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Sunday 30 November 2014

Read about Ladi Kwali: The woman on the N20 note

If you know any great Nigerian history please share with the rest of us. Below is the history of Ladi Kwali, the woman on the N20 note...
Nigeria's best known potter who was awarded a Doctorate and was made MBE in 1963 for the level of detail and skill she utilized while making her pots.
Ladi Dosei Kwali (1925-1983) popularly known as Dr Ladi Kwali was born in 1925 in Kwali town in the present Federal Capital Territory, Abuja,Nigeria.
Probably she is the best known of the Abuja potters. Making pots was women’s work in Kwali and the entire Gwari villages, therefore Ladi came to Abuja (the then Suleja) with knowledge of traditional Gwari pottery.
She did not at first take to the idea of using wheels and kilns and the other paraphernalia of the European potter, but proved to have a natural ability to throw. She was picked from her traditional home Kwali to the then Abuja the present Suleja because of her natural ability in making pots.
The Abuja Pottery Training Centre was established 1950 by an English potter, Michael Cardew, who was sent to the Abuja area by the then colonial government, ostensibly to improve the quality of local work. But he found himself, for the next 15 years, in a symbiotic working relationship with local potters, in which he taught and was taught by potters like Ladi Kwali.
While Cardew introduced wheels and kilns to the centre, he also learnt about traditional firing methods and ornamentation. Kwali on the other hand, was initially reluctant to adapt to the wheel, preferring the spiralled coil method of building pots. She however, discovered she had a natural flair for the wheel. Cardew encouraged her to decorate her work, something she had not done before, and he even fired some of her traditional work in the Abuja kiln.
Ladi was later to become a very popular member of the touring lecture team; her easy nature and ability to communicate made her well liked and appreciated in Europe, Britain and America. She became Nigeria’s best known potter and has been honoured in many ways; she was given a doctorate.
By the time she died in 1983, Dr Ladi Kwali was Nigeria’s best known potter. She left a rich legacy of her work and a school of ‘students’ who picked up from where she left at the Abuja Pottery Training Centre. Over the next decade, her ornamentation skills became more sophisticated, and probably because of improved firing methods, she had the opportunity to exhibit her work in Europe in 1958, 1959 and 1962.
Her pottery was also displayed during Nigeria’s independence celebrations in 1960. Dr Ladi Kwali remained associated with the Abuja pottery works till she died. She gave lectures and demonstrations at home and abroad on her craft throughout her career.
Source: www.kwalilobwoiunion.org/dr-ladi-kwali/

73 comments:

  1. Nice work! Need more people like her

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    1. The pple DAT wrote their name in d sands of time...

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    2. Inspiring!! Women that work with their hands and brains not the ones that flaunt their naked bodies everywhere looking for men to take them to dubai and paris to enjoy without any hand work.

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  2. So interesting. Valentinechisom7@gmail.com

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  3. When I was in school, my friend who was in the art department told me about her.

    Great woman!

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  4. Wow, beautiful and lovely so so nice. Always be the best in what u do

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  5. Wow! This is really amazing. History indeed is unique.


    Your comment will be visible after approval

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  6. A very true story,i was in a hostel named after her way back then in FGC kwali.

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  7. Wow! She is worth the honor #onelovefromSnow#

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  8. I never really paid attention to the lone figure at the back of the 20 naira note, I'd always thought it was just aesthetics and nothing more! Wow, this is really cool!

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  9. Now this is a life well lived...

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  10. Nice

    #Commenting thru Glo 4G LTE

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  11. Great history Ms Linda, one every week is not a bad idea, I didn't know this until now.

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  12. great legacy she left..may her soul continue to est in peace...



    #GodblessNigeria

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  13. Interesting



    Amakadarlyn@yahoo.com

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  14. Ok,nice

    ~@iamjbankz SA to President Jonathan 2015~

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  15. This is the kind of persons nigeria shud honor, not all those thieves in govt.

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  16. Wow! Love this piece. Great woman.

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  17. nice piece of history

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  18. Exactly we shud read stuffs like dis more often,
    No be everytime kim k butt dey hungry pesin to read abt

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  19. Dis thrilled me to go nd check a #20 note agaìn.nice one

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  20. You should be posting stories like this regularly and educating you readers instead of posting naked pictures of the Kathrashian family everyday!!

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  21. Interesting! Dis re one of the tins we sud ve bin taught since primary sch days dat's even if dos teachers know abt her

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  22. a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said...
    .
    this great no doubt. we need more of this linda..
    *GLO BRING 3G TO KONTAGORA*
    .
    .
    ***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***

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  23. Wow! i love this story.. a very big fan linda... A very nice one.. pls visit joshnaija.blogspot.com

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  24. Make it till you make it...I love the maker message!

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  25. Linda again, you were in the toilet taking a dump during your social studies lessons!!

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  26. As much I dislike the British for their obvious hatred of blacks, Nigeria/ns woulda been if our colonial masters are still around to develop the local content. Who would appreciate a local potter in this day and age? Which government would train TRUE local people to be the best in what they are good at? What about the local rafia palm frond weavers? Our present government may announce and approve a budget for such training but the money will end up in their foreign accounts. Our politicians are busy looting the country. God help Nigeria.

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  27. What an inspiring piece! Thnx Linlin...More of this please. I love reading about women who were great.

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  28. linda ikeji's boo30 November 2014 at 22:32

    such post humous honour isn't bad at all

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  29. for real. I never knew the pic on the note is real. Thanks Linda for the information. Information is Key!

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  30. You should be posting stories like this regularly and educating you readers instead of posting naked pictures

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  31. U are both right, everyday Kim, Beyonce, Cossy, northwest. Sometimes we need to learn from the medium. Linda pay attention to this

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  32. Yes Linda thanx

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  33. As much as I like reading history, I never read this. Bravo LIB

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  34. My oh my! I love this woman...

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  35. I can't believe dis, it's so fascinating

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  36. She is definitely worth celebrating

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  37. what a wonderful work am proud of her work.

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  38. @ary, Honestly. That was what I thought as well.

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  39. I nneva rily checked d bak of N20 to see who/what is der.....thnks for dis piece of Knowledge Lindosky. Mrs Babatunde toh gallant

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  40. Its awesome to know about our culture and tradition. Thanks for making me better informed...

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  41. Thanks for this aunty Linda. I like history

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  42. the white bobo definitely collected her number

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  43. hmmmmnnnn!!!! oro nla great woman whilst our girls of now our days are getting naked and looking for men to sleep with them to feed. awon oloriburuku lo pon nta

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  44. Great woman she was. Suljosh04@gmail.com

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  45. Hmmmm............I love that!

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  46. Mohammed Monsurah1 December 2014 at 13:12

    Nice piece.
    keep up the good work.

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  47. Nice one Linda, This is a job well done. One love.

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  48. Nice one Linda, This is a job well done. One love.

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  49. nice one gud for her..she makes a qud history tho

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  50. nice one gud for her..she makes a qud history tho

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

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