Hello, I’m Funmi. I am a storyteller. I tell stories through (interactive) fiction and collaborative art. This is my little corner on the web.

BLOG POSTS

  • Mother’s Place (An Excerpt from a work-in-progress titled Oriseje, This Too is Love)

    Mother’s Place (An Excerpt from a work-in-progress titled Oriseje, This Too is Love)

    Ichu Afo, that was what they called it, this chasing away of the old year to welcome the new one. The year that was being chased away was…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read

  • Choose Life

    Choose Life

    Georgia could, unlike other European countries, not afford to pose as Eldorado trapped in Pandora greenhouses in order to shelter them from the pollution(s) in the rest of…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read

  • The Day I Met Jessie

    The Day I Met Jessie

    For the first time in over three months, I feel desire. An unfathomable longing to drown in an avalanche of polychromatic feelings and slink out on the other…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read

  • A Story

    Source: Adobe Stock (Written way back when I still wrote in British English 😂) I must warn, this is a fairytale, a Happily-Ever-After story of very inconsequential circumstances;…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read

  • My Bunny Ears

    I bought my bunny ears on a whim. A friend, tall, dark, and handsome by way of visual description, called me out of my room one evening and…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read

  • The Opinions Essay

    Oppression Everywhere Every Time All at Once later that night i held an atlas in my lapran my fingers across the whole worldand whisperedwhere does it hurt? it…

    Continue Reading

    4 min read



Explore VIDEOS RELATED TO MY CREATIVE ENDEAVORS

MEDIA ARCHIVE

This video project poses as a curated digital repository of #ENDSARS2020 related experiences. But even more, like the slogan Sorosoke, this project is the outcome of offering a few Nigerians a platform to emotively voice out lingering concerns, unsaid stories, pent-up agitations and bitter-sweet memories. For the project, the personalised narratives of ten Nigerian creatives were collated, compiled, and curatively edited into a singular, cohesive, coherent video of shared experiences that were showcased during a forum held on June 27, 2020, titled “Digital Storytelling and Artivism in Nigeria: The Case of the ENDSARS Movement.”

The project focuses on de-sanitizing the creative process in academia by placing an emphasis on the origins and cultivation of a creative work rather than focusing solely on the final product. We have asked some artists/scholars in the humanities to document their creative processes as they work towards a final product, eschewing the commodified productivity culture that is valued and demanded by academia. By emphasizing process as equally important to the final outcome, this project will focus on how the narrative of our own creative endeavors sustains us.

“Arts of War: Hearts of War” is a collaborative art exhibition at the Mildred Westervelt Warner Transportation Museum that features work from a broad range of artists, including University of Alabama students, veterans, and a prisoner to showcase the different perspectives and experiences of war. Oluwafunmilayo Akinpelu, exhibit director and UA Ph.D. student, worked with each participant to ensure collaborative and diverse displays of artwork. The project reminds us that war is not just about battle tanks, nuclear missiles, and bullets going off in far-away countries, but conflicts residing in the hearts and lives of people we know and love.
Moderated by Funmi Omo Moji, the panelists of this edition are interested in neo-Nollywood and its contact points with global Black diaspora; African visual culture as it focuses on animation in Nigeria; Yoruba Bollywood and African literature in the digital age; and rising stars in Nigeria’s filmmaking industry.
New Myths for a Dying World is a collaborative interactive storytelling project that envisions a future where the world needs saving from itself. The potential ‘saviors’ are artists who, through suspension of disbelief, assume the position of deities, chronicle nostalgic mythos about the past, converse about the fate of the current human species, and propose a new order where humans are better and trees have a life of their own.