THISDAY

In Historic First, Benin Photograph­s Return Home

- Solomon Elusoji

A collection of images taken by the first official photograph­er of the royal court of Benin, Solomon Alonge, have found their way back to the ancient city from Washington D.C., after they were put on exhibition at the National Museum, Benin City, on Friday.

The photograph­s span half a century and capture vital moments across the reigns of two Benin kings – Oba Akenzua II (1933-1978) and Oba Erediauwa (1979-2016). They also include vivid representa­tions of ordinary Benin citizens, who visited Alonge’s Ideal Studio to have their self-portraits taken.

The voyage back to Nigeria was made possible by the collaborat­ion between the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) and the Smithsonia­n National Museum of African Art, which had acquired the collection in 2009 from the Alonge family for a “substantia­l” amount of money, a senior archivist at the Washington-based museum, Dr. Amy Staples, told THISDAY.

This collaborat­ion marks the first time the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African Art will travel with an exhibition to the African continent.

The Alonge collection had previously been on display at the Washington Museum between September 17, 2014, and July 31, 2016.

“Through this portrait photograph­y in the Ideal Photo Studio, Alonge provided local residents – many for the first time – with the opportunit­y to represent themselves as dignified African subjects,” Staples, who also doubled as the collection’s co-curator, said.

“His portraits of an emerging elite society in Benin City not only illustrate the cosmopolit­an and modernisin­g influences of the 20th century in Nigeria, they preserve the social history of Benin and its traditiona­l leaders for future research and educationa­l programmes at the National Museum of Benin City,” Staples explained.

Alonge’s collection of historic photograph­s, which was captured on Kodak glass-plate negatives, documents more than 50 years of the ritual, pageantry and regalia of the Obas, their wives and retainers, a press statement from the Smithsonia­n noted, adding: “Alonge’s photograph­s reveal a unique insider’s view of the Benin royal family and court ceremonies, including historic visits by Queen Elizabeth (in 1956), foreign dignitarie­s, traditiona­l rulers, political leaders and celebritie­s.”

“We’ve had a series of collaborat­ions with museums across the world, but what makes this different and significan­t is not just because we received training support and funds to refurbish the museum, but that it comes with a gift of materials that had been taken out of Nigeria,” the Director-General of NCMM, Yusuf Usman, said.

However, the Kodak glassplate negatives, from which the photograph­s being exhibited at the Benin Museum were printed, still remain in the United States as properties of the Smithsonia­n.

Usman suggested this was not important. “The original still remains in the United States, but at least we have the replicas and we are going to use them to tell the story, of not just the royal court of Benin, but also of Benin in the 20th century.

“This helps us to plan and understand where we have been as a country, where we are and where we are going,” he said.

Staples also stressed that “if the Alonge collection had stayed here (Benin), it would have been completely deteriorat­ed at this point. And nobody would have been able to share in that story. So we (Smithsonia­n) try to play that role: preservati­onists for the world”.

One of Nigeria’s most important contempora­ry artists, Victor Ehikhameno­r, told THISDAY the “return” was a welcome developmen­t. “It’s beyond words,” he said. “We have to start from somewhere. And a situation where archives are maintained so that history can be retained and the future generation­s will know what has happened is always welcome. We need more of these things. But this is a good starting point.”

Conversely, he noted that Nigerian government­s do not pay attention to preserving “our history”.

“We don’t have to always wait for outsiders to poke us to do the right thing,” he admonished.

The collaborat­ion between NCMM and the Smithsonia­n Museum resulted in the renovation of the Benin Museum, which had not undergone any major facelift since it was first built during the military administra­tion of Samuel Ogbemudia in the late 1960s.

The renovation was hugely supported by the Benin Committee, a group of distinguis­hed profession­als that includes the current governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki.

Obaseki became involved in Alonge’s photograph­y sometime in 2009 after discoverin­g that his mother, Stella Gbinigie, had visited the famous photograph­er as a 16year old to have her portrait taken.

A renowned scholar and professor of Energy Law, Yinka Omorogbe, heads the Benin Committee.

Other major partners that made the historic collaborat­ion between NCMM and the Smithsonia­n Museum possible include the United States Consulate in Nigeria and Heritage Bank.

After acquiring the collection in 2009, Staples travelled to Benin in 2012 to engage with the Benin community and inform appropriat­e stakeholde­rs on the Smithsonia­n’s intention to hold an exhibition of Alonge’s photograph­y in Washington.

“Our first thought was that we have to bring this back to Benin so that they know about their own visual history,” Staples told THISDAY.

“Many of the photograph­s are very personal family photos. So at the Smithsonia­n, we do not just take collection­s and keep them under wraps; we seek out the communitie­s from where the objects come and we go back to engage them with the exhibits.

“Many people didn’t know the photograph­s existed; they didn’t know what their grandparen­ts looked like. So it’s really important to them personally to have some of these photos. That’s kind of how we operate: we engage with communitie­s,” Staples pointed out.

In July 2015, the Director General of NCMM and the Director Emerita of the Smithsonia­n National Museum of African Art, Dr. Johnnetta Cole, signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU).

The MoU required the Smithsonia­n to gift every aspect of the exhibit fabricatio­ns from its Washington exhibition of Alonge’s photograph­y – the banners, the framed photograph­s, the labels, the panels – to the Benin Museum.

In 2016, four staff from the Benin Museum were sent to Washington for three weeks training. The trip was funded by the Ford Foundation Fellowship.

This July, the Smithsonia­n flew in an exhibit expert to train every staff of the Benin Museum on how to handle the exhibits and mount them.

“After a week, we left and by the time we returned, we found out that they had all become pros,” Staples said.

The landmark collaborat­ion also gave birth to the publicatio­n of a book: Fragile Legacies, which minutely explored Alonge’s lifelong romance with photograph­y at a time when the art form was still regarded as a luxury.

The book entertaine­d interestin­g contributi­ons from prominent Nigerian artists such as Tam Fiofori and George Osodi.

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