OUR PARTNERS The Creative Alliance is rooted in the belief that meaningful cultural work emerges through collaboration. From concept to execution, our project has been shaped by the insights, generosity, and partnership of individuals and institutions committed to reimagining public space, heritage, and storytelling.

Institutional Partner

The Sahara Centre  is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering the creative industries as catalysts for social cohesion in Nigeria. As co-conveners of the Lantern Art Space Fellowship, the Sahara Centre provided the foundational framework that enabled the formation of the Creative Alliance and the development of the TALE project. Their mission to harness the transformative potential of creativity for nation-building is deeply aligned with our own. Through research, immersive workshops, and policy-driven advocacy, the Sahara Centre creates the conditions for creative practitioners to engage critically with society, foster collective memory, and imagine alternative futures. Their support has been essential in enabling us to approach cultural memory and public space through a lens of creativity, care, and civic responsibility.

Institutional Partner

Goethe-Institut Nigeria has been a crucial institutional partner in the development and amplification of the TALE project. As co-conveners of the Lantern Art Space Fellowship, they provided funding and support that enabled the Creative Alliance to present our early research, documentary film, and exhibition during a public showcase at their Lagos space in December 2024. Their commitment extended into the second phase of the project, offering continued funding and institutional backing as we deepened our engagement with community stakeholders, unearthed archival

Institutional Partner

The National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) has been a foundational institutional partner to the TALE project, offering critical access, expertise, and guidance throughout our engagement with the Old Secretariat building. As the federal agency tasked with the preservation and management of Nigeria’s tangible and intangible heritage, NCMM’s support enabled the Creative Alliance to move from research into site-specific storytelling.

Under the leadership of Mr. Olugbile Holloway, Director General of the NCMM, the Commission facilitated our formal access to the Old Secretariat building, supporting our efforts to assess the site and conduct key elements of our documentary filming. His commitment to rethinking public engagement with heritage sites aligned closely with our goals of transforming historic architecture into living cultural spaces.

At the National Museum Lagos, Mrs. Nkechi Adedeji, Curator, offered an essential institutional perspective on the realities of heritage management today. Her insights into the policies and responsibilities that govern the stewardship of buildings like the Old Secretariat helped frame our project within the broader national context of cultural preservation, access, and public memory.

Mrs. Grace Ifeadi, Head of the Heritage Department at the museum, brought deep historical knowledge to the project, sharing context on the building’s past, its custodianship, and possible futures. Her contributions helped enrich both our understanding and our storytelling, adding nuance to the ways we approached the site’s layered narrative.

Together, the support of the NCMM—through its leadership and museum staff—has been integral to the TALE project’s unfolding, enabling us to ground our creative interventions in rigorous historical knowledge and institutional collaboration.

Kelechi Ujagbor Historian, The Façade Nigeria

Theo Lawson Architect and Chief Warden, Freedom Park Lagos

Richard Vedelago Curator & Founder, Nahous

Amanda Iheme Architectural Photographer & Visual Archivist

Oluwajomiloju Adeyemi Architect & Experience Designer

Daniel Onyemelukwe Tour Guide, Freedom Park Lagos

Ife Arowolawun Photographer & AI Artist

Olanrewaju Ali Photographer

Noah Okwudini Photographer & Sound Designer

Daniel Austine (Superstar Ace) Aerial Photographer & Visual Artist

Charles Ofikhenua Web Designer & Developer

Jonathan Chambalin Multidisciplinary Artist and Visual Storyteller

Creative Institutional Partner Communications & Production

As a creative enterprise dedicated to championing contemporary African art and culture, OSENGWA provided strategic and on-the-ground support across multiple aspects of the TALE project. Their team contributed to the planning and execution of the project’s social media communications, exhibition production, and content capture. From coordinating behind-the-scenes documentation to supporting the visual storytelling of the project’s evolution, OSENGWA’s role helped ensure the TALE narrative reached a wider audience while maintaining artistic and curatorial integrity. Their presence has been a steady hand in shaping how the project is seen, experienced, and remembered.

Creative Institutional Partner Virtual Reality Experience Design & Build

Lucid Jungles is an interdisciplinary creative studio working at the edge of technology, imagination, and African futurism. Co-founded by visual artist Bonzo and creative producer Mide Akindeko, the studio contributed an immersive video installation to the TALE exhibition that reimagines the Ministry of Justice building as a living, breathing entity—shifting through time and layered with ancestral energy, memory, and possibility. Their contribution invited audiences into a speculative world where the past and future of the building converge, offering an experiential meditation on loss, reclamation, and transformation. Through their practice, Lucid Jungles expands the TALE project’s exploration of space and memory into new visual and sensory territories.