A burgeoning wealthy class is settling into one of Africa’s
fastest-growing cities, Lagos is now attracting designers, world-class
architects and a growing creative community that seeks to preserve its culture
through art and fashion.
The Land Cruisers and Range Rovers began lining up on a
steamy Sunday afternoon outside Tafawa Balewa Square long before sunset. The
banking tycoon, Otunba Subomi Balogun
was hosting his 80th birthday party and nobody wanted to be late, and there was
also the matter of inching past the press of beggars living in the square’s
arcade. Once through a security line, women in gold headdresses and men in
white robes disembarked. Balogun lives in a mansion modeled on the White House,
furnished entirely in white and gold, and the invitation had asked guests to
wear his favorite colors.
Guests sashayed through the tent doors into a scene of
surreal opulence. At the far end of the tent, engulfed by servants, courtiers,
national politicians and guards with wires in their ears, the celebrant perched
beside his wife on a throne covered with white faux fur, his every move
broadcast on flat-screens arrayed around the tent walls. From the throne, the
founder of the First City Monument Bank
(F.C.M.B.) could survey his 1,000 guests, acres of floral arrangements and
goldfish ponds brought in for the occasion, and the legion of waiters ferrying
Taittinger and Veuve Clicquot and steaming trays of traditional Nigerian stews
and rice. Bands and dancers performed in succession, a professional actress
emceed and business and blood royalty mingled with state governors and the
archbishop of Lagos. Massive cakes, one a replica of Balogun’s columned white
house, and one designed to match his white Rolls-Royce, were stationed in front
of the head table.
Governors began their speeches by acknowledging “the celebrant” and other honored guests
whom they referred to as “your royal
majesties.” The archbishop gave a benediction calling on God’s blessings.
Another elderly gentleman, a childhood friend of Balogun, croaked out a
rendition of “Happy Birthday.” In
their formality and vocabulary, the speeches came from another era, Victorian
perhaps. If a speaker could find a three-syllable word to replace a
one-syllable word, he chose it. But nobody paid any attention at all. The
younger guests were too busy networking, exchanging business cards and tapping
numbers into their phones. Nigerians, I was told, often look like they are
partying, but they never stop doing business.
The Nigerian banking tycoon Otunba Subomi Balogun designed
his house to resemble the White House.
|
The world may still associate Nigeria with the legendary
Afrobeat musician Fela Kuti and online credit card scams, but the nation is now
home to one of the wealthiest microcommunities in the world. These global
super-elites educate their young in Swiss boarding schools and at Oxford or
Princeton, pay cash for luxury homes and cars, and hold major London and New
York real estate parcels in their portfolios.
As of last year, Nigeria was the 11th largest oil-producing
nation in the world. Otunba Balogun
and the men of his generation amassed giant fortunes because they were in the
right place and knew the right people when Nigeria began nationalizing its oil
in 1971. Home to great petro-fortunes, Lagos is Dallas minus the glittery malls
and pedicured blondes – although the shops are starting to come in. It is a
city of mind-boggling extremes. The average life expectancy in Nigeria is about
53 years, and citizens rich and poor struggle with hourly power outages and
obtain their own potable water, which the poor often carry home on their heads.
A small elite live in walled enclaves where palms and bougainvillea shield
Porsche collections, new palaces and swimming pools. According to a recent
study by New World Wealth, the number of Nigerian millionaires is expected to
reach 23,000 by 2017. As in oil-rush Texas, crazy rags to riches stories
abound. More than two decades ago, the oil billionaire Folorunsho Alakija,
reputedly the second-richest woman in Africa, was a fashion designer with a
high-end clientele that included the then-president’s wife, Maryam Babangida. The story goes that her
connection to Babangida led her to
be “dashed,” or “gifted” in Nigerian pidgin English, with a license to explore a
deep offshore oil block, which was then thought to be too expensive to drill.
Today it spews up to 250,000 barrels daily.
The four generations of guests at Balogun’s 80th were all as
tied to London as to Lagos, but the younger generations have almost no links to
the provincial and traditional Nigeria of Balogun’s generation. While the
“chiefs” – as some of the rich old guys are known, based on Yoruba tradition –
still speak Yoruba or one of the many other tribal languages, their kids and
grandkids have childhood memories involving blancmange or Yorkshire pudding,
not dried plantains. The old chiefs sent their children abroad to be schooled
and educated. Now those children are adults and are coming home, lured by
business returns and fortunes beyond Wall Street’s wildest dreams. The
returnees, as they are known, are familiar with the comforts of Western cities,
but don’t mind generating their own electricity and paying for private water
for their homes. They have a toughness their softer counterparts in the global
1 percent lack. One of the returnees who showed up at Balogun’s party, Kene
Mkparu, 47, earned two advanced degrees in London before coming to Lagos with
his wife and small children a few years ago. He co-founded Filmhouse Cinemas,
which plans to build 25 theaters in Nigeria in the next six years. His kids
don’t even notice when the lights flick off. “They just keep on playing,” he said.
“It’s frustrating here, because there isn’t a lot of logical thinking. But we
are kind of like the Europeans who came here hundreds of years ago. They didn’t
let the mosquitoes bother them because they were focused on the gold.”
Younger Nigerians see uncharted marketing territory and
opportunities to link Africa to the West and vice versa. The publicist Ngozi Omambala moved to Lagos in 2007
after working in the music industry in London. Clients she has worked with
include the rapper Ice Prince, who won the 2013 BET Award for Best
International Act: Africa, and the Nollywood and Hollywood movie star Hakeem
Kae-Kazim. The energy and openness of the Nigerian music scene drew her home
after years in London. “I kept coming
back here on vacations,” she said. “And
I would go home to London, and began to feel that the music lacked a certain
vitality. I found that here. One day I just realized that this is where I
belong.”
Chinedu Okeke,
29, was born in London and started British boarding school at age 7 (his Nigerian
father is a legal advisor for the British government in Abuja). Okeke earned a
British law degree and worked in New York, Beijing and Shanghai before moving
to Lagos and starting his own branding and production company.
Young producers like Okeke
and Omambala have joined the artist
and gallery owner Nike Davies Okundaye as part of a small but growing
group promoting Nigerian culture within Nigeria. Okundaye, who goes by her
first name, Nike, was one of the wives of a polygamous villager when she was
discovered by a curator from the American
Museum of Natural History for her indigo-batik skills. She eventually left
her husband, and has traveled to the United States many times over the years.
In 2009, she opened the Nike Centre for Art and Culture on the edge of Lagos,
near the sea. Nigerian art covers four stories of walls in the space. She says
returnee Nigerians are more likely to collect, filling their offices with
indigenous works. “Most Nigerians won’t
buy art,” she said. “They’d rather
have a religious icon in their home.”
That inclination against art and culture and toward
tradition and religion challenges the young, Western-educated returnees, but
doesn’t deter them all.
“I spent most of my
life outside and it’s not the best place to live, for many reasons, but it’s
never going to change if you are not willing to do your own part to create
change,” Okeke said. “I don’t think
politics is my thing but I’d rather be involved than complain and be part of
the problem.” He conceded that the way business is done in Lagos,
especially the closed circle of wealth and the official corruption, is
discouraging.
Some of the more spectacular incidents of apparent
corruption include the late military President
Sani Abacha’s embezzlement, to the tune of more than $3 billion. He died in
1998, but only in March the United States froze more than $458 million in
accounts linked to him. Earlier this year, the Nigerian government said it
would audit its petroleum agency after the head of the central bank, who has
since been fired, claimed that as much as $20 billion could be missing.
“It’s not as easy to
come back as people think it is, and it’s not for everybody. I have had friends
come back who haven’t been able to stick it out, there’s lots of stress and
things don’t work the way they should,” Okeke said. He recently traveled
around Europe and the United States trying to sell a documentary about a
Nigerian music festival he produced. For him and some of the younger returnee
generation, the lavish spectacles of the old guard are starting to chafe. “The power in Nigeria has remained within
the same generation for 40 years. It’s not trickling down. Anybody younger who
seems to have power is only there because a chief or a general, one of the set,
is behind them. We need a lot of development in Nigeria, infrastructure.
Nigeria should be feeding itself. But all the technical know-how and the
funding needed is international. And those within the continent that have the
money don’t understand how to develop it.”
Still, there are plenty of young people who guiltlessly
enjoy the wealth. The chiefs and their wives and children are icons of
conspicuous consumption. Nigerian peasants bend on one knee before them.
Lagos’s billionaires and multimillionaires spend up to $50 million on
long-range jets, and Nigeria has one of the fastest-growing markets for private
aircraft in the world.
Their children’s wild pool parties, drinking binges and
$250,000 weekend parties in London are local legend. Precious few from this set
would think of walking the streets of Lagos; they cruise through in
air-conditioned, locked luxury S.U.V.s, sometimes driven by officers wearing
the elephant and red eagle insignia of the national police, who divert traffic
if necessary to speed their bosses through snarled traffic. And if Lagos gets
too hot, or they can’t find a store carrying the Prada bag they want, they fly
to Dubai or Cape Town for the weekend.
The luxury concept store Temple Muse sells African fashion
alongside brands like Givenchy and Saint Laurent, food and fashion coffee table
books published by Assouline — and Champagne.
|
Luxury companies like Ermenegildo Zegna, Hugo Boss and
Porsche, noticing this trend, have been opening up shop in Lagos. Since 2008,
the Nigerian luxury concept store Temple Muse has sold a variety of African and
foreign fashion, home and gift brands, including Givenchy, Emilio Pucci, Saint
Laurent, Baccarat and Assouline. The Nigerian designer Reni Folawiyo is soon
opening a concept store called Alara, designed by the London-based architect
David Adjaye, in a three-story red-pigmented building that encloses a series of
suspended platforms and staircases. Alara will showcase Nigerian designers as
well as European houses.
“Lagos has always been
an important hub in Africa and the world – but it is now emerging as one of the
world’s foremost metropolitan cities,” Adjaye wrote in an email. “The fact that it can sustain a project like
Alara, and others like it, is evidence of its growing wealth, recently improved
infrastructure and sense of confidence. We are very much looking forward to the
project completing and have been doing some feasibility work on other sites in
the city. My hope is that we will continue to work there for years to come.”
Indigenous fashion designers are attracting the same crowd. The growing fashion
sector, like Nollywood, is indicative of a nation on the cusp of wider
prosperity, explains Omoyemi Akerele, the
founder of Style House Files, which organizes Lagos Fashion & Design Week.
“Retail is key here,” she said. “We need to create opportunities for people to
shop. People have nothing. People are returning here, because they see
opportunities.”
At her store on
Victoria Island in Lagos, the fashion designer Deola Sagoe infuses African
fabrics with Japanese and Italian influences.
|
The designer, Deola
Sagoe has been working in Lagos for more than 20 years. Sagoe, dressed in a
royal blue silk wrap blouse and black velvet leggings with a giant aquamarine
on one hand, met me in her store, a two-story sleek glass building located in
bustling Victoria Island. Even though the district is one of the wealthier
areas, many of the streets are rutted and the sidewalks cracked – if they are
there at all. She consults with clients in a room with French
velvet-upholstered chairs, and then leads them back into her studio, with walls
of fabric she designs and has handmade in Nigerian villages on 11th-century
looms. The traditional fabrics share wall space with newer pieces she designs,
like deep blue indigo-dyed silks, that she uses to create garments with an
Afro-Asian-Italian aesthetic.
Sagoe, the daughter of a major Nigerian industrialist, grew
up traveling frequently to Italy and Japan and went to college in the United
States. She took up fashion against the wishes of her father, who – like all
Nigerian parents, she said – wanted his children to go into business and make
money. Until quite recently, she noted, fashion was looked down upon as a
career in her set. Wealthy Nigerian women only went to Nigerian designers for
traditional gowns and headdresses needed for formal affairs.
Sagoe – and other Nigerian designers who’ve come after her –
are changing that culture. “People used to go to Paris and buy, but not buy it
here,” Sagoe said. “If they did, they would haggle about the price, because
there wasn’t a tradition of fashion, but of tailors.” She employs hand-weavers
and dyers in remote villages, but she can’t produce clothes on a larger scale
inside Nigeria, because the substandard power grid can’t support factories.
Nonetheless, she brought her three daughters into the business, and is
expanding. “Africa is my foundation,” she said. “Nigerians are expressive and
proud. Looking good is good business.”
The designer, Amaka
Osakwe, 28, caught the attention of the judges of the inaugural LVMH Young
Fashion Designer Prize this year with her sleek silhouettes that merge
traditional symbols and craftsmanship with modern looks. “Each piece has a
meaning,” she wrote in an email about her line, called Maki Oh, which placed in
the competition’s semifinals. “Traditionally, the colors, embellishments,
motifs, etc. of garments were used to pass messages. For example, a piece of
Adire cloth with the traditional Adire motif called ‘Mat’ (which features
hand-drawn lines which to the untrained eye may resemble a checkered pattern)
was often presented as a wedding gift.” The pattern, she continued, symbolized
the hope “that the couple may be blessed with children shortly after they lay
on a mat/bed in their home. This notion of passing messages through garments is
what we consider when we decide the length of a skirt, the motif, the color of
an embellishment. This is why research is key.”
Maki Oh, Deola Sagoe
and Folake Folarin-Coker, the designer behind Nigeria’s thriving Tiffany
Amber brand, exist to serve the wives, daughters and girlfriends of the
business titans and wealthy returnees like the 49-year-old television talk-show
host Mo Abudu, a former oil company human resources executive now known as the “Oprah of Africa.” Abudu, who was born
in London and educated in Britain, moved to Lagos a few years after she got
married. She started her talk show in 2006, and has interviewed the likes of
Hillary Rodham Clinton and Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary
Fund, but she’s chiefly an unabashed Africa-promoter. She recently launched a
pan-African television network, EbonyLife TV.
Before embarking on a
career in fashion, Folake Folarin-Coker studied law. Now, she’s the fashion
designer behind the successful brand Tiffany Amber.
|
Abudu said she’s living in Lagos because “it’s Africa’s time” now. “Westerners are more interested in war,
genocide, rape and H.I.V.,” she said. “You
would think if you listened to Western media that every other person in Africa
has H.I.V. For me, that’s boring. And there’s a business angle. African brands
must recognize that if you want to be global, your environment must be
considered with respect.
“Everything in Africa
is so virgin right now. There is so much interest. Big media are all putting
together their Africa strategy. We love American movies, but want to see our
stories. Their approach to Africa is like, we want to go to the moon. Don’t
make us look shallow and all about the money. There’s a lot of hard work going
on.”
Abudu and other Nigerian returnees know their country’s
reputation isn’t getting any better. Polio remains endemic in the northern
states, where several vaccination workers were killed in attacks last February
that were thought to have been carried out by the extremist sect Boko Haram.
The group, whose name means “Western education is forbidden,” also claimed
responsibility for a bus station bombing that killed dozens last week in the
capital city of Abuja, and is suspected in the kidnapping of about 200
schoolgirls from a northeastern town a day later.
“This country has the
biggest G.D.P. in Africa,” one oil industry expat said at the Lagos Yacht Club,
a hangout where British and Nigerian sailors sip gin and tonics. “But no
24-hour power. Where is it? The scale and quantity of what has happened here is
tragic. The people are fundamentally peaceful. They just want the basics –
water and power.”
One young investment banker educated in the United States
who had worked on Wall Street traded in his suit for the traditional linen gown
and trousers, and now works in his family’s investment firm in Lagos. He
pointed out that some of Nigeria’s problems stem from the newness and
insecurity of the private fortunes. “This level of wealth is a generation
deep,” he said. “You have a Lamborghini.
Where do you drive it? The roads are terrible. You take it out on Sundays and
carefully drive it to a hotel for lunch, then bring it home.”
The culture of philanthropy is growing among Nigerians and
the great chiefs do return some of their fortunes to the people. Banker Balogun
donated one of the largest pediatric hospitals in Africa to the medical school
of the Universtiy of Ibadan. Africa’s wealthiest businessman, the billionaire
cement mogul Aliko Dangote, has donated significant sums to programs to build
Nigerian small businesses, and he gave millions to help Nigerian flood victims.
I asked Balogun whether returning elites might portend
improvements in Nigerian infrastructure and social welfare. He said the
country’s problems stem from a postcolonial backlash against foreign
involvement.
“I’m 80, so I can give
you my views without fear,” he said. “The
country needs a thorough transformation. After independence, we used to think
the best thing was to get Nigerians into the commanding heights. We started with
what I call a morbid dislike for foreign acquisition of what we believed was
our own enterprise. It would be good if we could move away from that and allow
highly reputed, successful business entrepreneurs to partner with us in
developing the whole place.”
Mansions boast water views along Queen’s Drive in Lagos’s
exclusive Ikoyi neighborhood.
|
Chief Sonny Iwedike
Odogwu invited me in for an audience at his labyrinthine gated palace with
hand-tooled Moroccan filigree ceilings, on the palm-lined but rutted Queen’s
Drive. On the day we pulled up to the guard house, a water main was broken on
the street, and we splashed through a foot of muddy water as we pulled up. Like
Balogun, Odogwu is also in his 80s, and made his fortune as the oil and gas
industry developed. He founded one of the first Nigerian insurance brokerages
(Dyson & Diket), and insured the oil sector’s assets. On the day we met, he
wore a spotless, starched white linen robe with gold threads, and was perched
on a long couch in one of the grand sitting rooms in his mansion (a room in the
basement seats 700), considering the pleas of a pair of women from the fashion
council, who were proposing that he finance a Brazilian-Nigerian fashion expo
they wanted to attend.
Odogwu, like many of the old guard, is a very religious man.
He has donated millions to the Catholic Church and is particularly proud of
photographs of him and his wife in the Vatican earlier this year, renewing
their marriage vows in front of Pope Francis. He believes they are the first
African couple to have the Pope officiate at a marriage renewal ceremony.
I asked him whether he thought the vast fortunes he and his
friends control would or should trickle down to develop Nigeria. Odogwu
suggested that religion – not politics – was the answer to problems with
Nigeria’s wealth distribution issues. “There
are lots of religious organizations here,” he said. “They do a lot and we give them a lot of money. Instead of telling
people what they don’t have, they help them out of their frustration, and make
them believe that their way of life is better than in the west.” Spiritual
balm for the masses, he said, was one good reason for him and his fellow elites
to pile the collection plate high on Sundays.
Source: New York Times
No comments:
Post a Comment