The multidisciplinary artist of Nigerian origin, born in Lagos and currently based in London, Leonard Iheagwam, known as Soldier, presents Nourishment, his first solo exhibition in the heart of Lagos. The project, which blends the contemporary with memory and the urgency of everyday life, is presented at Nahous, the new cultural enclave housed in the historic Old Federal Palace Hotel, transforming it into a sensory territory where food, history and identity intertwine as one.
Iheagwam uses food as a starting point to discuss survival, class and collective memory, drawing a line between the resistance strategies of the past and the consumption patterns of the present. A tin, a sachet or a stock cube become symbols of a nation that has learned to reinvent itself within its own fractures. From humanitarian aid flights during the Biafran War to the arrival of foreign brands such as Peak, Milo and Maggi, the artist constructs an emotional archive of how desire and necessity have shaped the Nigerian imagination for more than half a century.
The exhibition combines painting, installation, sound and archive to create an immersive experience where everyday materials take on the weight of sacred objects. Rusty cans, reused wrappers, cardboard boxes and disposable containers are presented as relics that contain not only history, but dignity. Iheagwam turns the banal into the political, and the domestic into the poetic, questioning the hierarchies between art and life, between consumer object and cultural testimony.
On opening day, Nahous became a meeting point for Lagos’ new creative generation: artists, curators, collectors, and voices from the worlds of fashion and critical thinking gathered to experience an exhibition that is not only contemplated, but felt. Conversations revolved around the relationship between class, consumption and creativity, and the role of art as a mirror and driving force for a society seeking to narrate itself. There was something electric in the air, a shared sense of witnessing the birth of a new cultural language.
‘Nahous was born as a space for layered cultural storytelling,’ explained Richard Vedelago, founder of Nahous. ‘Nourishment embodies that vision, transforming the everyday into a lens through which we can reflect on how history, creativity and resilience intersect.’ In this sense, the dialogue between Iheagwam’s project and the exhibition space itself is inseparable: both function as living archives, places of friction and discovery, where art ceases to be contemplation and becomes conversation.
Beyond its aesthetic significance, Nourishment functions as a reflection on time. On how the simplest objects—a packet of noodles, a label, a spoon—hold traces of those who used them, shared them or needed them. Soldier approaches food as a language that spans generations, a form of communication that survives even when history fragments. Her work does not seek answers, but resonances: an invitation to think about how identity is constructed when memory is measured in flavours, textures and repeated gestures.
On display until 7 December 2025 at Nahous, Lagos.
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