act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn
act 2
between cities
movement, memory, and shared design—from mother to daughter, father to son, across Lagos, Accra and Los Angeles.
"Between Cities" represents the latest evolution in my ongoing exploration of Black life, loss, and resilience. Following my 2018 exhibition "What Do You Do"—which confronted the aftermath of police brutality—this new body of work examines what it means to raise Black children between Nigeria and America, between safety and surveillance, between cultural preservation and contemporary survival.
The exhibition presents 20-25 photographs from my family's transformative six-month sojourn in Lagos (December 2024-May 2025), documenting my American-born children discovering their Nigerian heritage while their Nigerian-born father rediscovers what home means after loss. This work speaks directly to contemporary urgencies around Black futurity, diaspora identity, and the possibilities that emerge when we imagine beyond borders.
nuthn