AfroVision X 2026 Nigeria kicks off, linking creatives, investors, and diaspora networks to grow Africa’s cultural and economic influence
AfroVision X 2026 officially launched its Nigerian activation this week, marking the start of a month-long international festival celebrating African and Caribbean creativity, scheduled from June 1 to June 30 across Toronto, Brampton, and Mississauga.
AfroVision X 2026 Nigeria aims to position the country at the centre of the festival’s global cultural and economic strategy.
The Lagos launch convened leaders from business, public policy, the arts, and the creative industries, signalling a coordinated effort to transform Nigeria’s cultural capital into structured economic opportunity.
Organizers emphasised that AfroVision X is more than a celebration of talent; it is a marketplace connecting creators, investors, diaspora networks, and global brands within a formal ecosystem.
David Bebiem, Convener of AfroVision X and CEO of Grandieu, travelled from Canada for the launch, describing Nigeria as the festival’s central hub.
“Nigeria is the heartbeat of modern African creativity,” Bebiem said.
“From music and film to fashion and digital arts, this nation shapes global culture. AfroVision X 2026 is intentionally designed as a structured marketplace a convergence point for creatives, investors, brands, and diaspora networks to generate measurable economic impact.”
The festival’s calendar will feature fashion showcases, film screenings, music concerts, theatre productions, art exhibitions, and high-level industry roundtables.
The month-long celebration will culminate in a global awards platform spotlighting excellence while strengthening cross-border collaboration.
On the Nigerian front, coordination is led by Inspiro Productions. Founder and CEO Ayoola Sadare highlighted the importance of formalising cultural exports.
“Nigeria already exports culture organically,” Sadare said.
“AfroVision X provides the infrastructure to transform that influence into capital access, diaspora engagement, and institutional growth. This is about positioning our creatives within formal global economic systems.”
Institutional backing appears strong.
The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry expressed support for the initiative, aligning it with Nigeria’s economic priorities.
Obukome Elaine Ibru-Mukoro, Chairperson of the Chamber’s Creative Economy Sector, and Andre Bassey, Director of Programmes for the Creative and Entertainment Sector, underscored the role of the creative industries in national development.
Industrialist Prince Adeyemi-Doro, founder of the Adeyemi-Doro Group, highlighted technology as a lever for scaling Nigeria’s creative economy, pointing to the intersection of artificial intelligence and digital infrastructure as critical for turning talent into export-ready value.
Oluwatoyin Shogbesan of the Asa Heritage Foundation stressed the importance of narrative ownership in global cultural exchange, emphasizing that international expansion must remain anchored in authentic storytelling and heritage preservation.
As preparations intensify for June 2026, AfroVision X 2026 Nigeria is positioning itself not only as a festival but as a strategic bridge between culture and commerce, with Nigeria firmly at its core.