Lagos
Appearance
Lagos or Lagos City is the most populous city in Nigeria.
Quotes about Lagos
[edit]- Lagos is the mega city that never sleeps. Its hustle and bustle constantly bombard me with emotional and visual triggers that appeal to my sculptor’s gaze which is usually more attuned to balance and order. This chaos helps me redefine my aesthetic viewpoint of the city and its markets. I employ a range of representational strategies photographs and mixed materials to address how Lagos is perceived and described – Lagos as chaotic.
- Ndidi Dike as quoted in Q&A with artist Ndidi Dike, South London Gallery, August 11, 2023.
- This relative lack of external pressure, together with the rise of laissez-faire liberalism at home, caused many a commentator to argue that colonial acquisitions were unnecessary, being merely a set of “millstones” around the neck of the overburdened British taxpayer. Yet whatever the rhetoric of anti-imperialism within Britain, the fact was that the empire continued to grow, expanding (according to one calculation) at an average annual pace of about 100,000 square miles between 1815 and 1865. Some were strategical/commercial acquisitions, like Singapore, Aden, the Falkland Islands, Hong Kong, Lagos; others were the consequence of land-hungry white settlers, moving across the South African veldt, the Canadian prairies, and the Australian outback—whose expansion usually provoked a native resistance that often had to be suppressed by troops from Britain or British India. And even when formal annexations were resisted by a home government perturbed at this growing list of new responsibilities, the “informal influence” of an expanding British society was felt from Uruguay to the Levant and from the Congo to the Yangtze. Compared with the sporadic colonizing efforts of the French and the more localized internal colonization by the Americans and the Russians, the British as imperialists were in a class of their own for most of the nineteenth century.
- Paul Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500-2000 (1987)