Porth Harcourt-based Costume Designer, Mr. Chike Mordi spoke to Ogi John and James Ibechi on this year’s (December 2017) edition of Agila Carnival.
Excerpt:
Who is Chike Mordi, for the sake of our readers?
My name is Chike Mordi, I am a costume designer.
We understand you are the costume designer for Agila
carnival, what is the inspiration; how did you come about the idea of
the designs?
As you all know, custom designs are character-inherited. The
inspirations for the costumes are drawn from the film. Film-based
designs are what we do for the carnival to interpret the theme for the
year, which is one people one love. The Idomas are known for their unity
because it is popularly said in their dialect “ Opiatoha Ki’Idoma ”.
That is, their strength lies in their unity. Based on that, we are
working on the design that is based on the history of the people. We
look at the Idoma yesterday, today and tomorrow.
Marketing of carnivals costumes is a huge revenue source where you make the costumes and people buy them, wear them, style up with them and they remain fashionable after the carnival. Are you able to do that for Agila Carnival?
Like you just rightly said in other carnivals around the world,
people take freebies; people buy stuff that they can take home for other
people to see and know. It’s a sort of creating awareness for the
carnival. Yes for this year in Agila Carnival we are looking at having
stuffs like that where people can get souvenirs and take home. Not only
the souvenirs, we are not going to be in charge of producing the
souvenirs of the carnival, but we are also looking at human capacity
building, because the people have to benefit from the carnival. The
carnival has a commercial value, so we are looking at booming the youths
of Benue State – talking to them and training them on these things like
producing costumes, to market themselves in the carnival. Produce their
artworks, their artifacts and other things that tourists will come
over for carnival, buy and then take home. The 2017 edition of Agila
Carnival will witness training, sales and all forms of exhibitions for
costumes. And not just costumes, Idoma-based arts will also be on sale.
Example are their traditional attires. You have their fabrics and will
be put out there for people to know that Idomas are capable of doing
that and if they properly invest in them, they will produce in quantity
and they will have commercial value. This year, we are seeing how we can
get the people involved because the carnival is for the Idomas and
generally Benue people. So they have to embrace their carnival and come
together, celebrate themselves so that the world will recognize them and
also celebrate them and we are calling on all Benue indigenes, all
Idomas, all Tivs, etc. As far as I am concerned there is no difference
between them. They are one people. Let them come together and enhance
the theme, “One people one love”.
more after the cut
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