LV
CV
DAZED-3
UM1B4706
UM1B5666
UM1B1889 1
UM1B1045 1
UM1B2159
UM1B2067
Untitled (Cotton)
UM1B1375
UM1B4974
Painted Calabashes, Aso-Oke and Veneto Leather
UM1B3272
UM1B6133 copy
UM1B3152
UM1B5944 1
Plastic, Two and Red
UM1B5714 1
UM1B1146_a
UM1B3164_a
UM1B0870 copy
8th Floor Internal View
UM1B6868
UM1B1594_a
UM1B8387
9th Floor Internal View
UM1B3420
UM1B8373
10th Floor Internal View
UM1B8398
7th Floor Internal View
UM1B9641
UM1B7047-copy
Cyan Deconstruction #1
UM1B1011_a
Lorenzo Vitturi book launch
Schermata 2020-09-14 alle 13.01.59
UM1B0038
Orange Deconstruction #3
UM1B1040_a
UM1B5353
UM1B8040
UM1B3277
UM1B4621
UM1B7676
Banana Tree, Bougainvillea, and Green
UM1B7250
UM1B5429_b_RGB
Painted Agbe, Italian Leather, Coral Beads and Horn
UM1B4887
Yam, Calabashes, Aso-oke, Egg and Pink Sponge
UM1B7533
Money Must Be Made

Money Must Be Made is a multidisciplinary project which explores atypical patterns of urban change through the observation of two contrasting realities in Lagos, Nigeria: that of the Financial Trust House multistorey building and of the Balogun street Market. Until the 1990s, the Financial Trust House hosted banks, international airlines, and corporate firms. But after the formation of the Balogun Market – the second biggest street market in West Africa – the building now remains unoccupied. While in the rest of Lagos, as in most other cities around the world, the arrival of Western corporations often causes the displacement of local businesses – in this particular area of Lagos Island it happened quite the opposite. The street vendors forced the financial companies out of the area, providing the biggest source of business locally through the sale of products mostly coming from China.

After taking photographs, interviewing locals and the owner of the building, as well as collecting materials and objects, Vitturi returned to London and continued to work in his studio. Objects were altered with paint and pigments and assembled into still lives and sculptures that Vitturi photographed, printed, re-altered and then re-photographed. Through this continuous process, Vitturi observed the encounter and transformation of two local contrasting realities, which reveal the complexity of Lagos’ society and economy, and that of the geopolitical landscape at large.

Money Must Be Made was published in September 2017 by SPBH Editions with texts by Emmanuel Iduma.