Commemorative plaque, bronze, Kingdom of
Benin, Nigeria. 1550 -1650 A.D.
Benin Art for the Palace When, just after the turn of the last century,
some European artists became infatuated with African sculpture, they responded
to its often astonishing formal inventiveness.
For centuries, European sculptors had been striving for lifelike realism.
Africans, by contrast, were more concerned with forms that expressed spiritual
or magical properties.
The Europeans, Picasso most famously, took what they admired from African
sculpture and ignored cultural context. Picasso's appropriations became
cubism, while African art remained confined to ethnographic museums until
relatively recently.
No art from sub-Saharan Africa has been more celebrated than the so-called
Benin bronzes - "so called" because while their dusky patinas look
like bronze, and for years they were believed to be cast in that noble metal,
many castings turn out to be copper alloys of various kinds, such as leaded
brass, that do not contain tin.
No matter. Benin metal sculptures, which come from Benin City in southern
Nigeria (not the country of Benin, which abuts Nigeria on the west), are
arguably the most glorious manifestations of art from west Africa in the
world's museums. Like Chinese ritual bronzes from the Shang Dynasty, they're
technically dazzling. It's on this level that Westerners can most readily
appreciate them.
Yet like the Shang bronzes, those from Benin also embody meaning rooted in
the culture that created them. It's this contextual dimension that the
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology presents
through an exhibition called "IYARE! Splendor and Tension in Benin's
Palace Theater."
The Penn Museum owns an extensive collection of cultural artifacts from the
Kingdom of Benin, now part of Nigeria. The first collection of its kind in the
United States, it once was also the largest; now it's outnumbered by those at
the Field Museum in Chicago and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Most of the more than 80 objects in the show come from the museum's
collection. The remainder are loans from institutions such as the National
Museum of African Art in Washington, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Baltimore
Museum of Art.
The exhibition grew out of a Penn art history curatorial seminar conducted
by Kathy Curnow, a museum research associate who was a visiting lecturer at
the university in the last academic year. It's a collaboration between the
students and Curnow, a Philadelphia native who teaches at Cleveland State
University.
A specialist in the art of Benin and its culture, Curnow has lived all or
part of 13 years there.
"IYARE!" - in the Edo language it means "May you go and
return safely" - is designed to show how the bronzes and other artworks
fit into a specific cultural milieu, palace life and ritual in the Kingdom of
Benin. It presents this milieu, with its ceremonies and visitor protocols, as
a kind of theater in which artists and artisans play a central role.
The celebrated bronzes - the term continues to be used because it's a
long-standing convention - can be appreciated as perhaps the most important
symbols of traditions that go back centuries.
The fabled bronze heads, for instance, are typically memorials to former
obas, or kings, and clan chiefs, and are objects of reverence. (The current
oba is a law graduate of Cambridge University in England.) One head in the
museum collection commemorates an early queen mother. They are usually
displayed on altars; the show includes a reconstructed 19th-century altar
framed by elephant tusks.
The other principal sculptural form in metal is the high-relief plaque. The
plaques, which are fastened to the wooden pillars that support the palace
roof, mainly depict images of courtiers and animals. Older ones occasionally
include figures in Portuguese dress that refer to early explorers and traders
along the West African coast.
The show's five memorial heads and eight plaques are augmented by other
imposing examples of Benin art, including a large brass serpent's head that
once adorned a palace tower; a carved ivory crocodile; small human faces, in
metal, worn by chiefs on their hips; a ceremonial "dancing sword";
and a necklace of coral imported from the Mediterranean region.
The objects have been organized into six thematic sections that place them
into their appropriate cultural, religious, political and social contexts over
the last five centuries. They're augmented by videos of ceremonies and of
artisans at work. The result is a tightly focused "dramatic lens"
that reveals how a once-powerful African culture celebrates its glory and
perpetuates it despite diminished political authority.

Image courtesy of the artist
PHYLLIS GALEMBO
Iyare! Splendor and Tension in Benin's Palace Theatre will be
presented concurrently with Kings, Chiefs and Women of Power: Images from
Nigeria at the Arthur Ross Gallery of the
University of Pennsylvania.
"IYARE! Splendor
and Tension in Benin's Palace Theater" continues at the University of
Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 3260 South St., through
March 1. Hours:
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday- Saturday, 1- 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $8
general and $5 for seniors and students with I.D. Information: 215-898-4000 or
www.museum.upenn.edu
Benin
Enter The Yare Palace is a website accompanying Iyare! Splendor and
Tension in Benin's Palace Theatre has been made possible with the support of
the PoGo Foundation.
Contact contributing art critic Edward J. Sozanski
at 215-854-5595 or esozanski@phillynews.com.
Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/