Monday
Friday
Yk in brief...
- Young Kings Projects (Yk Projects) operates between Nigeria and France as a not-for-profit company, initially registered as a performing company in Nigeria, but due to the lack of appreciation of the arts and the disdain which tend to subject Artistes to a hostile environment, informed the coming together of a collective of Youths with legs in different sectors of arts, amongst which are Performing artistes, Visual artistes and Writers, all with similar intentions of creating an alternative landscape for the local audience to be aware of the art by projecting contemporary arts (Dance, New Circus and Street arts) through media and publications, thereby creating a conducive environment for their existence at home.
- Creations and performances (Mainly Dance, New circus art and Street arts with the fusion of other media)
- Coverage and documentation of art related profiles, for media and archival purposes.
- Event Organizations (such as the Bi-annual Ewa Bami'jo, workshops and conferences)
- Since 2004 that Yk Projects has been in existence, we've been able to register ourselves in the subconscious of many and getting involved more in the contemporary dance discourse, both theoretical and practically in Africa, Europe and America at large, and we've participated in international workshops, festivals and conferences in Lagos, Bamako, Cotonou, Paris, Santo Domingo, Tunis and USA.
- Since 2005 we organised Ewa Bami’jo locally in Lagos. An event that will later become a bi-annual and international event from 2009.
- In 2007 the organisation executes a research project and happenings in non-conventional spaces titled Do we need Cola-Cola to dance? As part of the Afro-futurist struggles and inspiring Africa to dream using alternative measures. It toured round Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa, Mozambique, Kenya and Cameroon.
- In 2008, Yk Projects carries on with the realisation of a documentary film (Do we need cola-cola to dance?) and a documentary photographic book (Crossing Boarders) that follows our 2007 research project. A work-in-progress seires of Do we need cola cola to dance? Has been screened in Lagos, Kinshasa and Masachausette.
- Presently Yk Projects has moved on with the execution of a workshop series concept titled “Collection of those things that burn in us”
- whose series I was carried out in Lagos. Nigeria. April 2008.
- Series II, in Massachausette. USA. June 2008.
- Series III, in Kinshasa. DR Congo. July/August 2008.
Sunday
DO WE NEED COLA COLA TO DANCE?
Monday
Friday
A Penny from me
LAGOS: A new dawn at the center of excellence.
CAIRO: A Saga to contemporary civiliation
JOHANNESBURG: The rainbow journey
MAPUTO: Happy people - Happy Nation
NAIROBI: “Karibu Yumbani”
YAOUNDÉ: Even the Francophone speaks English
Tuesday
Au revoir
Déjà vu and the Aftermath
- -MESSAGE-
- -WEALTH-
Sunday
To: Professor Wole Soyinka
Saturday
Do we need COLA COLA to dance?
PROject ARTistery
The Project is an artistic expression of our "patriotism", declaration of our engagement in a structural development that is in the making as well as our responsibility as artistes for change, it is a sincere laboratory experimentation of an existing theory. Our reference points or case study could be coming from dance perspective or photography and cinematography, but its a valid element for development in general using alternative measures.
- Dance/street Theatre:
The project rallies around Dance which is the centre of attraction here, and as it was showcased mostly in public and private spaces it broke into the frontiers of street theatre. Meanwhile, the Happenings were absolutely un-official; no posters, no info, even we didn't necessarily know where the next performance spot may be just like in ancient travelling theatres. This "piece", more of improvisation is to be an alternative artform to the formal exhibition of dance in the theatre, it creates its own context, since there are few or no ready made theatre venues or audience to begin with, and there is only a few practice of alternative movements in the continent today, the creation of this piece is not to insert a new style into existing buildings or enticing already formed audience away from existing venues but just to be involved in an special broad oppositional art experiment.
This Alternative art movement could be cited as a significant part of, or even an influence on the general cultural and socio-political development of Africa and building of our local market and audience.
- Audio Visual:
Another part of the research is the documentation which was aimed at capturing the reaction of the "naive" public who audience our performances, seeing the different countries and their different present situation talking about culture and different internal cultural policies which certainly differs depending on their level of acceptability to arts and human tolerance in general, as well as a showcase of Africa in its diversity. The documentary film in its own special way sways between questions, dance, interviews, people, politics and city life, moving into the city to meet people in different realities and with a totally different point of view to arts and culture, from the regular citizen to the executives, politicians and financiers as well as the “culture people” ending it with another phase of meeting with other African creators and operator in the Diaspora.
- Book:
At the end of the touring phase of the research, while the editing was going on, we went back to the drawing board to begin a completely new phase of summarizing the whole experience into publication, a photographic illustration of the theme "Do we need cola-cola to dance?". This photographic documentary book is accompanied with statements of some important personalities in the city where the research were being carried out, the city in its utmost specificity, the audience in their collective and individual expressions, our own perception and personal point of view and the experiences we came back with during the research and other contributed articles to enhance our preoccupation.
REsearch Location and OUTcome
In order to gain access to different countries with their different internal cultural policies and human tolerance built on the knowledge, experience, and needs of local residents, we decided to spread this research into three similar locations in 6 cities in Africa (Lagos, Cairo, Johannesburg, Maputo, Nairobi and Yaoundé), organize happenings in public spaces varying from market places to malls, university surroundings to the beach, as well as the corners of the streets and other available spaces that could accommodate such manifestation. One important criteria we put into consideration is the possibility of balancing the gaps by making sure that our happenings travels from the locality of the low income earners to the rich quarters and also the young intellectual sects in the universities, in order to have a broader view of the level of acceptance of dance as a form of art in Africa.
The outcome of this new vision research will certainly bring the culture sector in Africa some very positive attention in the aspect of the quality of audience we get, finance and our market structure if we succeed in getting maximum media coverage after the project’s Cinema premier and book launch that will be held alongside Ewa Bami’ jo, a three day summit that reunites series of cultural operators, Artistes, cultural financiers, journalists/Art critics, film makers, Writers and culture ministries in the commercial city of Nigeria. LAGOS, during the month of August 2008 with the themed: "Home and Abroad".
ApproacH
This project is aimed to combine entertainment with database, discussion, socio-political proposals, recommendations and policies of culture, it represent our contribution to social engagement, primarily committed to bringing about actual changes in specific communities towards arts and culture. Our priority is our audience; all action, aesthetics and pragmatics, stories and documentary, and so on – was inscribed with questions of fundamental importance to our audience. Always, our starting point was the nature of the audience we were faced with and the location we found ourselves, the aesthetics of our performances was tailor-made and shaped to match with the locality we found ourselves. However, our choice of research was guided by a more fundamental impulse than the quest for mere traveling and performing.
ObjECTives
- Do we need Cola to Dance? Seeks to be part of the growing network of choreographic and research initiatives on the continent.
- By having discussions with important poeple in the region with similar types of community but not neccesarily having same problematic point of view, there might be a wider effect, such project as ours might contribute to some kind of progressive social, even cultural politics development.
- This is just an additional initiation of new structures and alternative movements to support the projection of contemporary Arts to local audience especially through the media.
- Being a medium of appeal to other African creators outside Africa to go and contribute to changes in the face of the Arts scene of their various home countries which has a long way to go.
- To be a source of inspiration to those large numbers of talented youth in Africa who are not encouraged, the Government and other enterprises, funding organisations and multinational companies who might be motivated to support the work of arts in Africa.