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Thread: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

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  1. #1
    DAVIDE's Avatar QVID MELIVS ROMA?
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    Default Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all




    The Olokun head, which was found near the Nigerian city of Ife in 1910


    Ever since a pure copper sculpture was found buried in a palm grove near the Nigerian city of Ife, experts from the West have argued that the artefact was a fake that was too sophisticated to have been created by African hands.
    Found in 1910, the "Olokun head" left Western curators doubting that such a technically advanced work of art could have been created by indigenous people. Years later, they even began to doubt its authenticity, claiming that the original had been sold illegally and the one which remained in Nigeria was an ingenious copy. But now, new science is set to turn past wisdom on its head. There is a growing belief among contemporary curators that the "counterfeit" sculpture is the real thing, according to The Art Newspaper.
    When it first travelled to the British Museum in 1948, it was exhibited as a copy; scholars claimed it was made from a blend of ancient materials that had been melted down, while the real work of art was thought to have been smuggled out of Africa by a European or American collector. The artwork, now on its second visit to the British Museum, where it is currently displayed – again as a "replica" – will undergo a thorough scientific investigation next month to establish the truth, once and for all.
    Nigel Barley, a former British Museum curator who briefly examined the head in January, believes it may well be the original. Enid Schildkrout, from New York's Museum for African Art and curator of the current exhibition at the British Museum, agrees. If, she said, the real treasure had in fact been stolen, "it is surprising that the original has never reappeared".
    It was first found by Leo Frobenius, a German anthropologist who had heard rumblings of a buried sculpture in a palm grove, just outside Ife, near a shrine dedicated to the goddess of the sea, Olokun. He organised a dig to investigate, and found the artwork.
    Some days later, the colonial administration seized the sculpture on the grounds that it was sacred and should be returned to its original site, before it was transferred to the Ife Museum. One theory that emerged was that Frobenius commissioned a replica when he was instructed to hand over the artefact, and smuggled the original out of the country.
    At the time of discovery, the head was considered too great a masterpiece to have been created by indigenous African artists – a reflection of prevailing attitudes of the early 20th century. Some Europeans even theorised that the work was a remnant from the lost city of Atlantis. A spokeswoman for the British Museum said when the head travelled to the West, it caused a huge stir because "it flew in the face of Western perceptions" (of African heritage and cultural achievements).
    It is now accepted by the curatorial community that the advanced artistic techniques used to create the sculpture were "more advanced than those of Renaissance Italy, and comparable to those of [the artist] Donatello".
    Such sculptures, discovered in Nigeria and neighbouring Benin, were sold on the open market for under £100, in some instances, during the 1950s. This particular work was surrounded by various myths and beliefs, but it was not actually examined until 1948, when it left Nigeria and specialists at the British Museum declared it was a replica.
    Since then, curators have cast doubt over the idea that Frobenius organised the deceit, not least because it is highly unlikely that such a complicated replica – which was found to be made from authentically ancient materials – could have been made in such a short space of time.


    Source:
    http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-en...l-1961485.html


  2. #2
    Opifex
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    The problem is not racism, but the incredible difference between this sculpture and typical African productions:



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    and may posterity forget that ye were
    our countrymen."
    -Samuel Adams

  3. #3
    CtrlAltDe1337's Avatar Praepositus
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    Looks more Asian to me based on the facial features. Maybe it ended up there via trade?


  4. #4
    DAVIDE's Avatar QVID MELIVS ROMA?
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    Doubt that. Statue never left Nigeria i mean always been there
    Last edited by DAVIDE; May 11, 2010 at 01:46 PM.

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    Hresvelgr's Avatar Campidoctor
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    Wait, wait, wait. People actually believed that was not African because it looked good? Racism is still that common? Goddamn, that's pathetic. What kind of "expert" actually believes that every culture in the second-largest continent in the world is exactly the same? The fact that the sculpture is from Ife is quite telling, Ife was a center of one of the developed kingdoms in West Africa.
    I'm not crazy, I'm the only one who's not crazy!


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    Salem1's Avatar Campidoctor
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    It's unbelievably ridiculous that scientists are actually seriously investigating whether Africans are capable of making good sculptures. Academic racism at its finest. And they had the audacity to claim this back then, imagine if someone walked up to them and claimed that the Roman ruins actually had to be alien remains because Europeans are too uncivilized and unsophisticated to ever be capable of creating something like that. Yeah, would cause one hell of an outrage wouldn't it?

    Sometimes the sheer stupidity that exists in this world jades the crap out of me, and this is one of those times...
    Last edited by Salem1; May 13, 2010 at 02:04 PM.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    Since the investigation is not complete this is a non-story until it is.

    Its not academic racism, its just completely inconsistent with anything else discovered. Perhaps its the work of a long unknown genius who figured it out on his own, perhaps we just haven't discovered the other works like it, but being a fake of some kind is also likely.
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  8. #8
    Ludicus's Avatar Comes Limitis
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    Default Re: Sculpture deemed too complex for Africa could be real after all

    Since the investigation is not complete this is a non-story until it is.
    Quite right.

    ------------------
    A head of an Oba, 16th century, court of Benin, early 16th century




    -----------------

    Queen mask pendant mask, 16th century. (ivory, iron, copper)




    but the incredible difference between this sculpture and typical African productions
    Or is just an example of convergence of cultures.
    A beautiful work:
    Lidded Saltcellar [Sierra Leone; Sapi-Portuguese] (1991.435a,b ...

    --------

    A royal gift from Prince Manuel I of Portugal to King Ferdinand V of Castile and Aragon. (1490/1500)
    Hunting Horn, Sapi-Portuguese style. Sierre Leone.




    ---
    Metropolitan Museum
    Africa, 1400–1600 a.d.
    African Art

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