Controversial Nigerian author Chidera shocks AMVCA with ancestral body tattoos

Abolade
2 Min Read
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.

She wrote bestsellers, started #SaggyBoobsMatter, and has been called a radical feminist, a provocateur, and a necessary evil. But at the 2026 AMVCA, Chidera Eggerue – The Slumflower – did not arrive with a manifesto. She arrived with her skin.

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Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.

In a surprise appearance that had the red‑carpet circuit buzzing, the Nigerian UK-based author traded her usual digital pulpit for a blush‑pink satin corset gown. No heavy beadwork, no architectural drama – just liquid silk, a Grecian drape, and the full topography of her body art.

The dress that disappears

Against a textured, mottled blue backdrop, her Old Hollywood minimal gown featured a deep‑plunging cowl neckline, boned waist, and a skirt gathered at the hips. The pale pink silk‑satin framed her décolletage but refused to compete. No necklace. The neckline was a window.

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Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.

And what it revealed was the real couture: her Black of ink tattoos across her sternum, chest, arms and hands – including the phrase “Home is in your body” – plus red uli‑style symbols painted on her shoulders and upper chest, echoing Igbo ancestral artistry.

‘The tide is finally turning’

After the event, Chidera shared her unfiltered reaction: “An eloquent, educated and ethereal queen. Nigeria is gonna have to get used to being triggered by a woman who cannot be controlled by shame, fear or religion! The tide is finally turning. Anyway, it was a joy attending the AMVCA awards.”

Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.
Chidera Eggerue at the AMVCA 2026.

The quote captures exactly why she is controversial – and why she is celebrated.

At a gala where many wore armour, she wore herself. The dress was just the frame. The art – the tattoos, the uli, the audacity – that was the look. And Nigeria, surprised or not, had to look.

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