General
Nigerian artist put up over 200 ‘missing’ posters depicting Benin bronzes throughout city of Dresden
A new project by the Nigerian artist Emeka Ogboh aims to remind the German public about its role in his native country’s missing heritage.
The work, which was unveiled on December 29, is comprised of a series of “missing” posters pasted throughout more than 200 locations in Dresden, which is home to five notable objects from the former royal palace in Benin.
In 1897, the palace was looted and razed by British soldiers during a punitive expedition, and the bronzes are now dispersed throughout major international Western museums. Germany holds the largest number of objects of any country.
Ogboh’s posters depict five of the bronzes currently in the collection of Dresden’s Museum für Völkerkunde, alongside the works’ dimensions, provenance, and the date they went missing. The project is done with the support of the museum.
Ogboh, who wants to pull the repatriation debate out of the museum and into the larger public sphere, says his project was created out of a sense of “impatience and necessity” and a desire to imbue the conversation “with the urgency and gravity of a public service announcement.”
“No one is exempt from the repercussions of colonialism and as long as issues of agency, ownership, and freedom continue to exist, society must act as a whole to repatriate artifacts that are simply not theirs,” Ogboh says.
Léontine Meijer-van Mensch, the director of the Volkerkünde Museum, says it has been in touch with the Nigerian Embassy in Berlin, which submitted a formal letter in 2019 to German Chancellor Angela Merkel asking for the Benin Bronzes to be returned. The embassy connected the museum with Ogboh, a prominent artist in Germany who was included in the 2017 edition of Documenta, among other major exhibitions.
“We are grateful that the artist raises this awareness amongst all of us, including the museums and Dresden’s urban community, with his action and for naming so clearly what is at stake with these objects,” Meijer-van Mensch says.
The Benin collections in European museums have been a growing source of controversy in recent years, as issues of colonial violence have become part of mainstream discourse.
The Humboldt Forum holds about 530 historical objects from the Kingdom of Benin, including 440 bronzes.
Source: Kate Brown
-
Entertainment24 hours ago
Chess Master Tunde Onakoya hits 20-hour mark on GWR quest
-
Politics23 hours ago
Yahaya Bello absence stalls EFCC arraignment
-
Politics20 hours ago
Court halts Ganduje’s suspension, restores APC membership
-
News16 hours ago
Police reportedly arrest two Fubara loyalists in Abuja
-
Politics24 hours ago
Court refuses to drop N4bn fraud charges against ex-Anambra gov
-
Crime23 hours ago
Nasarawa man slits Okada rider’s throat, steals bike
-
News15 hours ago
FCCPC shuts popular Abuja supermarket over price irregularities
-
News15 hours ago
Kenya military helicopter crash kills defence chief, senior officers