Art of the Kingdom of Benin

Benin art is the art from the Kingdom of Benin[1] or Edo Empire (1440–1897), a pre-colonial African state located in what is now known as the Southern region of Nigeria.[2] Primarily made of cast bronze and carved ivory, Benin art was produced mainly for the court of the Oba of Benin – a divine ruler for whom the craftsmen produced a range of ceremonially significant objects.[3] The full complexity of these works can be appreciated through the awareness and consideration of two complementary cultural perceptions of the art of Benin: the Western appreciation of them primarily as works of art, and their understanding in Benin as historical documents and as mnemonic devices to reconstruct history, or as ritual objects. This original significance is of great importance in Benin.[4]

Benin bronze
Bronze Head of Queen Idia

Importance of art in Benin culture

The Kingdom of Benin is powerful, but Benin culture has not been given proper recognition by western scholars.[5] The story of how the Kingdom of Benin began as a culture and nation starts with the origin story:

A motionless man was floating on water when he heard a voice from a spirit saying, "Open your eyes".[5] As soon as the man opened his eyes he became one with the spirit.[5] Soon after a whip and snail shell appear beside him, and the man then decided to whip the terrain he was on.[5] A golden orb appeared, and this golden orb, which would later be known as the sun, brings happiness and warmth to the man.[5] Again, the man struck his whip to the earth, and this caused forests and wildlife to appear before him.[5] Yet again, the man struck the earth with his whip, and a village full of people appeared.[5] He then became known as the Lord from the Sky.[5] As a result, he ordered the village to build a mound of earth painted white that would serve as a remembrance of his power and creation.[5] He then recognized a man as the priest, and he ordered that the priest must always wear white.[5]

The story of the origin of Benin was not transferred through literature or writings.[5] In fact, Benin as a culture was based on oral tradition: all of the history and stories we know of today from Benin were passed along from person to person from generation to generation.[5] The so-called Benin bronzes (they are actually made of brass) and other artwork are especially important to historians because they are a key part of the history of Benin[6].[5] Also, the Benin brasses and works of art are some of the only examples historians have of the physical representations of the culture.[5] At first, the city and culture of Benin started off as a kingdom that was based solely on chiefly tribute.[5] Later on, Benin’s culture and history were enriched and became more powerful because of the conquests they made through war.[5] For example, a war that was detrimental to Benin was the Idah war (1515-1516). The Idah war was a religious war in which Benin won. This war helped to establish unity and power in the Benin Empire.[5] The wars Benin participated in and the people Benin conquered made Benin into an imperial power.[5] It was under Oba Ewuare (r. 1440-1473) that Benin became an empire by launching its military and conquering other lands.[5] This also led to the formation of many trade routes and tribute-paying towns.[5] Therefore, the first Europeans to arrive in Benin were very impressed with the wealth and advancements of the country.[5] Overall, the Benin culture is an extremely important part of history because it is a culture not based on literature, and it is a culture that had great power before the 16th century.[5]

Chronology

Given the stylistic differences, the art of Benin has been divided by some authors, including Egyptologist Boris de Rachewiltz in the following periods:

No. Name Duration
1 the Archaic Period from the origins-1360
2 the Ancient Period 1360–1500
3 the Flowering Period 1500–1575
4 the Apogee Period 1575–1648
5 the "Renaissance" 1648–1691
6 the Decline Period 1691–1819

[7]

The royal arts of Benin

The royal arts of the Benin Kingdom of southern region Nigeria affirm the centrality of the Oba, or divine king, portraying his divine nature. While recording the kingdom's significant historical events and the Oba's involvement with them, they also initiate the Oba's interactions with the supernatural and honor his deified ancestors, forging a continuity that is vital to the kingdom's well-being.[8]

The materials used in Benin's royal arts—primarily brass, ivory, and coral—are endowed with sacred power. The innate value of these materials within Benin and the time and skill that is invested in working them reflect the earthly and otherworldly influence of the Oba and the great wealth of his kingdom. Benin's royal arts belong to a tradition that favors convention even as it promotes creativity and innovation, especially as a reflection of royal prerogative. Through time, rulers have used the arts to interpret the history of the kingdom and to orient themselves with the past in an effort to support their own initiatives and define their images for posterity.[9]

Although only popularly known to Western audiences after the Benin Expedition of 1897,[10] Benin art has been in existence since at least the 13th century.

Ancestral altars

Two ancestral altars, foreground, that of Oba Akenzua II's, 1936

A newly installed Oba is responsible for creating an altar dedicated to his father, commissioning the appropriate objects to adorn it and activating it on a regular basis with sacrifices of food or animal blood. The Oba does the same for his mother if she attained the title of iyoba, or queenmother. While bells and rattle staffs are placed on all ancestral altars, ivory tusks and commemorative brass heads are made specifically for royal altars. Associated with trade, ivory and brass are durable and valuable, and their colors—white like sacred kaolin clay and red like fire and coral beads—relate to royal power.[11]

Before the British conquest, an Oba's courtyard was the focal point for rituals in his honor. British troops reported 18 altars dedicated to previous Obas when they took possession of the palace in 1897. Today, all of the royal altars stand together in a single courtyard.[8]

One of the objects unique to Benin art is an Ikegobo, or "altar to the hand," which celebrates the accomplishments of exceptional individuals. The hand is associated with action and productivity, and is considered the source of wealth, status, and success for all those who depend on manual skill and physical strength. Altars of this kind are commissioned in terracotta, wood, or brass, depending on the status of the patron.[12]

This ivory double bell (Egogo) is one of the oldest surviving African ivory sculptures; only six of these ivory gongs are known. They were used by the oba during the Emobo ceremony to drive away evil spirits. Carved with the oba, supported by his military commander and his heir.

Private and public ceremonies mark many of the important moments in Benin's yearly calendar. In the past, an elaborate series of rites were performed throughout the year to secure otherworldly support for the kingdom's well-being and to celebrate decisive events in its history. For the sake of convenience, the current monarch, Oba Ewuare II, emphasizes the end-of-year festival called Igue, which is held during the winter holidays to allow the greatest number of people to attend. Igue includes a sequence of rituals that renew the Oba's supernatural powers and cleanse the kingdom's unruly spirits.[13]

Benin's other important ritual festivals include Ague, where the first budded yams are blessed in hopes of a successful harvest; Ugie Ivie,[14] the Festival of Beads, in which the Oba's coral and red stone regalia is bathed in cow's blood to reinvest it with spiritual force; Ugie Erha Oba, which honors the Oba's father and all paternal ancestors; Oduduwa, a masquerade that likewise honors the Oba's paternal ancestors; and Ugie Oro, celebrating Oba Esigie's victory over the Idah Kingdom in the 16th century.[15]

Finely carved ivory double gongs are examples of art related to rituals at court. They are called “double” gongs because of second, smaller resonating cups at their front. Typically, the central image is the Oba in coral regalia supported by the high priests Osa and Osuan, officials who tend the altars of the kingdom's two patron gods. These gongs are still carried today by the Oba during Emobo, the last of the empowering rites of the Igue festival. The Oba gently taps the ivory instrument, creating a rhythmic sound to calm and dismiss unruly spirits from the kingdom.[16]

Leopard imagery in the arts of Benin

The Oba is referred to metaphorically as “the leopard of the house,” and images of the beautiful, cunning, and immensely dangerous cat appear frequently in Benin's royal arts. Before the British invasion in 1897, domesticated leopards were kept in the palace to demonstrate the Oba's mastery over the wilderness. Leopard imagery is also frequently linked to the Oba's military might.[17]

The Oba's regalia

The Oba's divine right to rule is reiterated in his regalia. His coral crowns, shirts, aprons, necklaces, and accessories refer to those that Oba Ewuare is said to have stolen from Olokun, the god of the waters and prosperity. Coral and red stones such as jasper and agate are also filled with supernatural energy, or ase, as are elephant ivory and brass, two other valuable materials that the Oba has historically controlled.[18]

Despite his divine status, the Oba can not rule alone. He must rely on others to fulfill his destiny, a dependence that is physically expressed when he walks or sits with his arms supported at the elbows and wrists by attendants. They help him bear the weight of his regalia, a constant reminder of the burden of kingship.[8]

Brass casting

Brass casters (igun eronmwon) are the highest-ranking craft guild within the hierarchical structure of the Iwebo society, followed by blacksmiths (igun ematon) and ivory and wood carvers (igbesanwan).[19]

The origins of brass casting in Benin are debated. One popular story credits Oba Oguola (enthroned c. 1280) with sending for a master brass caster from Ile Ife, the capital city of the ancient Ife Kingdom to the northwest, and with later establishing a royal brass-casting guild.[20][21] Others suggest brass casting developed independently in Benin and may have mutually benefited from exchange with Ile Ife.[22] Casters in both regions used the lost wax method, in which a precisely detailed wax model is formed over a clay core. When the model is complete, clay is carefully applied over the wax. It is then heated, melting the wax, which exits from a narrow channel. Next, molten metal is poured into the mold. Once cool, the hardened clay is chipped away, leaving behind an image now cast in bronze.[4][23]

The Punitive Expedition

The decline of Benin art occurred at the end of the 19th century when the Benin Expedition of 1897[10][24][25] by the British caused impairment in the creation of the arts. On February 18, 1897, the British arrived in Benin City to punish a massacre. The possessions of the Oba and his court became spoils of war. The objects were rounded up with little regard for their associated meaning; no systematic record was kept of their grouping or placement. Many of these objects were sold in London to defray the cost of the expedition.[26][27][28]

In April 2021 Germany agreed to return to present-day Nigeria the Benin bronzes that their troops had looted from the Kingdom of Benin.[29] In late 2021 the Smithsonian Museum of African Art in Washington DC removed the Benin bronzes that they have from display and they say they have plans to repatriate them.[30][31]

Current Issues Surrounding the Return of Looted Benin Art

Looted objects from the Benin Punative Raid, 1897

After the British 1897 pillaged of Oba Ovonramwen’s compound in retaliation for the murder of British diplomats, most of pieces of Benin art were auctioned off in London.[32] Today the Benin kingdom, located now in modern day Nigeria, is asking for its art objects back, which are spread across Western Countries such as Britain, Germany, and the United States.[32] In 2007, western museums joined Nigeria in the “Benin Dialogue Group” to open discussion about the retrieval of the art pieces.[32] The movement slowed until the recent wave of the Black Lives Matter movement following the death of George Flyod.[32] Many countries, universities, and museums have returned or promised to return their pieces.[32] With the returning of the stolen work, many worry about the fate of the art, as there is now a battle for possession with Nigeria among three different parties: the descendant of the last oba, the current governor, Godwin Nogheghase Obaseki, and the federal government and state of Nigeria.[32] The current oba believes that the royal family has legal claims to the artwork. Critics say that giving the artwork to a single family might not fare well since the royal family no longer has power.[32] Meanwhile, the governor has plans for a museum.[32] Critics argue that once the current governor Godwin Nogheghase Obaseki leaves office in 2024 the museum plans will be abandoned.[32] The state of Nigeria believes that it has the rightful claim to the artwork, but many fear that corruption and mismanagement in Nigerian governments, citing, for instance, the 1973 incident when the head of state at the time, General Yakubu Gowon, walked into the Nigerian National Museum in Lagos and took one of the Benin heads and gifted it to Queen Elizabeth; that piece remains today in the Royal Collection of Britain.[32]

References

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  2. "Benin | historical kingdom, West Africa". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  3. "Benin Standing Figure". Peyton Wright Gallery. 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2022-06-11.
  4. Barbara Plankensteiner, ed. (2007). Benin- Kings and Rituals: Court Art from Nigeria. Exhibition catalogue Kunsthistoriches Museum Vienna mit MVK und OTM/Snoeck.
  5. Docherty, Paddy (2021). Blood and bronze : the British empire and the sack of Benin. London. ISBN 978-1-78738-456-9. OCLC 1242465258.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. Cartwright, Mark. "Kingdom of Benin". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  7. Mihăilescu, Plutarh-Antoniu (1968). Întâlnire cu arta africană (in Romanian). Editura Meridiane. p. 48.
  8. "Benin—Kings and Rituals: Court Arts from Nigeria". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  9. "Overview | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  10. Robert., Home (1983). City of blood revisited : a new look at the benin expedition of 1897. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-8476-4824-9. OCLC 795371327.
  11. "The Royal Altars | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  12. "Oba with Animals, Altar to the Hand (Ikegobo) of Ezomo Ehenua [Nigeria; Edo peoples, court of Benin] (1991.17.113,1996.11)". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 2000. Retrieved 3 April 2013.
  13. "Rituals at Court | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  14. admin (2022-03-29). "The Cultural Significance Of Coral Beads To The Benin People". The Street Journal. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
  15. "Rituals at Court | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  16. "Double-Gong and Striker | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
  17. "The Oba: Leopard of the House (Ekpen N'Owa) | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  18. "The Oba: Leopard of the House (Ekpen N'Owa) | The Art Institute of Chicago". archive.artic.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-09.
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  22. Gore, Charles (Summer 1997). "Casting Identities in Contemporary Benin". African Arts. 30 (3): 54–61, 93. doi:10.2307/3337500. JSTOR 3337500.
  23. Jeffreys, M. D. W. (June 1951). "The origins of the Benin bronzes". African Studies. 10 (2): 87–92. doi:10.1080/00020185108706840. ISSN 0002-0184.
  24. "What are the Benin bronzes, and why are they so controversial?". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  25. "Nigeria demands unconditional return of looted artefacts from Germany". 2021-07-08. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  26. "What was life like in Benin?". BBC Bitesize. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  27. "The kingdom of Benin was obliterated by the British, who still have the evidence on display". www.abc.net.au. 2020-11-29. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  28. Marshall, Alex (2020-01-23). "This Art Was Looted 123 Years Ago. Will It Ever Be Returned?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  29. "Benin Bronzes: Germany to return looted artefacts to Nigeria". BBC News. 2021-04-30. Retrieved 2021-07-12.
  30. Catherine Hickley (28 Oct 2021). "Smithsonian Museum of African Art removes Benin bronzes from display and plans to repatriate them". CNN.
  31. Maximiliano Duron (5 Nov 2021). "Smithsonian's Museum of African Art Begins Process to Repatriate Its Benin Bronzes". Art News.
  32. Frum, David (2022-09-14). "Who Benefits When Western Museums Return Looted Art?". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2022-11-22.
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