Established by Dr Usman Oladipo Akanbi, the Imodoye Writers Residency is a private initiative for writers and visual artists keen on completing their ongoing work in a conducive environment at no cost. And as part of giving back to the community, during their stay in the residency, the writers are expected to mentor secondary school students in Ilorin in creative art/writing.
Today, the ancient town of Ilorin, Kwara State, welcomes the first batch of the 2023 Imodoye Writers Residency programme. “The four writers, Tares Oburumu, Ruth Chidera Echewe, Sadiq Mustafa and Taiye Ojo are expected to be here for three weeks and an optional one week,” according to a statement issued by the Residency Manager.
Tares Oburumu is a Bayelsa State-born poet and essayist, based in Warri, Delta State, Nigeria. He's the author of 6 published chapbooks. Tares Oburumu is the winner of the GAP poetry prize 2018 and his chapbook 'Origin of the Syma Species' won The Sillerman First Book prize for African poets 2022, to be published by Nebraska University Press, U.S., in fall 2023. Tares had been nominated for the Pushcart prize with Woven Tales Press 2019, and Ice Floes International literary journal 2021.
Tares Oburumu is in Imodoye residency to work and expand his three chapbooks, Erasure, Chatham House and Red: the Love Story of Annie Ernaux. As a child, Tares heard the nerve-racking stories of how brothers took to the Atlantic Ocean, going oversee, and it broke him to pieces hearing the manner they died in their attempt to escape the bedlam their country has become. His lens' expositions focus on emigration and the attendant trauma not told by those who suffer from it. And to shine the light on how they ended, coffined in the dream of escaping Nigeria.
Ruth Chidera Echewe, (Unbreakable) is a writer, editor, media personality and professional blogger. She publishes potpourri of themes in unbreaky.com blog. Her personal blog space is called Unbreakable Features. She's a graduate of English and Literary Studies from the Federal University Lafia, Nasarawa State, Nigeria. An indigene of Abia State, Nigeria, but resides in Enugu State.
Ruth, Chidera Echewe is in Imodoye to complete her work, Sisters Series, prose, dealings with humans, and certain bonds that sustained our existence and given us a different definition of life. She kindly follows various studies that have proven the strongest bonds emanated from the establishment of relationships. Ruth is motivated by her passion for creativity which has gone ahead to give birth to what she intends to manifest into a publishing, writing and editing firm in the nearest future.
Abubakar Sadiq Mustapha is a poet, art curator, documentary photographer, and community developer. He studied Geology and Mining at Ibrahim Badamadi Babangida University, Lapai, Niger State, and he is currently rounding off his Master's degree program at the same institution. Sadiq uses books, photography, and arts in driving social change from girl-child education, and gender-based violence to youth participation in politics and believes in the power of photography and how it can be used toward mental health. He is in Imodoye to complete his manuscript, Home is my Mother's Tongue.
Abubakar Sadiq Mustapha is a photo columnist with Salamander Ink Magazine and the curator of the Abubakar Gimba literacy campaign. He's the project lead for The Lapai Book Club's mobile library and school, a project that takes reading and arts to grassroots communities in Northern Nigeria aimed at increasing the literacy rate of the region and creating awareness in governance.
Ojo Taiye is a Delta-based Nigerian eco-artist and writer who uses poetry as a handy tool to hide his frustration with society. He is the winner of the Hay Writer's Circle Poetry Prize, US, 2021, Calthalbui Poetry Prize, Ireland 2021. In 2020 Taiye Ojo was selected to participate in Capital City Film Poetry Festival, in Michigan and Poetry Introductory Series, in Ireland. His commissioned works include Belfast Photo Festival 2021, Winnipeg Fringe Festival and Leeds Poetry Festival.
Taiye’s recent works explore neocolonialism, institutionalized violence and ecological trauma in the oil-rich, polluted Niger Delta. His themes deal with the effects of climate change, homelessness, migration, drought and famine, as well as a range of transversal issues arising from racism, black identity and mental health. Taiye Ojo is in Imodoye to complete his poetry collection, Scoping Map.
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