Benin bronzes get final Berlin show before return

Published September 16, 2022
A ‘memorial head’, collected in Nigeria and acquired from Edouard Schmidt, a collector, by  the Berlin Museum in 1898, on display as part of an exhibition on the “Benin Bronzes”.—AFP
A ‘memorial head’, collected in Nigeria and acquired from Edouard Schmidt, a collector, by the Berlin Museum in 1898, on display as part of an exhibition on the “Benin Bronzes”.—AFP

BERLIN: Stolen during the colonial era, dozens of Benin bronzes that once decorated the royal palace of the Kingdom of Benin will go on show for one last time in Berlin from Saturday before being repatriated to Nigeria.

The renowned pieces of African art and their tumultuous journey up to the exhibition at the Humboldt Museum speak to Germany’s gradual reckoning with the colonial era and the injustices of the past.

The move to return some of the bronzes is the latest in a series of steps taken by Berlin to try to take responsibility for the crimes of the colonial era, including the official recognition in May 2021 of a genocide perpetrated by Germany in Namibia.

Among the items being exhibited are a pair of thrones and a commemorative bust of the monarch of the Kingdom of Benin, in modern-day Nigeria.

Two rooms in the sprawling museum are being dedicated to the art and the history of the kingdom, an exhibition realised “in close cooperation with partners in Nigeria”, according to the German side.

The removal of the precious objects is explained in the gallery, while educational workshops are also planned around the display.

“When it comes to colonial injustice, I think we’re on the right path,” said Hermann Parzinger, president of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, which oversees the national museums in the German capital.

Published in Dawn, September 16th, 2022

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