Renowned Nigerian documentary photographer and filmmaker Tam Fiofori, popularly known as Uncle Tam, has died. He was 82.
The prolific writer, critic, and media consultant’s death
was announced on Wednesday.
Mr Fiofori was also a notable chronicler of Nigeria’s
history through his albums. His films, which include the works of Nigerian
artists Biodun Olaku, J. D. Okhai Ojeikere, and Olu Amoda, have left an
indelible mark on the country’s cultural landscape.
Fiofori grew up in Benin City, where his father, Emmanuel
Fiofori, taught at Edo College but he was originally from Okrika, Rivers State.
He attended King’s College, Lagos, and later King’s College
London for his university education, after which he focused on writing and
music.
In the US, he was an associate of Sun Ra. According to the
Pan African Space Station, he invited Sun Ra to Lagos for FESTAC 77, which led
to a visit to the Kalakuta Republic. He documented this experience in the
Nigerian journal Glendora Review.
His role in bringing underground black creativity to the
American national consciousness in the 1970s was significant. As the first New
Music/Electronic Music Editor for DownBeat and a contributor to many other art
and literary publications in the US and Europe, he played a crucial role in
shaping the cultural narrative of the time.
Fiofori’s influence extended beyond Nigeria. He lived in
Harlem, New York, in the 1960s, where he became Sun Ra’s manager and produced
writing considered ‘a founding connection between Ra and the movement known as
Afrofuturism’. This international exposure shaped his perspective and greatly
influenced his work.
He was famous for his significant contributions to film and
photography. He managed American jazz legend Sun Ra, wrote for numerous
publications, and was a founding executive of the Photographers Association of
Nigeria.
He served as a film consultant to the Rivers State Council
for Arts and Culture, director of the Rivers State Documentary Series, and
consultant/scriptwriter to NTA Network on Documentaries. He was also a founding
executive of the Photographers’ Association of Nigeria (PAN).
His works have been exhibited in Africa, Europe, and the US.
He featured in films such as “Odum and Water Masquerades” in
1974, “Biodun Olaku: Nigerian Painter”, “J. D.’ Okhai Ojeikere: Master
Photographer”, and “Olu Amoda: A Metallic Journey” in 2015.
Some of his publications include the print documentary ‘A
Benin Coronation: Oba Erediauwa’ of 2011.
He contributed to the 2018 book ‘African Photographer J. A.
Green: Re-imagining the Indigenous and the Colonial’, edited by Martha G.
Anderson and Lisa Aronson.
His awards include the Pan African Writers’ Association
(PAWA), the present International Documentary Film Festival, and Music in
Africa. In 2022, he received the IREP Lifetime Achievement Award. Femi
Odugbemi, founder of the iREP Documentary Film Festival, praised him as a
monumental figure in the documentary world.
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