NBA Africa To Host Second Edition of “NBA Meets Art” in Nigeria

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NBA Africa today announced that the second edition of “NBA Meets Art” – an invite-only evening reception bringing together industry leaders from fashion, music, art, business, and sports, curated to celebrate the game of basketball through the lens of Nigerian art and culture – will be held in Lagos, Nigeria on Saturday, Nov. 4.

For this edition, NBA Africa will collaborate with Nigerian artist Dennis Osadebe to curate an installation titled, “Passing / Building / Victory,” which explores the key role of teamwork on the court and how similar collaboration can help develop communities, aligning with the NBA’s mission to inspire and connect people everywhere through the power of basketball.

The installation comprises of five figurines representing basketball players wearing the artist’s distinctive mask, a recurring symbol in his visual language that speaks to Nigeria’s basketball heritage.  Drawing from the universal childhood memories of playing with toys, the figurines will be in dynamic motion, symbolically passing the ball through their unified, outstretched arms, encapsulating the spirit of victory through teamwork and emphasizing the importance of every person’s contribution to the development, growth, and prosperity in their communities.

The installation will also be open to public viewing from Nov. 3-5 at the Balmoral Convention Center at the Federal Palace Hotel in Lagos as part of “ART X Lagos” 2023.

“We are excited to host the second edition of “NBA Meets Art” as we continue to use basketball as a tool to inspire and connect people across Africa,” said Vice President and Head of NBA Nigeria, Gbemisola Abudu.  “Given Nigeria’s vibrant art scene, it was essential we create a platform to celebrate basketball through the lens of the country’s rich heritage and culture.  The theme of our collaboration with Dennis Osadebe – “Passing / Building / Victory” – specifically speaks to how we can use the teamwork displayed in basketball as inspiration when building our communities, which also aligns with the essence of our work in Nigeria and Africa.” 

The NBA’s history in Nigeria spans more than five decades, dating back to when Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famers Kareem-Abdul Jabbar and Oscar Robertson held basketball clinics in Lagos in 1971.  There have been nearly 50 NBA players either born in Nigeria or with at least one Nigerian parent, including Hakeem Olajuwon, who was selected first overall in the 1984 NBA Draft and became the first African player to be selected first overall.  In 2013, the NBA, ExxonMobil, and PanAfricare launched the Power Forward youth development program, which uses basketball to teach health literacy and life skills to secondary school students in Abuja.  To date, Power Forward has reached more than 250,000 boys and girls across 40 schools.  The NBA Nigeria office launched in January 2022.   

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