The Guardian (Nigeria)

The Empire Roars Back As Victor Ehikhameno­r’s Still Standing Confronts Colonial History

- By Onyema Dike

I FHistory never sleeps nor slumbers. For me to be responding to the memorial brass of Admiral Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson who led British troops in the sacking of the Benin Kingdom 125 years ago is a testament to this. The installati­on Still Standing was inspired by the resolute Oba Ovonramwen who was the reigning king of Benin Kingdom at the time of the expedition,” while for Dan Hicks, “this specially- commission­ed work opens up a unique space for remembranc­e and reflection. Still Standing reminds us of the ongoing nature of the rich artistic traditions of Benin, of the enduring legacies and losses of colonial war, and of the ability of art to help us reconcile the past and the present.

you follow the ongoing debate around repatriati­on and restitutio­n of stolen art works, especially from the Bini Kingdom, one would be forgiven for thinking that following the sacking and pillaging of Benin City in the punitive expedition of 1897, the production of Bini art ground to a halt.

But nothing could be farther from the truth as the ongoing installati­on by Victor Ehikhameno­r, which opened two days ago on February 17 at St. Paul’s Cathedral, makes clear. Contempora­ry Edo artists like Victor Ehikhameno­r are keeping the flames of creativity burning and Igun Street, the bronze maker’s redoubt is still abuzz with activity.

Titled Still Standing, the 12 foot high work composed of rosary beads ( chaplets), lace and miniature bronze pieces on canvas, depicts the imposing image of Oba Ovonramwen, the Oba of Benin who was on the throne of his fathers when British forces carried out the so- called punitive expedition. The date was February 18, 1897. There were 1,200 British forces. The commanding officer was Admiral Harry Holdsworth Rawson. The expedition was carried out to avenge the death of Acting Consul General James Phillips, scores of other British officers and their African porters who were killed when they defied warnings not to enter the kingdom. The massacre of that first party led to the punitive expedition of February 1897.

In a clear nod to that history, Ehikhameno­r’s installati­on Still Standing which memorializ­es and commemorat­es Oba Ovonramwen and all those who lost their lives in the attack opened on the eve of the expedition­s 125th anniversar­y as part of “the 50 Monuments in 50 Voices, a partnershi­p between St Paul’s Cathedral and the Department of History of Art at the University of York to invite contempora­ry artists, poets, musicians, theologian­s, performers and academics to showcase their individual responses to 50 historic monuments across the Cathedral.”

Curated by Dan Hicks, Professor of Contempora­ry Archaeolog­y at University of Oxford and Curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum and Simon Carter, Head of Collection­s at St Paul’s Cathedral, the exhibition, according to a statement from The Dean of St Paul’s, the Very Reverend Dr. David Ison “invites responses to these memorials and the people they commemorat­e, from an array of different perspectiv­es. As part of that project, the installati­on of Victor Ehikhameno­r’s artwork contribute­s to the ongoing task of understand­ing the complexiti­es of these monuments in 21st- century Britain.”

To understand “the complexiti­es of these monuments in 21st- century Britain” requires a confrontat­ion and conversati­on that admits contempora­neous art works like Victor Ehikhameno­r’s, which have one foot planted firmly in the past and another in the present/ future. By exhibiting Still Standing, the promoters seem to be echoing the sentiments expressed by Mr. Ehikhameno­r on what he calls “the vibrant continuity of the kingdom till this day” and Prof. Hicks’ who has noted “the ongoing nature of the rich artistic traditions of Benin” in their comments on the exhibition.

For Ehikhameno­r, the exhibition bears out the truism that “History never sleeps nor slumbers. For me to be responding to the memorial brass of Admiral Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson who led British troops in the sacking of the Benin Kingdom 125 years ago is a testament to this. The installati­on Still Standing was inspired by the resolute Oba Ovonramwen who was the reigning king of Benin Kingdom at the time of the expedition,” while for Dan Hicks, “this specially- commission­ed work opens up a unique space for remembranc­e and reflection. Still Standing reminds us of the ongoing nature of the rich artistic traditions of Benin, of the enduring legacies and losses of colonial war, and of the ability of art to help us reconcile the past and the present.”

Visitors will be able to view Victor Ehikhameno­r’s work, which will be sitting beside the plaque of Admiral Sir Harry Holdsworth Rawson in a clear case of the empire roaring back, confrontin­g colonial history and re- appraising the meaning of heroes and victors.

By presenting a work that is composed of Judeo- Christian icons and animist Bini bronze pieces, Mr. Ehikhameno­r is expressing the duality and binaries that define his practice.

Beginning his art practice in the US, Victor Ehikhameno­r has been back fully in Nigeria since 2008 and his works over that time have evolved dramatical­ly thanks to a constant reinventio­n of his process and oeuvre.

He has moved from oil on canvas to large- scale murals and installati­ons inspired by topical news, happenings and events. His perforatio­n pieces have seemingly made way for sculpted pieces and to his current preoccupat­ion with works made out of rosary beads and bronze elements, which speak to his traditiona­l roots as well as Christian persuasion.

This is what makes his installati­on, Still Standing, an absorbing piece of art as well as a political and cultural statement because it embraces cultures while confrontin­g a sad history of violence and forceful appropriat­ion. And this is one of the abiding ironies of art, its ability to birth beauty from violence and carnage and pain.

An outspoken advocate for repatriati­on and restitutio­n of stolen artefacts, it is gratifying that he is the first Nigerian artist at the vanguard of taking contempora­ry Nigerian work steeped in the history of the Benin Kingdom across the seas with ownership and provenance clearly defined.

The curators Dan Hicks and Simon Carter may have in placing Still Standing beside the plaque of Admrial Rawson down there in the crypt of St. Paul inadverten­tly set the stage for the two personages to confront the colonial history that thrust them front and center into our consciousn­ess when all the guests have departed.

One can only imagine.

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