy Award in 2022 for outstanding long-form DEI content. The documentary was also screened at the Brooklyn Museum and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York.


Fadugba has participated in prestigious residencies, including the Smithsonian Institute of African Art Research Fellowship (2020), the International Studio and Curatorial Program in Brooklyn (2018), and the International Cité des Arts in Paris (2017). She is also an Archbishop Tutu Leadership Fellow (2024). Her works are part of significant collections, including the Smithsonian Institute of African Art, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Sindika Dokolo Foundation, and Facebook, where she completed the commissioned piece Indigo Reflection in 2021. In February 2025, she won The Norval Sovereign African Art Prize 2025, a milestone recognising her contributions to contemporary African art.

