‘Westernization is not the answer’: Artist Àsìkò explores Yoruba culture through mythology
Appreciating cultural heritage and using it to
imagine a better future: that’s one of the goals of self-taught photographer and visual artist Ade Okelarin.
Professionally, he goes by the name of "Àsìkò" – the word for "time" or "the moment" in Yoruba, one of the languages in his home country of Nigeria. Drawing on aspects of traditional Yoruba
culture has been an important aspect of his creative journey. Through two recent series titled "Guardians" and "Of Myth and Legend," he explores the iconography of Yoruba deities,
омг зеркало or "Òrìshàs."
In Yoruba history, the Òrìshàs were sacred beings with divine powers, and the belief in them continues beyond West Africa, having been transmitted by slaves and their descendants in the Caribbean and South America, among other places.