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Nkiru Nzegwu Race as a category of classification has an infamous history of injustice
and domination. In late nineteenth century Africa, it was deployed in
a violent agenda of empire-building, in which European superiority became
the organizing principle of the new political order. Following colonization,
European cultural values, social norms, and conception of reality provided
the privileged frame of representation, and the standpoint for understanding
Africans whom Europeans considered to be subhuman. In the views of then
Governor of Lagos, Sir Hugh Clifford, Africans lacked the organizing
and creative abilities that were "the particular trait and characteristic
of the white man" (1). Vestiges of this racist legacy persist today
in the West in the critical reception of the works of African artists.
It underwrites the reluctance to accord intellectual sophistication
to African artists, and the hesitance to grant the legitimacy of Africa'
s cultural paradigms in shaping the evaluative lens by which the creative
expressions of Africans are framed. Nowhere is this ideological posture
most evident as in the evaluation of the works of Nigerian's preeminent
artist, Benedict Chukwukadiba Enwonwu. In the colonial quest to position Europe at the center of analysis,
minimal attention is paid to the creative politics of modern African
artists. Instances of the artists representation of a white man or white
woman are often unimaginatively explained away as instances of Africans'
fascination with, or reverence for, the white man. The pervasive depictions
of Tarzan on the side of mammy wagons, lorries, and luxurious buses
are rarely seen for what it is, which is, the lunacy of a half-naked
white man running around aimlessly in a jungle with animals for relatives
and companionship. In an attempt to occupy the cultural high ground,
hardly do the EuroAmerican interpreters of African visual forms of representation
consider the rationale of art from the African perspective. For this
reason, most miss the possibility that African artists could harbor
revolutionary aspirations, or that they may be engaged in subversive
activities even as they feign civility. Race representation, the depiction
of white people in paintings and sculpture, in fact, has provided occasions
in which imperial power relations are dramatically reversed so that
the white oppressor becomes the loser in counter-hegemonic narratives. In this essay I shall investigate the revolutionary anti-colonial politics
underlying the production of the bronze portraits of Queen Elizabeth
II by Enwonwu. I shall focus on the performative role these sculptures,
formerly at the House of Representatives in Lagos, Nigeria, were designed
to play. Of special interest is the symbiotic relationship of art and
ritual, and the subversive way art production metonymically created
a context for ritual invocation. The use of the naturalistic style achieved
revolutionary potentials in shielding anti-colonial goals. This atavistic
struggle between the colonizer and the colonized becomes obvious once
we abandon both the colonizer's imperial gaze and its simplistic racialized
interpretations. Shifting, as Enwonwu had insistently urged, from the
Western conception of art and aesthetics to the appropriate Onitsha-Igbo
conceptual framework reveals a different explanatory terrain. Indeed,
culturally centering this artist and his work, as is routinely done
for artists in Europe and the United States, constitutes the only meaningful
way to apprehend the counter-narratives of resistance and anti-domination
uprisings that informed the production of the Queen's bronze portraits. I. In a truly racially neutral context in which outstanding achievement
is the yardstick for documentation, there is no question that Enwonwu
would need no introduction. With works at the United Nations, in the
private collection of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, the National Gallery
of Art, Nigeria, the National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Federal German Government,
United States State Department Building, Washington D.C., and the Commonwealth
Institute in London, he has earned a respected place in the annals of
art. That the recognition eludes him is not unconnected to racist expectations
that African art must be visibly different to be acknowledged. Enwonwu
attained international repute while Nigeria was still a colony of the
British Empire. Born in Onitsha in 1921, he was introduced to carving
by his sculptor-father. His appreciation for the Igbo conception of
art comes from his belief that art is suffused with spirit force and
energy, and that Western art is too much wrapped up with the physical.
In his view, "Art [by which he means nka] does not imply
good colors, lines and shapes, nor do these make up art (2). Art ...
is not a quality of things, but an activity" (3) that "objectifi[es]
... the artist's beliefs, his feelings, meanings or significance, and
volition" (4). The works produced under this condition of inspiration
are both works of art and spirit-receptacles. Two years after graduating from High School, Enwonwu received a scholarship
to study art at The Slade School of Art. He graduated with First Class
Honors in 1947, and then enrolled in a postgraduate program in Social
Anthropology at the University College, London. He received his Master's
of Art degree in 1948. He entered the program principally because he
was disturbed by the racist rhetoric in England in the 1940's, and anthropology
seemed to offer a space for the scientific study of the races, their
physical and mental characteristics, customs, and social relationships.
After enrolling in the program, he discovered the invidious dimension
of the discipline and that the emphasis was on "primitive peoples
and their cultures." The real objective of anthropology was the
facilitation of the colonial agenda, "to create an intellectual
barrier which makes it extremely difficult for most Africans to be considered
qualified to play an important part in the development and preservation
of their art" (5). Though he was elected Fellow of the Royal Anthropological
Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (FRAI) after his study, he remained
distrustful of the discipline and disenchanted with its practices. Shortly after graduation from University College, Enwonwu was appointed
Art Supervisor by the Colonial Government in Nigeria. The appointment
required him to function as the nation' s official artist and artist-ambassador.
As part of his duties, he executed major art commissions for the government,
represented the country in diverse international art events, and exhibited
in London, Paris, New York, Boston, and Washington. The mid-1950's was
a significant time in Enwonwu's life. In 1955, he was awarded an MBE
(Member of the British Empire) for his contribution in the arts, and
a year later, he received permission to produce an official portrait
of the Queen. The latter put him in the class of a small select group
of artists that have been so honored. The recognition was historic for
a variety of reasons: he was a youthful thirty-four years, he was the
first black artist to be accorded permission to produce an official
portrait of a European monarch, and the Queen actually sat for her bust
and full-length bronze portraits (6). The completed works were exhibited
at the Gallery of the Royal Society of British Artists and Tate Gallery
in London in 1957 before onward transportation to Nigeria. From 1949 to 1994, Enwonwu lived a grueling life as an artist, artist-ambassador,
administrator, and educator. He blazed an impressive path for African
artists establishing an enviable record of achievements. By his death
in February 1994, he had steadfastly pushed the plasticity of wood through
exploring its formal limits in sculptural forms. In the area of painting,
he had explored, re-translated, innovated, and extended our understanding
of dance movement, by focusing on the artistic essence of such dances
and mmuo (masks) forms. Unlike the European artists of the period
who willingly ignored political issues in their art, Enwonwu devoted
enormous attention to the politics and the multiple sites of operation
of colonialism. He was aware of the power of visual representation in
illuminating, distorting, or erasing people's realities and emancipatory
struggles. For this reason, he directed his art to combating, in a non-propagandist
way, the psychological effects of colonialism and racism. II. Some who are unaware of Enwonwu's anti-colonial politics have quickly
concluded from his professional relationship with the Colonial government
that he was a collaborator. Unable to understand how he could be morally
opposed to a system that served him so well, others who are aware of
his anticolonial politics, are convinced that his politics were a shrewd
attempt to deflect attention from his collaboration with the British
and to give historical relevance to his actions. To interpret the historical
Enwonwu in this light is to miss, however, the complex nature of colonial
rule and subjugation, and to ignore the peculiar nature of life under
colonial rule. Enwonwu's professional success as an artist derived entirely
from the excellent quality of his work. The fact that he worked within
the colonial administration cannot be construed as evidence that colonization
was acceptable, or that he was a collaborator. Enwonwu never concealed
his distaste for colonization and racial domination. As an anti-colonial
activist in the heyday of British rule, he espoused the political ideology
of Pan-Africanism while still a student at the Slade. By his own admission,
he joined the Oxford Union "a purely political organization in
Britain that had nothing to do with art" (7). This political affiliation
offered him an alternative intellectual space for critiquing the European
construction of creativity, art, aesthetics, political structure, and
reality. From the benign liberal politics of the Oxford Union, he progressed
to the more radical counter-domination politics of the London-based
West African Student Union (WASU). In the mid-1940's in Britain, the
work of George Padmore and Jomo Kenyatta in the Pan-African Federation,
and of Kwame Nkrumah in the West African National Secretariat (WANS)
helped to transform liberation theorization into revolutionary protest
movements. Political activism revealed to Enwonwu the complex shifting nature
of the colonial process and the multiple sites of inequities inherent
in the structure. These sites were exposed as prominent political figures
in different parts of the British Empire who called for the dismantling
of the British Empire (8). In the arts, Negritude emerged as the cultural
arm of Pan-Africanism. Articulated by Léopold Sédar Senghor
of Senegal and Aimé Céasire of Martinique, Pan-Africanism
stressed the need to capture the self-expressive manner of African cultural
life, and under-scored the importance of self-pride as a basis for personal
liberation. Using the concept of African Personality as a model of cultural
action, Enwonwu merged his political beliefs with his visual representation
(9), without sacrificing artistic excellence for political expediency.
Membership in the West African Writers' and Artists' Club in London
provided him with access to artists, Vincent Kofi and Kofi Antubam of
Ghana and the Senegalese artists Papa Ibra Tall and Iba N'Diaye, with
whom to solve the technical questions that arose in the course of their
political work. Reflecting on those times, Enwonwu stated, "[W]e
were all so conscious of the struggle against colonialism, and of nothing
else. We just wanted the colonial empire to end in Africa. . . . If
we painted any picture it was about this freedom. If we sang a song,
if like Senghor we wrote or recited poems, we philosophized. You find
that in those days all the leaders of Africa were inspired" (10). In the course of his exemplary career, Enwonwu had his problems with
Euromodernism. Part of his misgiving centered on the appropriation of
African art and the subsequent devaluation of the socially affirmative
aspects of African culture and life. The other part is based on ideological
differences. The notion of creativity that Enwonwu valued stressed a
connection between a certain class of sculptural objects and their performative
role. In his view, nka (art, creativity and creative expression)
is an "invocation of ancestral spirits through giving concrete
form or body to them before they can enter into the human world"
(11). Treating art as a ritual of embodiment positions the artist to
appreciate the sacral aspect of creation, and to confront the responsibility
of infusing life into mundane physical objects. In his youth, he had
perceptively noted the relationship between the spirit-related function
of sculpted objects and their placement in family shrines at Onitsha
and, in site specific installations at sacred spaces in Uyo and Calabar.
In Benin, he witnessed the bronze sculptural forms on the mud platforms
in family shrines. This relationship not only established that sculptures
performed spirit-related tasks, they offered a compellingly different
way of thinking of sculpture. Rather than thinking of it in the Euromodernist
sense as physical objects with a completely visual role, one could think
of sculptural forms as spirit receptacles to be energized and placed
at sites where they are expected to act on their environment. The difference between Enwonwu's view of art and the modern view is
that in the former in which the concept of nka is dominant, artists
consciously seek access to inner metaphysical knowledge, while artists
in the modern view leave such matters to organized religion. On the
older view, inspired imagination is required to apprehend creative forces,
and spirit apprehension and embodiment constitute the basis for artistic
creation. By attending to this close relationship between visual representation
and cultural beliefs, Enwonwu successfully rescued for posterity the
transformative element of creation that is central to Igbo conception
of creativity. By so doing he challenged the underlying physicalist
philosophy of the popular view of "art for art's sake," indicting
modernist artists for their abdication of their moral responsibility
and leadership. In some of his own works he demonstrated the process
for recovering the principles of invocation and enactment, and effectively
displaced the notion of physicality and inertia at the heart of the
Euromodernist conception of sculpture. Conceptually stepping into the
metaphysical dimension of nka, he placed his works on a different
ontological basis even as he appeared to be "wedded" to the
Academy style, and appeared to practice art in the Western vein. As
he succinctly put it, "[W]hen I use the pure art form of my father's
images and I use my experience, academic knowledge, and my political
motivations, I ... arrive at a point where realism and symbolism can
meet. That to me is art. What will result and survive is the continuation
of the aspirations of African people, their dignified way of life, their
beliefs, their dreams, and their yearnings for intrinsic lasting values
that are encapsulated in the new form" (12). Proud, urbane, Christianized, yet still steeped in the spiritual values
of his culture, Enwonwu carried, molded, or separated the different
facets of his identity as conditions demand. Although he espoused Negritude
with his Francophone counterparts, unlike them he did not face the debilitating
psychological problem of self-doubts that is the staple of the French
assimilation policy. Emerging from the indirect rule reality of British
colonialism, Enwonwu retained a stronger sense of his cultural identity
and place in the colonial world of the first half of the twentieth century.
As a result, he publicly dismissed as nonsense and a reflection of ignorance,
the racist narratives which he encountered in the 1940's in England.
Rather, viewing himself as the heir of an honorable heritage, he exhorted
"the gods of (his) ancestors to tell (him) what art is and for
what purpose it exists" (13) and he used the techniques he learned
from the Slade to reproduce his ideas. Because his creative philosophy underscored the metonymic character
of objects, his works simultaneously occupy several states of existence.
They are many things at the same time. In their specialized role as
concretized incantations, however, sculpted objects enact the idea of
embodiment by becoming instantiations of whatever ideal, objective,
or prayer that was the motivating rationale for creation. Enwonwu's
creative stance marks an important distinction between the idea of art
as an immanent quality in things, and art as a relational quality. The
stress on the idea of relationality is that we make our art and art
is what we make of it, including investing it with goals and meaning,
and the power to change our circumstances. III. From 1947 to 1957, Enwonwu pursued his anti-colonial objectives of
cultural freedom through visual representation. At a time when the positivist
ideology of "art for art's sake" counseled the separation
of art and politics, he unapologetically deployed his art to the political
struggle for independence. His most profound, anticolonial statements
were memorably stated in 1957, in his bronze bust and full-figure bronze
portrait of HRH Queen Elizabeth II (14). Enwonwu set the production
in motion by presenting then Colonial Secretary, Mr. Alan Lennox-Boyd,
with a proposal to execute a bust and a full-length portrait in bronze
of the Queen (15). The proposal was tabled to her Majesty in 1956, and
was accepted the same year by the Queen. The timing was auspicious since
Enwonwu had just been awarded an MBE for his contributions to the arts
less than a year before, and the Queen had just completed a royal tour
of Nigeria in 1956 in which she had been warmly received. Enwonwu's sculptural incantation began with sittings at Buckingham
Palace, which later moved to his Maida Vale studio when the transportation
of the bust from the studio to the palace became too cumbersome (16).
Completed in ten months in 1957, the bust and full-length figure of
the seated Queen were cast in bronze (17), then exhibited at the gallery
of the Royal Society of British Artists, in London, and also at the
Tate Gallery. Although they were acclaimed internationally as Enwonwu's
greatest works, the sculptures sparked intense controversy (18). Their
Negritude statements were prophetic, not in charting a new artistic
direction, but in the daring political statement they made. In modeling the features of the young Queen, Enwonwu had taken liberties
with the royal lips. Widening them, he gave them a fuller, sensuous
more becoming pout. In so doing, he boldly inscribed an African aesthetic
ideal of womanhood on the Queen's visage, the fountainhead of British
imperial rule (19). While the political ramifications of this act were
missed, the artistic significance was not lost on the British art establishment,
which perceived the inscription as an audacious rejection of their twentieth
century European aesthetic ideals, with its concept of thin-lipped womanly
beauty. Stunned by the act, the art critics responded sharply in editorials.
The Empire telegraph crackled from London, England to Christchurch,
New Zealand with news about this Africanized bronze portrait of the
Queen (20). Screaming headlines described the "controversy"
in sensational terms-"The Queen Through African Eyes." Speculations
as to the possible rejection of the sculptures were cut short by the
Queen's official endorsement of them. The bust was mounted on a black
marble plinth and, with the full-figure portrait, was sent to the House
of Representatives in Lagos in 1958. The seated full-figure portrait
was installed in the courtyard, while the bust was placed inside the
chambers of the House. It joined the Speaker's Chair (21), a pair of
doors and plaques carved by Enwonwu (22), and a group of murals he had
painted. Although, many correctly saw this substitution of European for African
values as a political commentary on European aesthetic imperialism,
they missed the more important incantatory dimension of the work. Too
many people focused on the physical over the metaphysical. What many
then, and now, have failed to grasp in responding to these portraits
of the Queen is the subversive metaphysical message which Enwonwu deliberately
refused to disclose. He prevaricated. His aestheticized comment that
he had simply widened the royal lips to make them fuller and more becoming
satisfied many enquirers since it suggested that this was merely a physical
protest against aesthetic imperialism. Yet, this calculated physically-grounded
explanation masked the metaphysical dimension of the act by treating
the entire action as a symbolic gesture. Stripped of its revolutionary
edge, the action becomes an ineffectual gesture, a vain cry for attention.
However, correctly understood, the transposition constitutes the first
stage in the rite of transubstantiation that alters the imperial objective
by transforming the face/spirit of the British Empire. According to
the mystical principles of spirit embodiment, a person's spirit may
be captured and contained so that his or her intentions could be changed
through auto-suggestion. Thus, within the metaphysical scheme of action,
one way to free oneself or group from bondage is to neutralize the power
of the oppressor, by containing it. This is what Enwonwu did with the
portraits. IV. A culturally grounded interpretation is needed to illuminate the significance
of Enwonwu's solicitation and his Africanization of the Queen's portraits.
Such a grounded interpretation transgressively subverts the central
logic and materialist ideology of any artistic explanation that fails
to comprehend the world in a similar way. On the latter framework, art
is in a metonymic (symbiotic) relationship with other activities, and
so sculpted objects are simultaneously artistic works and ritual objects.
Given this, the bronze portraits of the Queen are receptacles in which
spirits may reside, and specified wishes and thoughts may be contained.
For precisely this reason, verisimilitude in representation was shunned
in diverse parts of Nigeria prior to the rise of both photography and
Christian beliefs. Sculpting another's likeness was thought to expose
one's spirit to psychic manipulation by leaving it vulnerable to containment.
Thus, to an anti-colonial activist who was aware of the ritual practice
of spirit-containment, he or she was also more aware that political
liberation is secured through using all available resources, including
mystical means, to obtain physical liberation. That the portraits are containment receptacles as well as public statues
is explained by the fact that Enwonwu proposed to the Colonial Secretary
(23) to execute a portrait in bronze of the Queen. In making the offer,
he was aware of the following: that such a prestigious commission would
enhance his career, and this is what some people would focus on; that
the Colonial Government would appreciate the symbolic importance and
glamour of having a renowned artist from the colony produce the bust
of the Imperial Crown for the colony's House of Representative; that
an appropriate vessel for spirit-containment was important to securing
an efficacious ritual; and that he could exploit assumptions to mask
his underlying objectives. Since there was no way the Queen was going
to come calling for a portrait, and there was the very real possibility
that a British artist would be given such a commission, Enwonwu had
to seize the initiative in obtaining the Queen's consent to this rite
of liberation. Although, he stood to gain professionally if his Trojan-horse
proposal was accepted, he was aware that he would be represented as
servile and of shamelessly seeking validation from the colonial masters.
Regardless of this possible damage to his reputation, he presented his
proposal knowing the importance of seizing the power of representation
from an imperial power that claims a people as colonial subjects. Of
course, those who are firmly located in a Eurocentric framework would
fail to see the resistance in the act because they tend to see Africans
as lacking revolutionary spirit. Within the anti-colonial movement,
however, and the metaphysical scheme of his Onitsha culture, a different
interpretation emerges that represents the proposal as establishing
a ritual pathway to self-determination. For the dramatic reversal of imperial power entailed by this act, the
site of Enwonwu's anticolonial political statement was carefully chosen.
The royal visage and body embodied the British Empire. To the colonized
world of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean it was a symbol of imperial
rule and its subjugation. Seemingly functioning as an artist located
within the Western framework, Enwonwu shifted to the Igbo conception
of art to avail himself of its metaphysical precepts. He knew that for
the colonial subjects of the Crown to be free, it was also crucial that
the "royal head be bound." After all, this was the most pervasive
seal of British power. As an Imperial seal, he was aware that the Queen's
head circulated profusely, occurring in stamps and even the lowest currency
denomination of far flung regions of the Empire. In its ubiquity, the
monarch's head psychically regulated trade, psychically commodified
life by controlling labor and its terms of exchange, and psychically
monitored communication. Thus to secure freedom, it was crucial that
the pervasive psychic force of this imperial seal be reigned in and
neutralized. The metonymic conception of art of his Onitsha heritage allowed Enwonwu
to cloak his objectives and to transcend the limiting positivistic conception
of Euromodernism that constrains both the power of objects and the efficacy
of our psychic lives. On the positivists view, war or politics rather
than creative expression or art enables people to overcome oppressive
conditions. But on the metaphysical scheme in which the concept of nka
finds its home, and in which relationality rather than individuation
is the organizing force, creativity constitutes a pathway to liberation.
Since things are relationally linked, it is believed that a corrective
measure initiated in one domain has relational impact on another. Metonymically
treating the bust and full-figure portraits as art and as aestheticized
aja (or sacrifice) means that the artistic production of these
portraits can (meta)physically/psychically (ichu aja) be deployed to
prod the Crown into granting independence to its subjects. That Enwonwu's
aesthetic sacrifice was successful is evidenced by the Queen's endorsement
of the bust in the face of Eurocentric indignation. In officially accepting the Africanized bust, an act that preserves
intact the principle of artistic license, the Queen as the official
head of the Empire inevitably accepted the immanent imperatives of the
aja (sacrifice). In accordance with the obligatory principles of the
ritual, she (and Britain through her) was bound by nso ani (the Earth's
sacred law) (24) that was activated by the sacrifice. The law committed
her to grant expeditiously the wishes inscribed on her visage, and to
permit the peaceful emergence of Africa out of her imperial head and
power. Significantly, less than three years after the execution of these
bronze portraits, Nigeria peacefully became independent. Indeed, the
African face that Enwonwu envisioned in the Monarch's face emerged in
full form in the 1960's as the indomitable, irresolute will to freedom
transformed the landscape of Africa. Race and visual representation interweave in intricate ways to establish
the outlines of explanation. To understand the meaning of Africans'
representation of their racial other, African cultural paradigms are
needed to unravel the objectives of sculptures and paintings that were
produced during the anti-colonial struggle. As Enwonwu revealed, critics
and art historians need to "know the mind of the artist" and
to base their interpretations of modern African art on "philosophical
ideas," since the artist is responding to "social, economic,
educational, and even religious changes ... taking place in ... countries"
(25). It would be a mistake to trivialize the legitimacy of the offered
interpretation and to dismiss the efficacy of Enwonwu's action on the
ground that the process of independence was already well on its way.
While that may very well be true, historical evidence shows, however,
that independence was not a done deal. Familiarity with the history
of the period reveals that although Nigerians had been engaged in constitutional
talks since 1945, difficult conditionalities were imposed by the Colonial
Office in London to further its own imperial agenda. Independence was
not in the cards for Africans. On September 9, 1941, the British Premier
Winston Churchill had explained to the House of Commons that clause
three of the Atlantic Charter, which conceded "the right of all
peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live,"
applied only to the white peoples of Europe under Nazi rule. In his
view, the conditions of this clause was a separate issue "from
the progressive evolution of self governing institutions in the regions
and peoples who owe allegiance to the British Crown" (26). Given this official declaration of the British Government, obstacles
were accordingly placed on the path of colonized peoples in various
parts of the world. In Nigeria, for instance, Governor Richardson drew
up a constitution that was touted as the constitution for the new independent
nation of Nigeria, but which was implicitly structured to work against
the unification of Nigeria into a centralized state with a common identity.
Faced with mounting criticism, that constitution was replaced in 1952
by the hastily drawn- up, short-lived MacPherson constitution. In 1954,
the Lyttleton constitution was drafted to address the inherent weaknesses
of the MacPherson constitution. Although this constitution remained
in place until independence in 1960, the manipulative ploys of the colonial
government, especially Britain's balkanization of northern and southern
Nigeria, left severe structural rifts and conflicts. These could have
preempted independence in 1960, as it had done in 1956. The point is
that at the crucial historical juncture when Enwonwu created the portraits,
independence was not a certainty and an abrupt reversal of the path
to self-determination was still possible. There is no question that
to fully appreciate the colonial and contemporary politics of visual
representation, the underlying artistic philosophy of Enwonwu's is needed
to grasp the historic and unprecedented nature of the bronze portraits
and the decline of the British royals. ENDNOTES 1. West Africa, 26 July 1924, quoted in Michael Crowder 1962, 264. 2. Ben Enwonwu, "The Evolution, History and Definition of Fine
Art (2)," West African Pilot, Friday, May 6, 1949, 3. 3. Enwonwu, West African Pilot, Friday, May 6, 1949, 3. 4. Enwonwu, "The Evolution, History and Definition of Fine Art
(3)," West African Pilot, Tuesday, May 11, 1949, 2. 5. Ben Enwonwu, "Problems of the African Artist Today," Présence
Africaine, 8-10 (June -November 1956), 177. 6. Drum (East Africa), May 1958, 36. 7. Interview, May 22, 1989. 8. These figures were Mahatma Ghandi and Pandit Nehru of India, Gamel
Nasser of Egypt, Kwame Nkrumah of then Gold Coast, now Ghana, Nnamdi
Azikwe of Nigeria, Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia
and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania. 9. Interview, May 22, 1989. 10. Interview, July 1989. 11. Enwonwu, 1968, 421. 12. Interview May 1989, 22. 13. Ben Enwonwu, "The Evolution, History and Definition of Fine
Art (1)," West African Pilot, Thursday, May 5, 1949, 2. 14. By 1955, Enwonwu had been awarded an M.B.E. (Member of the British
Empire) for his contributions to the arts. This recognition made him
one of the youngest holders of that award in the Commonwealth. 15. West African Review (London) no. 28 (352), 1957, 2. 16. Drum (East Africa), May 1958, 36. In Enwonwu's personal papers
is a 1955 photograph of the Queen inspecting her statue in plaster form.
Also see West African Review (London) no. 28 (352), 1957, 6. 17. The bronzes were cast by Galicie from the plaster molds made by
Mark Mancini. West African Review (London) no. 28 (352), 1957, 6. A
Nigerian painter and sculptor, Abayomi Barber, who worked in Mancini's
studio also confirmed this during this writer's interview with him in,
March 1994. 18. Drum (East Africa), May 1958,35-37. 19. Issues surrounding this bust were discussed with him on various
occasions, but especially during his birthday celebrations in July 1991. 20. The lead line of November 11, 1957 of Christchurch Press New Zealand
newspaper. The event was also featured in Otago Daily Times, New Zealand.
The cutting had been preserved by Enwonwu who first showed it to the
writer in July 1989, with discussions following in July 1991. 21. Drum (East Africa), May 1958, 36. 22. Francis Osague states that his uncle Felix Idubor worked with Enwonwu
in competing these commissions. As an assistant to his uncle, he (Osague)
worked on the plaque carvings some of which were done in Idubor's studio
at Tinubu Square. Interview, March 1994 at foyer of National Gallery
of Modem Art, Iganmu, Lagos. 23. See West African Review (London) no. 28 (352), 1957, 2. 24. The sacredness of the earth is inherent in Igbo conception of life.
This is why the earth is frequently referenced as an altar. People are
constantly reminded to speak circumspectly, since words uttered on the
earth-altar are oaths. 25. Source and attribution unkown. 26. Cited in Esebede 1982, 146. |