This is one of the reasons kó Gallery decided “to put together a show in his honour and for the art community in Lagos and around the world to experience and share in this visionary visual creator who lived a life of quiet but vibrant art practice,” said the gallery.
He started his education in Lagos in 1942, later, at Sudan Interior Mission (S.I.M.) School Egbe, 1946. He was at Government College Keffi 1955 and it was there that he had a defining moment in his career.
Akolo studied under Dennis Duerden, an education officer in the Nigerian Colonial Service at Keffi Government College. During this period, he started painting and was included in the 1956 exhibition Keffi Boys at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Later at Keffi, with his encounter with the famous expatriate educator, Duerden, his interest in engineering was shifted to art. He, however, brought with him, the compositional strategy of engineering in his paintings.
His paintings can be observed to contain a system of carefully constructed figures, objects, and spaces in compact picture planes where figure and ground are brought to harmonious equilibrium. Akolo has had several exhibitions in Nigeria and abroad. A few of them are worth mentioning here. On the international scene, he was honoured with a solo art exhibition at the Commonwealth Institute London in 1964, participated in a group touring exhibition in London and Edinburgh in 1965, and also participated in the Second Biennial Arts Exhibition in Havana, Cuba in 1986.
In Nigeria, he had a solo show at the Nigerian Arts Council, 1970, participated in the All-Nigerian Festival of Arts, Ibadan in 1971, and Visual Arts Exhibition of FESTAC 1977.