November Spotlight Artists: Olamide Ogunade Olisco, Boluwatife Victoria Lawal, and Wasiu Eshinlokun
- THE.CCART

- Nov 6
- 2 min read
This November, THE.CCART highlights three artists whose work explores layered emotional states, social commentary, and the moments that shape our everyday realities. Olamide Ogunade Olisco, Boluwatife Victoria Lawal, and Wasiu Eshinlokun each approach art as a way to observe, question, and reflect, translating personal experience into visual form. Through varied techniques and mediums, their practices open up conversations about pressure, memory, and transformation.
Olamide Ogunade Olisco: Creating Pressure, Presence, and Portraiture
Olamide Ogunade Olisco is a Nigerian visual artist whose work combines hyperrealism with symbolic gestures to reflect the complexities of African society. Using charcoal, graphite, and acrylic on paper or canvas, Olisco focuses on intricate renditions of skin and expressive facial features. His signature motif, vibrant comic-style bubbles, represents the pressure and impermanence of daily life, offering viewers both catharsis and reflection.
Drawing inspiration from his environment and multidisciplinary interests in dance, music, and drama, Olisco uses art as a tool for social commentary and empowerment. His work celebrates Black identity, merging fashion-forward detail with classical realism to portray powerful figures that prompt viewers to pause, question, and engage.
Boluwatife Victoria Lawal: Swirling Colour, Shared Humanity
Boluwatife Victoria Lawal is a contemporary Nigerian painter whose portraits fuse emotive brushwork with swirling colour to tell deeply personal and social stories. Her practice blends oil and acrylic to explore themes of gender, race, and identity, often focusing on the lived experiences of African women. Her works honour Afrocentrism while embracing the complexity of human emotions, intimacy, joy, grief, and healing.
Lawal’s layered use of colour represents connection across difference, forming figurative fusions that speak to unity, resilience, and dignity. Influenced by her training in art and public health, her portraits are not only visual statements but emotional spaces that advocate for justice, self-acceptance, and visibility for marginalised voices.
Eshinlokun Wasiu : Tension, Transformation, and the Symbolic Body
Eshinlokun Wasiu is a surrealist Nigerian artist whose evocative paintings explore growth, struggle, and psychological freedom. Often using charcoal and acrylic, his work features silhouetted figures wrapped in tape, a powerful motif that signifies the emotional and societal binds that shape and restrict us. Yet within this visual tension lies possibility: each figure seems caught between limitation and breakthrough.
Wasiu's art acts as a metaphor for transformation, showing how constraint can spark evolution. Inspired by the challenges of daily life in Nigeria, his visual language invites us to confront internalised pressures while recognising the quiet power we carry within ourselves to push forward.
Whether through precise realism, expressive colour, or surreal symbolism, these three artists open windows into emotional landscapes shaped by both personal histories and wider social currents. This November, take a closer look at the practices of Olamide Ogunade Olisco, Boluwatife Victoria Lawal, and Wasiu Eshinlokun, and discover how their work gives form to the unspoken tensions we all navigate.
By THE.CCART
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