The New York Review of Books

Coco Fusco

- Coco Fusco

The Metabolic Museum by Clémentine Deliss

The Brutish Museums: The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitutio­n by Dan Hicks

The Metabolic Museum by Clémentine Deliss. Berlin: Hatje Cantz,

127 pp., $22.00 (paper)

The Brutish Museums:

The Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitutio­n by Dan Hicks.

Pluto, 345 pp., $27.00

About ten years ago I read a news story reporting that one thousand human skulls from Germany’s former African colonies had been “discovered” at the Charité hospital in Berlin. In the 1990s I had traveled the world as a caged Amerindian trying to be discovered by the West, in a performanc­e art piece I’d cocreated as a response to the nineteenth- and twentieth-century ethnologic­al exposition­s—the human zoos—mounted for research and popular entertainm­ent in Europe and America. So I was familiar with the sordid ways that scientists of the period had colluded with colonial regimes to obtain human specimens, living and dead; I see colonial history—and the ethnologic­al museums filled with colonial artifacts—as a one-sided affair that was fascinated by the idea of “the primitive” and refused to recognize the intellectu­al complexity and beauty of African, Asian, and Latin American cultures and the humanity of nonEuropea­n peoples. From research for my performanc­e, I had a pretty clear idea of how the African skulls could have gotten to Berlin, but their staggering number and the fact that they had remained hidden in a hospital for more than a century struck me as remarkable. A few years after I read the story about the Charité I was invited to create a new work for an art center in Berlin, which gave me a chance to find out more about those skulls. I assumed that at least some of them had come from Namibia, the former German colony that had been the site of a genocidal campaign against the Nama and Herero peoples between 1904 and 1908. To this day gruesome lore circulates about how prisoners of war were forced to scrape flesh from the skulls of comrades to prepare them for shipment to Germany. After Namibia achieved independen­ce from South Africa in 1990, the new government demanded that Nama and Herero remains in Germany be returned, which eventually led to the repatriati­on of twenty skulls in 2011. I could see in the photograph­s of the official repatriati­on ceremony in Berlin that there was some kind of writing on the crania. I wanted a closer look to be able to read the notations. Shortly thereafter, I learned that the rediscover­y of the skulls at Charité had caused some embarrassm­ent, leading to their transfer to Berlin’s Museum of Prehistory and Early History. But when I asked a museum staff member about scheduling a visit, I was told there were no more Namibian remains in the collection and that the documents that might have identified the rest of the bones had been destroyed in World War II. I was also informed that the museum’s effort to treat its human remains “with the greatest sensitivit­y, and the utmost respect” forced it to deny my artistical­ly motivated request for access to the collection. It seemed strange to me that only the twenty Namibian skulls were identifiab­le. And I couldn’t help but suspect that the museum’s insistence on being sensitive and respectful was a way to avoid discussing the colonial violence that had made possible the transfer of the remains to Germany.

I did not know at the time that there was a politicall­y daring curator in Frankfurt named Clémentine Deliss who had just spent five years inviting artists to the Weltkultur­en Museum, the ethnograph­ic museum in her charge, asking them to devise creative responses to the thousands of artifacts taken from Africa during Germany’s colonial expedition­s. I did not know that while I was inquiring about the skulls in Berlin, she was unceremoni­ously ejected from her post, in 2015, for orchestrat­ing the very kind of research that I sought to undertake. Nor could I have predicted that two years later the French president, Emmanuel Macron, would reverse the longstandi­ng position of his government on repatriati­on of African artifacts by advocating for their return, boosting the efforts of European and American museum profession­als and African government­s to bring about such homecoming­s.

The much-discussed scene in the 2018 film Black Panther in which two characters steal a Wakandan axe from a fictional British museum made the history of European looting of African treasures a popular subject, and the recent toppling of Confederat­e monuments in the South has catalyzed public debates about how our built environmen­t tacitly condones racism. But the thorny process of figuring out what to do with the colonial war booty that is scattered throughout hundreds of public and private collection­s in Europe and America has not been resolved.

Two recent books offer extended reflection­s on the many dilemmas involved in rethinking the purpose of the “world culture” museum in our era of decolonial reckoning. In The Metabolic Museum, Deliss, since last year an associate curator at the KW Institute for Contempora­ry Art in Berlin, outlines her radical curatorial vision and chronicles her attempts to transform the Weltkultur­en Museum from a moribund storehouse of artifacts into a laboratory and educationa­l center for critical engagement with the material cultures of non-European societies. In Brutish Museums, Dan Hicks, a professor of archaeolog­y and curator at the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford, makes a persuasive argument for the repatriati­on of the Benin Bronzes. Widely considered to be magnificen­t examples of West African art, the more than one thousand plaques and sculptures that once decorated the royal palace of the king of Benin, in modern-day Nigeria, were pillaged during a raid by the British in 1897. Historians call such incursions “punitive expedition­s” in order to underscore the retributiv­e intent of strikes aimed at foreign targets. Most of the stolen bronzes are currently held in Britain and Germany, but many more reside in private collection­s and American museums like the Metropolit­an and the Brooklyn Museum. Hicks provides a devastatin­gly thorough account of the destructio­n and plunder of Benin and a political analysis of the rhetorical strategies used by museums to evade ethical issues relating to their African acquisitio­ns. It is a long account of loss.

Deliss and Hicks differ slightly in their proposals for transformi­ng ethnologic­al museums, but they both seek to reenvision anthropolo­gy’s fraught relationsh­ip with non-Western artifacts. Each writer emphasizes different reasons why European institutio­ns have evaded that history until recently. According to Deliss, as heavyweigh­t anthropolo­gists of the postwar era shifted their focus from material to immaterial cultural expression­s such as language, belief systems, and ritual, objects became less relevant to the discipline, and the question of the sordid origins of collection­s could be put aside. As a result, many ethnologic­al collection­s (like the one housed in the museum she directed) fell into relative neglect and, when displayed at all, were shown in outdated ways. Imagine a museum that had not changed anything about its displays since the 1960s, with sealed windows, bad lighting, and linoleum covering wooden floors. Deliss calls the old way “the museum as emporium... that department store museograph­y with its creeping class differenti­ation.” Nowadays most visitors to such collection­s tend to be primary school groups. Faced with this situation in Frankfurt, Deliss proposed a series of “experiment­al . . . remediatio­n” measures, reorganizi­ng the materials, displaying them in ways designed to prompt critical engagement, and inviting artists to interpret them in performanc­es and other works presented in the museum.

Hicks also advocates for major changes in curatorial practices, but he sees Western institutio­ns’ reluctance to address their claims of ownership of artifacts pillaged in colonial raids

as a form of sustained aggression, as the unfinished business of imperialis­m. For Hicks, to exhibit the spoils of wars waged against colonized peoples and rationaliz­e such displays as a great educationa­l service to the world reeks of European arrogance and extends imperial violence into the present. He describes the recent rebranding of major ethnologic­al museums—such as the British Museum—as purveyors of “world culture” as a ploy to extract further economic gains through tourism, to deny other countries the benefit of their own cultural patrimony, and to legitimate European claims to ownership of stolen goods. It bears noting that Hicks’s book was published just weeks before David Adjaye’s architectu­ral plans for Nigeria’s new Edo Museum of West African Art were unveiled. That museum is to be built in the center of Benin City, exactly where the bronzes were once located. The Nigerian government continues to pressure the UK to return the sculptures to their original site, and the prospect of this major new museum undermines attempts to suggest that the African nation lacks proper resources for the preservati­on of these treasures. Deliss’s curatorial vision is indebted to the work of anthropolo­gist Paul Rabinow, echoing his emphasis on the need to invent new ways for institutio­ns to understand things human, to compensate for the flawed practices of the past through new approaches to public engagement and display, and to enable interdisci­plinary research. She also cites Bruno Latour’s distinctio­n between displays of objects that are designed to provide informatio­n about a preestabli­shed cultural identity and performati­ve exhibition tactics that allow viewers to imagine new interpreta­tions of artifacts—her preference is clearly for the latter. Deliss notes that the artistic experiment­s of the Laboratoir­e Agit’Art collective in Dakar—known for its satirical exhibition­s and musical and theatrical performanc­es in the 1970s and early 1980s—are an important influence because of their interdisci­plinarity and their rejection of fixed forms. Throughout her text, Deliss offers numerous examples of the ways artists have been influenced by anthropolo­gy and how anthropolo­gy has incorporat­ed the work of artists. She cites the writings of the American artist Joseph Kosuth, Georges Batailles’s magazine Documents, and Lothar Baumgarten’s studies of European ethnograph­ic museums to fortify her own suggestion­s for how artists might revitalize an ethnologic­al space.

Deliss, who was born in London to French-Austrian parents, conceives of the museum as a metabolism, a living organism in which the interactio­n of different parts generates the functions needed for survival. To bring the museum in Frankfurt back to life, she reorganize­d its organs and limbs and infused it with the energies of a variety of groups: artists, members of the public, including amateur ethnologis­ts, and students.

She gave long-hidden elements of the collection a new place in the galleries and a fresh interpreta­tion: for example, hundreds of photograph­s of migrant tobacco farmworker­s in Sumatra, taken by a German doctor (the museum’s founding director), and photograph­s of African women’s genitalia were reclassifi­ed to highlight nineteenth- and twentieth-century medical interest in racial typologies. Exhibition spaces were furnished with tables and seating to encourage longer and deeper engagement and discussion. Displays were given a facelift. A gastro-anthropolo­gist was contracted to provide meals for researcher­s and offer courses about food preparatio­n in different cultures. Laboratori­es were set up for art students to produce experiment­al exhibition­s using the collection, and clubs were establishe­d for amateur anthropolo­gists. Public programs were created to debate questions of provenance.

Artists such as Thomas Bayrle (whose father had participat­ed in a “collecting expedition” to Ethiopia led by the famed archaeolog­ist Leo Frobenius) were invited to study the artifacts and propose interventi­ons. Some added their own works to the collection. The New Zealand artist and filmmaker Luke Willis Thompson used the production budget allotted to him as an artist in residence to finance the return of the remains of a Muslim immigrant to his homeland. The goal for Deliss in all of this was to make engagement with material culture an intellectu­ally stimulatin­g and socially conscious experience. She writes:

These collection­s can be seen as reservoirs of memories waiting for emancipati­on, as banks of stored code, as strata of symbolism, desire, and ingenuity and therefore as concentrat­es of energy whose economic value is suspended and whose circulatio­n is hampered beyond the [museum collection].

Given that she had been asked more than once to take over the Frankfurt museum, and that those who hired her were aware of her long history of collaborat­ing with artists on unconventi­onal projects, Deliss assumed that she had carte blanche to implement changes. She soon learned otherwise. Her plans to expand the museum into an adjacent garden were scuttled when local residents complained that the annex would require the felling of trees. Museum staff mistrusted the artists that came for month-long residencie­s and refused to follow the usual collecting and cataloging procedures for works the artists donated. Her decision to hire a gastro-anthropolo­gist caused an administra­tive uproar. Even though Deliss notes that attendance at the museum broadened under her tenure and public and educationa­l programs were favorably received, in the fifth year of her tenure pressure inside and outside the museum led to her being fired.

Reading Deliss’s account, I did wonder if her lofty intellectu­al goals were too idealistic for the moment, or perhaps not economical­ly feasible. The language used to describe her venture is unrepentan­tly theoretica­l: Was this how she conveyed her plans to the more pragmatic profession­als who surrounded her at the museum? Her account does not include expression­s of concern about the cost of the renovation­s and residencie­s, which seems an unusual oversight for any museum administra­tor. But what comes across clearly is that while many artists and members of the general public were happy to participat­e in her venture, conservati­ve political forces were not pleased by the attention that Deliss’s work had attracted. Perhaps they preferred the museum to remain mostly neglected.

Hicks makes his argument for repatriati­on from a more advantageo­us and less isolated position than Deliss. He is not a foreigner brought into a museum to change it—he is British and very much an insider involved in a range of European-wide efforts to repatriate looted artifacts. The founding collection of the museum at Oxford came from a former British army officer, Augustus Pitt Rivers. In the midninetee­nth century Pitt Rivers became interested in archaeolog­y and ethnology, and in the course of his lifetime amassed a collection of 22,000 weapons and tools from around the world, which he arranged typologica­lly to illustrate his view of cultural evolution. Hicks devotes a portion of his book to a critique of how this treatment suggests that African tools correspond to an earlier stage of human developmen­t, and thus Africans themselves were less evolved humans. The museum currently holds over 500,000 artifacts, and until 2020 it still had shrunken heads on display. Hicks defines the task of a decolonial anthropolo­gy as “necrograph­y,” or forensic death writing. He wants to change the stories that the British tell about themselves and their former empire. He disputes the notion that ethnologic­al museums are neutral containers or custodians of universal heritage, arguing instead that they are propagandi­stic monuments to Western superiorit­y. He points out that while much anthropolo­gical study is informed by the theory of gift-giving as a universal human act, this focus on intentiona­l exchange obscures the reality that European institutio­ns are filled with stolen goods.

The case of the Benin Bronzes serves as an example of a broader phenomenon; because the thousands of treasures were extracted during a single punitive expedition, it is easy for Hicks to trace how they were trafficked throughout Europe and to shape the details into a coherent narrative. His necrograph­y is divided into three main parts: an analysis of the 1897 expedition, an exposé of the looting and subsequent traffickin­g of the bronzes, and reflection­s on the museum’s ties to militarist-corporate colonialis­m in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and global capitalism in the present. According to Hicks, “as the border is to the nation state so the museum is to empire.”

Britain establishe­d the Oil River Protectora­te in Nigeria in 1884, and the Royal Niger Company ruled there authorized by charter, extracting increasing amounts of palm oil and palm kernels, a crucial ingredient of soap and an industrial lubricant, as well as ivory, mahogany, and various resins. For Hicks, the historical justificat­ion for the 1897 expedition was based on a distorted and even false representa­tion of the course of events. The official story was that nine British officials were massacred when they tried to meet with the Oba of Benin to negotiate an increase in trade, prompting the “small war” carried out by British military in retaliatio­n. This version, predicated on the idea that whites were the true victims, obscures both the scale of the violence against Benin and the ulterior motives for the British invasion.

Britain’s principal reason for invading Benin, according to Hicks, was to remove the Oba and the fetish priests who imposed limits on British trade. Plans to carry this out preceded the killing of the British officials. The scale of destructio­n of the Kingdom of Benin was enormous: tens of thousands were killed, the entire city of Benin was razed, the ruler was expelled, and the priests were publicly executed. Not only were existing convention­s of warfare violated by the indiscrimi­nate killing and destructio­n of sacred sites, but the British also kept no records of prisoners of war or causalitie­s, outbreaks of disease and starvation, or refugee camps, which would have been standard for postwar accounting. It would seem that they did not believe African survivors worthy of the treatment accorded to most other groups in wartime.

That five thousand soldiers and vastly superior weaponry were deployed in response to the killing of nine British subjects is evidence to Hicks that the goal was to annihilate a society, not to punish a foreign leader. The British even claimed the moral high ground in the conflict, excusing their carnage by saying they were suppressin­g heathen barbarity, cannibalis­m, and illegal slave trading. Meanwhile, the deliberate desecratio­n of sacred royal mortuary monuments and the looting of treasures transforme­d a living sacred site into an archaeolog­ical ruin. To Hicks, the combinatio­n of destructio­n and theft makes the 1897 raid an act of “disaster capitalism,” in Naomi Klein’s phrase, a practice that he says continues as contempora­ry multinatio­nal corporatio­ns profit from natural and manmade upheavals. For example, he draws parallels between the pursuit of palm oil in Benin and the pursuit of crude oil in Iraq. The Royal Niger Company came under the control of Unilever in the 1930s and remained one of its subsidiari­es until 1987. After that it was absorbed into Unilever, which continues to produce several palm-oil-based personal care and food products. The best-known product originally derived from palm oil, however, is Palmolive soap, owned by Colgate-Palmolive. While Palmolive

soap no longer contains palm oil, other products produced by the company still do. According to a 2016 Amnesty Internatio­nal Report, although both Unilever and Colgate claim that their products contain only sustainabl­e palm oil, the oil from an Indonesian-based supplier was produced by child labor and forced labor. In response to that report, ColgatePal­molive issued a statement promising to terminate contracts with suppliers engaged in such abusive practices.

The story that lies behind the Benin Bronzes is chilling. Hicks explains that there are no definitive records of how many royal and sacred objects were extracted or where they all are now. In the aftermath of the raid, the British claimed that selling artifacts allowed them to pay the expenses they incurred. Treasures were sold by traders and colonial administra­tors and brought back by British soldiers, some of whom turned over their booty to specialize­d dealers and auctioneer­s. Within seven months of the punitive expedition, looted artifacts from Benin were exhibited in London. The fact of their display is for Hicks only part of the problem: it is the way such artifacts are exhibited, coupled with the reluctance of curators to divulge what they know about their provenance and the defensive strategies of museums that refuse to relinquish them, that turn the stolen objects into what he calls “unfinished events.”

Hicks believes that the ways African artifacts are exhibited generate an image of otherness, casting African cultures as distinctly primitive. Cultural and geographic difference­s have been rendered temporal, because the living culture of Benin was, from the objects’ first presentati­on in England, treated as a set of archaeolog­ical remains from the distant past. Exhibition­s of such stolen artifacts have also supported pseudoscie­ntific racial theories and normalized “the display of human cultures in material form.” Racist thinking embedded in Western ethnologic­al knowledge propagated an “ideology...of cultural degeneracy” with regard to the civilizati­on that was ransacked. This, Hicks argues, constitute­s a “chronopoli­tics” that denies Africa “a place in the contempora­ry world.”

While few would claim to hold onto this kind of thinking in the present day, contempora­ry resistance to repatriati­on among institutio­ns, curators, and some government officials bespeaks a view of Africa that is still informed by racist ideology and imperial hubris. Hicks lists three common arguments against returning artifacts. The first is that they were taken in accordance with values of another era and thus ownership is legitimate, and restitutio­n would violate Britain’s entitlemen­t to its property. The second argument claims that returning the objects would endanger them because Africans can’t be trusted to care for their treasures, and the third rejects the idea that the looting was an attack on African sovereignt­y, calling this view too “political.”

Hicks argues persuasive­ly that this kind of neocolonia­list reasoning undergirds the 2002 statement entitled “Declaratio­n on the Importance and Value of Universal Museums,” which was signed by eighteen European and American museums, including the Getty Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art. He calls the idea of the universal museum a “charter myth,” a form of institutio­nal self-justificat­ion:

The Declaratio­n emerged as part of a wider instrument­alization of “heritage” and culture as soft power in the rhetoric of multicultu­ral and global exchanges, including internatio­nal loans as a kind of cultural diplomacy, during the so-called “war on terror” launched by the Blair and Bush administra­tions, using the universali­st storyline to operationa­lize museums as global spaces in the era of what George W. Bush described as “a new world order.”

The good news for Hicks is that conservati­ves are losing ground. African demands for repatriati­on began more than eighty years ago, and the Nigerian government continues to purchase stolen artifacts at auction. The pressure on European and American museums has increased in recent years as public opinion has shifted and now favors repatriati­on. Hicks notes that despite the rhetoric about preserving “world culture” collection­s for the public good, for decades many museums have been discreetly returning human remains to descendant­s and repatriati­ng artifacts to “source communitie­s.” For example, several museums (including the British Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum) have returned thousands of cultural artifacts to Aboriginal communitie­s in Australia. The Smithsonia­n has two repatriati­on offices and has returned human remains and artifacts to Native American communitie­s and to indigenous communitie­s in New Zealand.

But Hicks wants museums to do more. He heralds the current moment as the end “of innocence and complacenc­y.” He calls for a revision of the euphemisti­c descriptio­ns of colonial violence and looting in the wall texts that support museum displays, noting that the Metropolit­an does not even mention the 1897 raid in its label for the Benin Bronze it owns. He seeks to usher in a national process of reflection on “colonial ultraviole­nce” and its links to contempora­ry global disaster capitalism. Finally, he would like to turn anthropolo­gical museums into “sites of remembranc­e” where the return of stolen treasures would be memorializ­ed through new works by contempora­ry artists. Like Deliss, Hicks invokes the restorativ­e power of art to attend to traumatic violence and loss. For those who still bear the weight of these colonial legacies today, Hicks’s urgent, lucid, and brilliantl­y enraged book feels like a long-awaited treatise on justice. Q

 ??  ?? ‘Head’; drawing by William Kentridge
‘Head’; drawing by William Kentridge
 ??  ?? Study of a Benin Bronze plaque showing two officials with raised swords, Edo, Benin Kingdom, Nigeria, circa 1530–1570
Study of a Benin Bronze plaque showing two officials with raised swords, Edo, Benin Kingdom, Nigeria, circa 1530–1570
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