By Ovio Peters
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu attended a modern Nigerian art exhibition at Tate Modern in London, where he commended the creativity and resilience of Nigerian artists.
He described the exhibition as “a testament to revolution,” noting that Nigerian artists “chose to define themselves” through a blend of traditional and modern influences. David Lammy, Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, highlighted bilateral ties, stating that trade between both countries has reached £8.1 billion.
Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chairman of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NDiCom), also referenced the contributions of Nigerians abroad, while Governors Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Dapo Abiodun were among officials present.
DECISION HIGHLIGHT
The Nigerian government is leveraging cultural diplomacy and creative expression as a soft power instrument within broader United Kingdom engagement.
DECISION MEMO
The Tate Modern engagement reflects Nigeria’s increasing reliance on cultural capital as a diplomatic tool. Nigerian art and the broader creative economy have become globally visible, offering a narrative of identity, resilience, and innovation that contrasts with persistent economic and governance challenges.
Tinubu’s framing of Nigerian modernism as a “testament to revolution” positions art as both historical resistance and contemporary relevance. However, the policy gap lies in translation. Cultural recognition abroad does not automatically translate into structured domestic industry growth.
Lammy’s reference to £8.1 billion in trade underscores that cultural diplomacy operates alongside economic interests. Nigerian cultural exports enhance visibility and influence, but the financial architecture supporting the creative sector remains underdeveloped. Intellectual property enforcement, financing access, and distribution infrastructure continue to lag behind global standards.
Dabiri-Erewa’s emphasis on diaspora contributions aligns with this pattern. The Nigerian diaspora plays a central role in projecting cultural influence globally, yet domestic systems have not fully institutionalised mechanisms to capture that value within the national economy.
The presence of state governors and federal officials signals political recognition of the creative sector’s importance. However, this recognition has not consistently translated into policy coherence. Nigeria’s creative industries operate largely through private initiative, informal networks, and external partnerships rather than coordinated national frameworks.
President Tinubu’s assertion that Nigeria is “on the path to growth” reflects broader economic optimism tied to reform narratives. Yet, within the creative economy, growth remains uneven and largely externally validated. The sector’s global success often outpaces domestic institutional support.
The exhibition therefore serves more as a projection of potential than evidence of a fully developed creative economy. It highlights Nigeria’s cultural strength while simultaneously exposing structural weaknesses in how that strength is monetised and sustained locally.
DATA BOX
- Event location, Tate Modern, London
- Bilateral trade value, £8.1 billion
- Sector focus, modern Nigerian art and creative industries
- Key stakeholders, Nigerian government, United Kingdom government, diaspora representatives
WHO WINS / WHO LOSES
Winners
Nigerian artists gaining global visibility and cultural influence
United Kingdom cultural institutions benefiting from Nigerian creative capital
Diaspora communities reinforcing their role as cultural intermediaries
Conditional winners
Nigeria’s economy, dependent on converting cultural visibility into structured industry growth
Losers
Domestic creative infrastructure lacking institutional support
Artists without access to global platforms or diaspora networks
POLICY SIGNALS
The engagement signals increased use of cultural diplomacy as part of foreign policy. However, it also reflects a gap between international cultural positioning and domestic creative industry development.
INVESTOR SIGNAL
Nigeria’s creative economy remains globally relevant and commercially viable, particularly in art, music, and film. However, investment opportunities are constrained by weak intellectual property systems, limited financing structures, and fragmented distribution channels.
RISK RADAR
Disconnect between global recognition and domestic monetisation
Weak intellectual property enforcement reducing revenue capture
Overreliance on diaspora and foreign platforms for distribution
Limited institutional funding for creative industries
Policy inconsistency affecting long-term sector development
The exhibition underscores Nigeria’s cultural influence, but also highlights a persistent imbalance. Visibility is global, value capture remains uneven.
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