Afikaris Gallery is pleased to present the first solo exhibition in France by Nigerian artist Eva Obodo—And we hired a carpenter to patch the cloth—running from 6 November, 2025 to 3 January, 2026.

Exploring the fragile act of repair — of materials, histories, and human connections — Obodo transforms charcoal into poetic acts of mending. Rooted in his personal story and the coal-mining legacy of Enugu, his works intertwine the economies of extraction with the metaphors of healing, where coal and charcoal become symbols of endurance, transformation and time. Between memory and matter, Eva Obodo invites us to reflect on what it takes to restore the torn fabric of communities, where each stitch is both a gesture of care and a reminder of human resilience.

Eva Obodo is one of the artists whose long-term engagement with unconventional materials for sculpture has shaped the direction of contemporary art in Nigeria. Working primarily with charcoal, copper wires and aluminium, his work engages both the materiality of his chosen media and their potential as metaphors for addressing contemporary issues in Africa and the enduring legacies of extractive colonialism.

Through a labor-intensive process of tying and bundling charcoal, a material with chemical, physical, and symbolic affinities with coal, Obodo interrogates the history of mineral extraction in Africa. His works in this exhibition responds to the social and environmental consequences of extractive economies, including the exploitation of labor and the precarious conditions of contemporary living.

Obodo’s engagement with these themes is deeply personal. His father was a coal miner in Enugu, Eastern Nigeria, and survived the 1949 massacre of protesting miners by British colonial officers. This event catalyzed the independence movement in Nigeria and marked the gradual decline of coal mining in the region. To confront the environmental and social repercussions of this industry, Obodo employs charcoal bound with copper and aluminum wires. For instance, his work Pickman, featured in this exhibition, references not only miners in Enugu, but also other across Africa, who, under dangerous conditions, descend into the bowels of the earth to extract rare minerals that sustain global demand for fuel and digital conductors. Through such works, Obodo invites us to reflect on both the social and ecological toll of fossil fuels and rare earth mineral extraction and the contemporary charcoal trade, with its attendant devastation caused by felling and burning of hardwood forests.

The meticulous, time-consuming nature of Obodo’s practice underscores the value of labor. In his relief sculptures, he experiments with the form and arrangement of charcoal, transforming the material into an expressive medium. To create these works, he gathers charcoal fragments, and with several assistants, sort them by size, meticulously wash away staining dust, and prepare them to transition from fuel sources to art material. These fragments are then methodically tied into vertical and horizontal patterns, while acrylics, colored aluminum wires and aluminum strips (fashioned from discarded beverage cans) punctuate the surface with color, creating monochromatic reliefs.

In the works presented in this exhibition, Obodo’s materials and studio process function as metaphors for the lived condition in Africa. He describes his process of stitching, wrapping, and tying as gestures of repairing wounds that history has left open and tying disparate parts together, both materially and symbolically. His approach transforms artistic labor into a meditative practice of restoration, reimagining how broken systems and fractured histories might be held together, even temporarily. He believes that materials possess their own agency and capacity to speak, and by listening to his materials, Obodo allows charcoal to narrate intertwined stories of exploitation, resilience, and hope.

The exhibition’s title, And we hired a carpenter to patch the cloth, crystallizes this philosophy. It evokes the improvisation and irony that define both African social realities and Obodo’s aesthetic language. The absurdity of a carpenter repairing damaged garments reflects the absurdity of systems that no longer function as intended, yet across his works, this metaphor of repair acknowledges that healing in postcolonial societies is often achieved through imperfect acts of care—patching and suturing. His Rush hour, a dense composition of a cityscape, visualizes the entangled energy of urban life and its relentless drive to “fix” things, even as new complications emerge, reflecting the popular Nigerian urban parlance – “We dey patch am.” Obodo’s wrapping of some charcoal fragments like presents also extends this symbolic vocabulary. The gesture of wrapping implies preservation and concealment, inviting questions about value and exchange. Through his processes, Obodo reconfigures materials associated with destruction into sites of contemplation and rebirth.

A glance at the evolution of Obodo’s practice reveals an artist continually pushing the boundaries of his medium. His engagement with charcoal, which began in 2008, has since evolved considerably. Initially working with metal and concrete sculptures, he later turned to wood fragments—often engraved with motifs or text—establishing the groundwork for his continued exploration of charcoal.

The trajectory of his practice can be traced to the decades-long experimentation among artists of the Nsukka School, a group formed at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, where he is now a professor of sculpture. Rooted in the postcolonial modernist philosophy of “Natural Synthesis”, this lineage—including artists like Uche Okeke, Obiora Udechukwu and El Anatsui—bridges 20th century postcolonial modernist art and 21st century contemporary art in Africa. Obodo’s own practice continues this legacy of transformation, demonstrating how the language of materials can articulate histories of exploitation and survival.

(Text by Iheanyi Onwuegbucha, art historian and independent curator)