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<title>TRANSPORTATION CHAOS ON LAGOS STREETS IN SELECTED WORKS OF LAGOS BASED VISUAL ARTISTS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1906</link>
<description/>
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<rdf:li rdf:resource="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1907"/>
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<dc:date>2026-04-19T07:27:59Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1907">
<title>TRANSPORTATION CHAOS ON LAGOS STREETS IN SELECTED WORKS OF LAGOS BASED VISUAL ARTISTS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1907</link>
<description>TRANSPORTATION CHAOS ON LAGOS STREETS IN SELECTED WORKS OF LAGOS BASED VISUAL ARTISTS
AYEYEMI, Emmanuel Kolade
Traffic gridlock is one of the features that define urbanism and complex spatial&#13;
configuration of the Lagos metropolis. Existing visual anthropological studies on&#13;
urban transportation system have focused on visual analytic approaches to the visual&#13;
accounts of travellers, and slogans printed on cars, buses and trucks, particularly&#13;
commercial vehicles. However, little attention has been paid to the diverse ways’&#13;
transportation disorder is represented in artistic works. This study, therefore, was&#13;
designed to explore the representation of transportation chaos on Lagos roads in the&#13;
paintings of selected Lagos based-visual artists, with a view to providing an&#13;
interpretive schema of the selected works.&#13;
Douglas Kiel and Euel Elliott’s Theory of Chaos, which states that instability and&#13;
disorder were essential to the evolution of complexity in the universe, was adopted as&#13;
the framework. The interpretive design was used. Sixteen paintings were purposively&#13;
sampled for thematic affinity, narrative and symbolic contents. They are Olokada,&#13;
Keke Marwa, The New Order, and BRT Lane by Festus Adeyemi; Old Oshodi, After&#13;
the Rain, Rail line Market, and At the River Side by Bolaji Ogunwo; Idumota, Morning&#13;
Rush, A Place I used to Know I, and A Place I used to Know II by Ishola Matthew,&#13;
Closing Time at Idumota, Before the Closing Hour, Busy Bus Stop, and Rush Hour in&#13;
Lagos Island by Dolapo Ogunnusi. The paintings were subjected to visual analysis.&#13;
Festus Adeyemi’s paintings, stylistically adopted the use of lines in creating forms to&#13;
depict the chaos associated with Okada and Marwa riders on Lagos streets. Olokada&#13;
and Keke Marwa depicted the disorder and confusion that pervaded the urban&#13;
transportation system, while New Order and BRT Lane indicated orderliness. Bolaji&#13;
Ogunwo, used textured surface of the canvas to showcase the chaotic experiences in&#13;
the old Oshodi and other areas in Lagos with clumsy driving activities. The shades of&#13;
colours authenticate the colour value in the works: After the rain and Rail line market.&#13;
Ishola Matthew creatively used very warm colour of blue and purple to demonstrate&#13;
the chaos on the streets of Lagos with combinations of light and dark symbolising&#13;
struggling and perpetual movement of vehicles in Lagos city. Unstable forms and&#13;
patterns, with heavy painting strokes in Idumota and A Place I Used to Know&#13;
described not just the population challenges in Lagos, but also the urban decline that&#13;
had resulted from transportation pressure. Dolapo Ogunnusi’s paintings actualised the&#13;
complication in urban Lagos transportation with vivid expression to the impatience of&#13;
drivers and other road users, which resulted in traffic gridlocks by structuring the&#13;
forms and contents to express Lagos transportation chaos. The theme of periodicity of&#13;
chaos was well elaborated in all the paintings where overlapping yellow buses&#13;
conveyed the vivid image of gridlock.&#13;
Transportation chaos on Lagos roads, and the values, which visual artists have&#13;
generated through paintings, represent instability and disorderliness in the urban public&#13;
space. The selected paintings were stylistic pieces embedded with artistic impression&#13;
of reality.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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