Nwoko’s own residence, inbuilt 1978, bears clear traces to the constructions within the historical Benin Metropolis: ridged exterior columns on the entrance echo the fluted partitions of the Oba’s Palace (dwelling to the ruler of Benin Metropolis), whereas the pitched, overhanging roof—a signature throughout his tasks—nods to conventional homes within the southeast of the nation. Nwoko designed and constructed each ingredient of the house himself utilizing conventional strategies and native supplies.
Modeled on the New Tradition Studios in Ibadan, Nwoko’s ever-evolving arts and tradition heart (which started as his private studio and residence), the house’s exterior is clad in blocks of laticrete—a cloth he developed when legal guidelines prohibited using native laterite soil. By mixing the soil with cement, he created a cloth rooted in custom, however tailored to trendy rules. “There may be nothing incorrect with mud,” Nwoko says, earlier than citing three-story properties throughout Yorubaland constructed with the available materials. “A constructing will not be viable if it doesn’t make use of native supplies.”
Inside, the house exudes a sacred silence, damaged solely by the low hum of a tv. The open area consists of distinct zones: the eating space options stained-glass panels harking back to Nwoko’s earlier works, such because the Dominican Chapel in Ibadan, and is flanked by his signature interlocking picket chairs, that are crafted with no single nail. “That’s our way of life: open plan, no rooms,” Nwoko says. “The home is modeled in an analogous method, so you may transfer via it very freely.”















