By: Tope Akintayo
Esther, a documentary and fine art photographer, is no
longer a bystander in the streets but a curator of the ordinary. Her
photography embodies the concept that "the spectacle we seek in art is
already present in the rhythm of everyday life," if only the artist is
patient enough to wait for it.
The artwork serves as a connection point between Esther’s
Nigerian heritage and her current experience in contemporary Britain. This
exhibition, though, does not follow the classic “immigrant tale” using the
struggle paradigm. Rather, Esther approaches these photographs with a fine art
eye that categorises what would otherwise be street photographs.
Crucially, her photographs seek to overcome the “noise”
of the modern media culture with the slowness of the shutter speed, both
literal and figurative. There exists a depth of serenity in her compositions
that resists speed. Through the recording of “simple and beautiful realities in
various environments,” Esther successfully contends that grace as human
experience is a universal constant, irrespective of geography.
The centrepiece of the Nigerian edition, titled
"Core and Course: Cultural Echoes in Motion," serves as the project’s
emotional and intellectual anchor. It marks the shift of Esther away from
observation and commentary towards the personal and the symbolic.
The series centres on her mother, an African elder, as
she walks through the UK streets. The contrast between images is striking. The
Material: The figure is adorned with àṣọ òkè, a fabric rich in Yoruba heritage
and history. The Anchor: The figure holds a Bible, symbolising a centre of
unshakeable faith. The Motion: The blur of the modern world is all around her,
yet she is always the steady, focused "core."
On a more critical level, this collection can be regarded
as a textbook case of representation via placement. To position a black,
African elderly at the centre of a Western cityscape narrative when this
population tends to be relegated to either backdrop or invisibility in
mainstream Western media primarily constitutes an exercise in visual
recuperation. The subject of identity in this collection does not represent an
object in space at a particular historical point. Identity could be defined
here as an experience that is “carried.”
Esther's artistic authority is reinforced by the fact
that she has a unique Open Knowledge background. This is due to the fact that
she is a recognised contributor to the Wikimedia Commons and a past winner of
the Wiki Loves Earth Nigeria.
This documentary approach to photography prevents
Everyday Grace from merely being sentimental. There is an idea of truth to
Esther’s photographs, an idea of a commitment to lived experience, that keeps
her work honest. Her success internationally, such as her 8th placement in the
Wiki Loves Earth competition, is a testament to a photographer who realises
photography is not merely art but an archive.
The subtlety of Esther’s work requires a silence from the
viewer that is ever more difficult to achieve. A “quiet meditation” is needed
for the viewer to appreciate the work that has been created. A reaction to the
transient qualities of digital culture has been successfully created by Esther
through her fusion of the àṣọ òkə textures with the hard stone found on UK
pavements. Esther’s work has created a visual statement that has reminded us
that beauty is a journey, not just the destination that we find. For an
audience seeking an antidote to the chaos of the present, Esther’s work is a
sophisticated, serene, and essential intervention.
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