Akintunde Akinleye
Akintunde Akinleye ( bɛ dɔɣi o la silimiingoli April bɛɣu pinaa wei dali, yuuni 1971) o nyɛla ŋun nyɛ Nigerian photojournalist ŋun anfooni nim nyɛ din jeni photo-activism mini trial narrative subjects. Ka o nyɛ Reuters photographer kurɔ, n be West Africa, o anfooni nim nyɛla din laɣim mali Nigeria's postcolonial history.[1][2][3] Ŋuni n nyɛ tuuli Nigeria photographer ŋun daa di kpaŋmaŋ pini din nyɛ World Press Photo prize ( yuuni 2007), ka di nyɛla o foto shɛli din nyɛ pipeline explosion n be Lagos.[1][3][4][5] Lala yuuni maani nɔɔ, o daa lan dila kpaŋmaŋ pini din yuli booni National Geographic All Roads award la. O anfooni nim nyɛla din be yaɣa nim ni kamani Time, Vogue, The New York Times, n ti pahi yaɣishɛŋa din pahipahi.[3][6]
O pilli taarihi
mali niŋHali di daa niŋ ka o laambi Joel Oloruntoba mini Ebuoluwa Racheal—daa yina Okemesi-Ekiti din be southwest Nigeria la, Akintunde daa nyɛla bɛ ni dɔɣi so ka o zoogi na Mushin, Lagos.[6]
O mamaŋ biɛhigu taarihi
mali niŋAkinleye nyɛla ŋun niŋ bipuɣingi yuli booni Omobolanle Dada-Akinleye ("Omo-B") amiliya . Bɛ malila bihi anahi bani n nyɛ; Akinbusayo, Akinola, Ibukunoluwa, n ti pahi Eniola.
O kpaŋmaŋ pina nima, nintiɣibɔ n ti pahi dini yina yaɣi shɛŋa ni
mali niŋ- World Press Photo prize (yuuni 2007)
- National Geographic All Roads award ( yuuni 2008)[1][3][5][8]
- Nominations for Prix Pictet award on Photography and Sustainability for his works on:
- Delta: A Vanishing Wetland ( yuuni 2012)
- Delta Bush Refineries ( yuuni 2015)
- Makoko: Life on Stilt ( yuuni 2019)
- Lagos' Firemen ( yuuni2021)
- Residency fellowship, University of Texas at Dallas ( yuuni 2008)
- Residency fellowship, Thami Mnyele Foundation, Amsterdam ( yuuni 2010)
O Selected exhibition nima
mali niŋ- Delta Bush Refineries and Other Stories, Omenka Gallery, Lagos, Nigeria, yuuni 2016.[3][8][9]
- Each Passing Day, Red Door Gallery, Lagos, Nigeria, yuuni 2015.[1]
- Spiritual Highway, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London, yuuni 2014.[10]
- Wole Soyinka and the Rest of Us, Brunei Gallery, SOAS, United Kingdom, yuuni 2012.
- Delta: A Vanishing Wetland (For a Sustainable World), Bamako, Mali, yuuni 2011.
- Troubles of a Blessed Country, California and Washington, D.C., yuuni 2007.
O Publication nima
mali niŋ- Janson, Marloes and Akinleye, Akintunde ( yuuni 2015). "The Spiritual Highway: Religious World Making in Megacity Lagos", In Material Religion, 11, (4), yuuni 2015, pp. 550–56 https://doi.org/10.1080/17432200.2015.1103484
- Akinleye, Akintunde ( yuuni 2013). "Paradox". In Rogue Urbanism: Emergent African Cities (ed.) Edgar Pieterse and AbdouMaliq Simone. Johannesburg: Jacana Media, pp. 355–364, 2013.
- Oyebode, Aisha and Akinleye, Akintunde ( yuuni 2021). The Stolen Daughters of Chibok. Power-House Books, New York.
O Papers and posters presentation nima
mali niŋ- "Beyond the Frame: Photojournalism in the Context of Africa, Centre for African Studies", University of Florida, Gainesville, U.S.A, silimiingoli February ni, yuuni 2020.
- "Anthropocene Lives in Deviance: Delta Bush Refineries and Other Stories". Paper presented at the annual conference of the Anthropology Graduate Students' Association, York University, Toronto, Canada, silimiingoli March ni, yuuni 2019.
- "Closing the Missing Link: Climate Change Awareness Campaign and Children's Photographic Production for Museum Exhibit". Poster presentation @Canadian Museum of History, silimiingoli December ni, yuuni 2019.
Kundivihira
mali niŋ- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 A Complex Self-Portrait of Africa.
- ↑ Aisha Muhammed-Oyebode.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Akinleye's exhibition revisits corruption in oil-rich Delta. Arts & Life (January 10, 2017).
- ↑ Akintunde Akinleye's best photograph: the aftermath of a Nigerian pipeline explosion (July 31, 2014).
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Who Is Telling Africa's Stories?.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Photographing firefighters on the streets of Lagos.
- ↑ Simon Schama's photograph of the decade (November 13, 2010).
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Akintunde Akinleye.
- ↑ Exhibitions.
- ↑ The Spiritual Highway: Religious World Making in Megacity Lagos. School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS).