This is part of a special series, We’re Reemerging. What Does the World Look Like Now?, which considers in real time how we cope while living through a historic time. It’s also in the latest VICE magazine. Subscribe here.
Advertisement
As it is our center, love should be at the heart of everything we do. In this photo series, I turn the lens on my community at home in Lagos. After being away for a year because of the pandemic, I felt compelled to explore what changed and what remained the same in terms of the ways individuals related to themselves and others. By exploring the tender interactions in various types of relationships, this body of work aims to emphasize the importance of both intra- and interpersonal love.
What do we do that is a reflection of the love we share? This question is at the core of the images and served as a guiding force when putting them together. I set out to engage with love as a necessity—something that must prevail in our society. The resulting series is a collection of images that highlight new and existing bonds within my community.
A big part of love is a conscious dedication to someone or something. Something that everyone in this image has in common, besides being a Lagosian, is their dedication to an intra- or interpersonal relationship. Whether it’s me and my mother, or friends at a cookout, there is a sense of warmth and acceptance that echoes through the photographs.
I’ve also thought a lot about public space and how the pandemic influenced the way we interact with public spaces. I’ve found that in Lagos, they’re less crowded and littered. I wonder if being in lockdown made people understand the delicacy of space. When I’m out and about, I notice a more conscious dedication to sanity and hygiene—this is love, too. We are nothing without the space we occupy, and it’s important to nurture the environment that nurtures us.
Advertisement
When I think about a post-COVID world, I dream of one that is more intimate, communal, and delicate. Being aware of how you interact with your community allows for accountability and change for the better. I would like to see more intentionality in everything—and, as you can hear from my subjects, so would they.
DAPPost-pandemic, I’m looking forward to performing and connecting with the people who really support my music. Not just the crowd interaction, but conversations after the shows and getting to know these people is important to me. This is also the longest time I’ve spent away from home in my life, so I’m very much looking forward to getting back to Lagos and reconnecting with family.
MAYOKUNCOVID was a great period for me in terms of marriage and intimacy. We were able to just focus solely on each other and what we wanted out of life. We set things in motion—which are now becoming a fast reality. I think about where we were this time last year, and I cannot believe what we were able to do and achieve together in that time.I’m looking forward to motherhood, to hanging out with friends again, because I haven’t really seen my friends—we talk often but we have not hung out properly, and I truly miss my unit. I’m also looking forward to going back to full-time employment. I used to be a going out buddy, but thanks to COVID, I’ve found true joy and contentment in just being a home buddy. I love it, so it’s very unlikely that I’ll revert back to my old social ways.
Follow Isabel Okoro on Instagram.