Modern art in Nigeria emerged through complex processes of cultural contact, educational reform, and individual artistic agency during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Initially introduced through trade catalogues, church and mission school activities, and the informal cultural influences of colonial administrators’ families, modern artistic practices gradually found receptive ground within Nigerian society. This development was significantly strengthened in the second quarter of the twentieth century with the collaboration between Chief Aina Onabolu, a pioneer Nigerian artist trained in Europe, and Kenneth Murray, a British educational officer committed to art education. Their combined efforts laid a formal foundation for structured art instruction in schools and promoted the recognition of art as an essential component of intellectual and cultural development. This paper examines the historical circumstances, key actors, and institutional mechanisms that facilitated the growth of modern art in Nigeria, highlighting how indigenous creativity intersected with foreign influences to shape a distinctive modern artistic tradition.
Olusegun Michael Adeyemi (Thu,) studied this question.