Monday, June 15, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

Iké Udé storms Washington with  Nollywood Portraits

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By Damiete Braide

Nigerian artist, Ike Ude, is currently holding a solo exhibition entitled “Iké Udé: Nollywood Portraits” at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in Washington, United States of America.

The exhibition features 33 of Udé’s 64 portraits of Nollywood film stars, directors and producers, alongside for the first time some of the garments styled by the stars and a bespoke set, in which visitors can create their own identities with the help of on-site stylists. The exhibition opened on Saturday, February 5, and runs till month end.

Ude is based in America and, after three decades, he returned to Nigeria, in 2014, to photograph Nigerian celebrities.

“We are very excited to join the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art in celebrating these Nigerian film industry personalities in the classic, elegant style Iké Udé has perfected,” said Osahon Akpata, Project Director of Nollywood Portraits.

“The radical beauty of these portraits are intended to make a bold statement about the portrayal of our people at the highest art and cultural institutions in the world.”

Akpata further disclosed that, on Friday, February 11, 2022, there would be a virtual global launch event of the exhibition featuring an interactive session with the artist, Iké Udé, and four Nollywood stars discussing their portrait experience, an exclusive preview of Udé’s documentary short, Nollywood in Focus, and a sneak peak of the exhibition.

Iké Udé celebrates the luminescent beauty and mystique of Nigerian visionaries by turning his lens on the talented people who drive Nollywood, Nigeria’s $3 billion film industry. Known for his performative and iconoclastic style and vibrant sense of composition, Udé’s photographs use colour, attire and other markers to make elegant yet unexpected portraits. 

The exhibition features 33 of Udé’s 64 portraits of Nollywood film stars, directors and producers, alongside—for the first time—some of the garments styled by the stars and a bespoke set, in which visitors can create their own identities with the help of on-site stylists.

On display through February 2023, the exhibition was originated by independent curator, Selene Wendt, and curated for the Smithsonian by Karen E. Milbourne. In addition to Udé’s portraits, the exhibition will feature fashion, film clips and interviews with such Nollywood celebrities as Alexx Ekubo and Taiwo Ajai-Lycett.

“Iké Udé is a true visionary who presents himself and the world around him with a combination of extraordinary style, cutting intellectual humor and exacting detail,” said Milbourne, senior curator for the National Museum of African Art. “He reveals how each of us performs our identity, and in the case of these Nollywood stars, he takes us beyond the façade of celebrity. He invites us to see how they, themselves, want to be seen.”

The exhibition counters the isolation of COVID-19 and winter in Washington with a unique and regenerative visitor experience. Everybody is celebrated as they enter on a red carpet. Weekends will be especially dynamic as visitors are invited to bring their best selves (and outfits) to the museum to be enhanced by an on-site stylist before taking a photograph in an Udé-style set. Visitors can also explore portrait art using interactive tools in which they can combine set, stage and costume to envision lustrous compositions of their own.

Throughout his career, Udé has consistently challenged distinctions between art, performance and style and has positioned himself at the forefront of each. He is perhaps most widely recognised for his performative, often autobiographical, approach to photography, which is typically bold, ironic, playful and inquisitive. With the launch of his art, culture and fashion magazine, aRude, in 1995, Udé set the standard for what would set a trend of similar magazines worldwide.

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art is the only museum in the world dedicated solely to the collection, conservation, study and exhibition of Africa’s arts across time and media.