Skip to main content
Vilcek Foundation
  • About
    • About

      The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation of the arts and sciences.

    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prizes

      The Vilcek Foundation Prizes celebrate extraordinary achievements in the arts and sciences.

    • About the Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prizes

      Awards immigrants with a legacy of major accomplishments.

    • Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise

      Recognizes young immigrant professionals for outstanding achievements.

    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence

      Celebrating intellectual and cultural leaders in the United States.

    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History

      Honors art historians, curators, and fine arts professionals.

  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants

      Grants awarded to 501(c)(3) cultural, educational, and philanthropic organizations in the United States.

    • Grants

      Learn more and apply for a grant.

    • Grants History

      Explore a list of past Vilcek Foundation grantees.

  • Events
  • News
Sign Up Search
Home > News > Oluremi C. Onabanjo: Expanding the Horizons of Photographic Histories

Oluremi C. Onabanjo: Expanding the Horizons of Photographic Histories

News | February 3, 2025
Tags
African studies art art history curator curatorial work MoMA Museum of Modern Art photography visual art
Download audio
Audio: Listen to this post
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn
Oluremi standing in the Sculpture Garden at the MoMA with green trees visible behind her.

Born in London, Oluremi C. Onabanjo grew up in Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and the United States. An avid reader and writer, her home life was filled with transnational forms of literature, art, film, and music. “I am at home in the world,” she says, “and deeply committed to seeing how specific encounters can shape perceptions that resonate on an international scale.”

Onabanjo’s international upbringing and intellectual commitments manifest in her curatorial practice, currently as Peter Schub Curator in the Robert B. Menschel Department of Photography at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Her impact on the art world—championing artists and photographers across Africa and the African diaspora—helps transcend cultural and geopolitical boundaries.

Oluremi standing in the gallery space at the MoMA with a projection in the background behind her.
Oluremi C. Onabanjo photographed at the Museum of Modern Art. Artwork–© Leslie Thornton

Onabanjo receives the 2025 Vilcek Prize in Curatorial Work for her significant contributions to examining the power, position, and production of Blackness within the ongoing history of photography. Through scholarship, exhibitions, and publications, she expands how narratives of creativity, culture, and experience across Africa and the African diaspora are represented, constructed, and interpreted in artistic practice.

While pursuing African studies at Columbia University, Onabanjo took her first art history course and was captivated. The class touched on the emergent field of the history of African photography and sparked a new passion for her. “I am open to artistic and interpretive modes that I might not immediately understand, and trust in the power of form to resonate across geopolitical and cultural contexts,” she says.

Oluremi standing in front a wall of small, wooden archival drawers.

A Labor of Love

Onabanjo is deeply dedicated to her work. Her curatorial practice is structured by four critical things: research, close attention to form, public engagement, and publishing. She dedicates extensive time to studying her subjects and engaging with artists to better understand their processes.

This commitment to detail was key in developing Marilyn Nance: Last Day in Lagos (2022, Fourthwall Books & Center for Art, Research, and Alliances), one of Onabanjo’s critically acclaimed projects. The photo book chronicles Nance’s experiences in Lagos during the Second World Black and African Arts and Culture Festival in 1977. The project, which took six years to complete, was a labor of love for Onabanjo. 

Oluremi working at a desk with a bookshelf and storage drawers behind her.
Oluremi standing at the bottom of a gray staircase in front of a stark, black wall.
Oluremi carrying an exhibition model.
Oluremi stands in a blank white gallery with large light-filled windows.
  • Oluremi working at a desk with a bookshelf and storage drawers behind her.
  • Oluremi standing at the bottom of a gray staircase in front of a stark, black wall.
  • Oluremi carrying an exhibition model.
  • Oluremi stands in a blank white gallery with large light-filled windows.

“This project was profoundly empowering, and deepened my belief that with patience and precision, all is possible,” Onabanjo says. She learned that the best way to ensure the integrity of the work is to prioritize the relationship with the artist.

She has carried this valuable understanding with her throughout her curatorial practice. For Onabanjo, working with the artists empowers and enriches her work as a curator.

Oluremi standing in the Sculpture Garden at the MoMA with green trees and large windows to the galleries visible behind her.
Oluremi C. Onabanjo in the Sculpture Garden at the Museum of Modern Art.

Artistic Legacy

Onabanjo’s upbringing was steeped in the arts. She fondly recalls mornings filled with South African jazz, Nigerian poetry, and British novels, courtesy of her father. He helped foster her love for the arts by regularly taking her to libraries, museums, and cinemas. Though these experiences felt like chores at the time, she now credits them for her own sense of comfort within cultural institutions.

Onabanjo is a proud resident of Harlem, a neighborhood that is key to New York’s intellectual and cultural history. “It is a mythic place for many,” she says, “but for those of us who reside here, it’s a neighborhood for real humans who carry global histories and cultures in every stride.”

Tags
African studies art art history curator curatorial work MoMA Museum of Modern Art photography visual art
Share this page
Share this page on X Share this page on Facebook Share this page on LinkedIn

Related News

February 3, 2025

Vilcek Foundation Awards $250,000 in Prizes to Immigrant Curators

The Vilcek Foundation awards $250,000 in prizes to immigrant curators Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aimé Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira with the 2025 Vilcek Foundation Prizes in Curatorial Work.
Four diagonal splices featuring portraits of Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Donna Honarpisheh, Aime Iglesias Lukin, and Bernardo Mosqueira, against a red background.
February 3, 2025

Francesca Du Brock: Curating Alaska

Anchorage Museum Curator Francesca Du Brock receives the 2025 Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History.
Francesca standing outside in nature in Alaska, smiling with her arms crossed.
February 3, 2025

Pioneering Change: Bernardo Mosqueira’s Visionary Curatorial Practice

Explore the impactful curatorial journey of Bernardo Mosqueira, a champion of freedom, transgression, enchantment, and transformation in the art world.
Bernardo stands on the New York City streets with city architecture visible behind him.

You may also be interested in

Oluremi C. Onabanjo

Oluremi C. Onabanjo receives the Vilcek Prize in Curatorial Work for her work to examine the power, position, and production of Blackness in relation to the unfinished global history of the photographic medium.
A portrait of Oluremi Onabanjo.

Francesca Du Brock

Francesca Du Brock receives the Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History for her holistic and comprehensive approach to exhibition curation and to public education and engagement with art through museum programming.
A portrait of Francesca DuBrock.

Donna Honarpisheh

Donna Honarpisheh receives the Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Curatorial Work for her multidisciplinary approach to address the historic and ongoing omissions of global artists and movements in Western art history and institutions.
A portrait of Donna Honarpisheh.

Join our mailing list

Sign Up
Vilcek Foundation
21 East 70th Street
New York, New York 10021

Phone: 212.472.2500

Email: info@vilcek.org

  • About
    • Our Mission
    • Our Founders
    • Our Team
    • Press Center
    • Contact
  • Prizes
    • Prize Recipients
    • Vilcek Prizes
    • Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise
    • Vilcek Prize for Excellence
    • Marica Vilcek Prize in Art History
  • Art
  • Grants
    • Grants History
  • Events
  • News
  • Careers
Connect with us
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Facebook
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Instagram
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on X
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on LinkedIn
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Youtube
  • Connect with the Vilcek Foundation on Vimeo
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
© 2025   Vilcek Foundation
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok