Jonathan Adagogo Green (1873–1905), Nigeria’s First Professional Photographer. |
Jonathan Adagogo Green (1873–1905) was one of the first and best African photographers who also took advantage of his British sounding name and his wealthy father’s connection to obtain even more jobs especially from highly placed colonial officers.
As the first professional photographer of Nigerian birth, Jonathan Adagogo Green can be seen as an important voice for Nigeria’s early modernist art movement. Moreover, his photographic work reveals that he was straddling two worlds; one, his own as an Ibani young man born into an elite trading family, and the other, as the chief photographer for the British as they lay the foundation for the newly formed colony of Nigeria.
Adagogo Green was of noble stock; son of a high Chief of a prominent Bonny House. He was well-educated and socially very confident, all of which can be glimpsed from his body of work.
He studied photography in Sierra Leone and then established a studio in Bonny and became one of the most prolific and accomplished indigenous photographers to be active in West Africa.
Green’s photographic skills were in great demand and his business boomed at a time Bonny functioned as the administrative centre of the protectorate throughout the historical trajectory, putting him at the hub of British imperialist activity.
Green took this famous photograph of Oba Ovonramwen of Benin on the navy ship (SS Ivy) on his way to exile in Calabar, 1897 |
He was also responsible for the now very famous photograph of Oba Ovonramwen of Benin on the navy ship (SS Ivy) taking him into exile in 1897, while it was anchored off the Bonny River enroute Calabar.
At that time, the Ibani Ijaw town of Bonny was at the heart of maritime commerce, with the slave trade at its peak in the 18th Century and the palm oil trade dominating throughout the 19th Century.
Green’s photographic skills were in great demand and his business boomed at a time Bonny functioned as the administrative centre of the protectorate throughout the historical trajectory, putting him at the hub of British imperialist activity.
Some of his works are on display in the British Museum to this day and without his prolific portfolio, there definitely would be huge gaps in Nigeria’s recorded history.
Green died in 1905. He was 32. His remains lie in an all-marble tomb, imported from Belgium, in Bonny, present day Rivers State.
Source: Historyville
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Meet Jonathan Green, Nigeria’s First Professional Photographer
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April 30, 2019
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