Nigerian scholar calls for halt to auction of sacred Igbo artworks
A prominent Igbo-Nigerian artist and academic has
called for the cancellation of a forthcoming auction in Paris of two sacred
sculptures taken out of Nigeria during its devastating civil war in the late
1960s.
Chika Okeke-Agulu, a professor of art history at
Princeton University, said the sale of the Igbo objects – called alusi or
“sacred sculptures” – at Christie’s auction house later this month would
“perpetuate the violence” of the conflict.
Similar sculptures that adorned Igbo shrines in
Okeke-Agulu’s hometown and across south-east Nigeria were taken during the
failed push for an independent state of Biafra. Up to 3 million people died,
many from starvation, during the conflict, one of the darkest chapters in
modern history.
“The original acquisition was rooted in violence,”
Okeke-Agulu said in an interview. “These objects are from my hometown, removed
from places around eastern Nigeria during that war. What we’re seeing now is
the continuing benefit from that original act of violence, which is an
extension of that violence.”
The sculptures, which have an estimated sale price
of between €250,000 and €350,0000 (£227,000-£317,000), were acquired from
Nigeria by the prolific French art collector Jacques Kerchache.
Countless alusi sculptures were systematically
looted during the war from Mbari houses – communal shrines lined with symbolic
murals and sculptures of Igbo deities.
Many artefacts were taken from Okeke-Agulu’s home
state of Anambra, the frontline of the war in the majority Igbo south-east of
Nigeria. As the conflict raged, local conspirators collaborating with wealthy
benefactors engineered the exodus of cultural treasures across the border to
Cameroon.
“I remember there was deep pain at what the war cost
us when it was over,” he said. “I still remember my mother looking through
catalogues in the 70s of alusis and important cultural artefacts, most of which
were outside of Nigeria.
“As an art
historian it is a continuing agony that I teach African art. I studied African
art at the University of Nigeria in Nsukka and we did not have access to the
key artistic monuments of Igbo or Yoruba art..”
According to Christie’s, the sculptures were
acquired by Kerchache between 1968-69, likely through a Belgian dealer,
Phillipe Guimiot, and other local art dealers. “There is no evidence these
statues were removed from their original location by someone who was not local
to the area,” Christie’s said in a statement. “At no stage since they have been
widely known has there been any suggestion that these statues were subject to
improper export.”
Nigeria’s 1953 Antiquities Ordinance law made the
trade of stolen cultural artefacts illegal, and a 1970 Unesco convention signed
by Nigeria banned the international trade in stolen artefacts.
The alusi statues are among a vast collection
amassed by Kechache and sold to a private collector after his death in 2001.
Kechache, who advised the late French president Jacques Chirac, was a prominent
art figure and helped to found the Musée du Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac in
Paris.
“It does not
matter whether Jacques braved the bullets and bombs, went by foot into Biafra
and carted away or seized these objects. The main issue is that in a place that
was at war, people went in and took away valuable materials of artistic and
cultural value and sold them,” he said.
Beginning with a rallying Instagram post earlier
this month, Okeke-Agulugu has spurred growing awareness of the statues’ origins
and opposition to the sale.
The loss of cultural objects during the war was
immense. Anna Craven worked as an ethnographer and curator at the Nigerian
Federal Department of Antiquities in Jos, central Nigeria. In 1970, she was
present during a raid where Cameroonian traders were stopped with dozens of
cultural artefacts.
“There’s been a huge international market for
antiquities, particularly Nigerian antiquities, she said. “It sadly continues
today.”
In the wake of the death of George Floyd in
Minneapolis, Black Lives Matter demonstrations have refocused the spotlight on
the colonial origins of cultural artefacts in the possession of western art
institutions and collectors.
Earlier this month, five protesters who tried and
failed to seize an African funeral pole from the Musée du Quai Branly-Jacques
Chirac said “most of the works [in the museum] were taken during colonialism
and we want justice”.
Calls for the repatriation of artefacts taken out of
Africa in the colonial era have grown more vigorous in recent years, resulting
in unprecedented pressure on western galleries and institutions. Yet in
practice repatriations have not been radical.
Under a deal between the Benin Dialogue Group and 10
European museums, more than 300 Benin bronzes will return to Nigeria in a new
gallery to be built by 2023 in Benin City. Most were stolen during violent
raids by British soldiers in 1897 and will be loaned back for an initial three
years.
The conditions for such returns are often perverse,
said Okeke-Agulu. “It is like someone stealing your car and then agreeing to
return it when they are satisfied with the condition of your garage,” he said.
He hopes that increased awareness will help move the
dial. “What they [auction houses] care about is their brand. The campaign is
important because we are making it unavoidable that these items can’t be
divorced from their dispossession. Christie’s and other companies have to
reckon with that.”




