Yahoo – AFP,
Cecile de Comarmond, 17 May 2015
![]() |
A piece by
late Nigerian sculptor Ben Enwonwu is displayed during an exhibition
of African
art by Bonhams in Lagos on April 22, 2015 (AFP Photo/Pius Utomi Ekpei)
|
Lagos (AFP)
- Giles Peppiatt, from Bonhams in London, had good reason to make the trip to
Nigeria's financial capital, Lagos, for the auction house's next sale of
African art -- a glut of potential buyers.
On a recent
visit, he described Africa as "one of our hottest properties on the art
block".
"In
some ways, Africa is the new China when it comes to art," he added.
"We are investing time, money and people to maintain our presence in this
market."
![]() |
A man looks
at a poster featuring part of a
piece by late South African painter Irma
Stern
during an exhibition of African art by
Bonhams in Lagos on April 22, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Pius Utomi Ekpei)
|
Among its
most expensive sales was "Arab Priest" (1945) by South African
painter Irma Stern, which was bought by the Qatar Museums Authority for just
over three million pounds (4.2 million euros, $4.7 million) in 2011.
"New
World Map" (2009) -- one of Ghanaian artist El Anatsui's tapestries
embroidered from crushed aluminium bottle tops and copper wire -- went for
nearly 550,000 pounds the following year.
A series of
seven wooden sculptures by Nigeria's Ben Enwonwu fetched 361.250 pounds --
triple the estimate price.
Increasing interest
Leading
African artists were virtually absent from art sales just a decade ago but now
contemporary works feature strongly in sales at several international auction
houses.
Another El
Anatsui tapestry sold for $1.4 million at Sotheby's.
"When
institutions such as the Tate (in London) and the Smithsonian (in Washington
DC) start to acquire contemporary African art, one then knows something
wonderful has occurred," said Peppiatt.
On the back
of successful sales in recent years, Bonhams is specialising even more this
year, with a selection of modern art going under the hammer this month and
contemporary art in October.
In Africa,
the Zinsou foundation's museum of contemporary African art in Ouidah, Benin,
and and the forthcoming opening of the huge Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art in
Cape Town, South Africa, are clear signs of the increasing interest of
collectors.
Most of the
buyers at Bonhams' "Africa Now" sales are African, explained Peppiatt.
"A lot
of collectors are very wealthy Nigerian businessmen," he added.
![]() |
Director of
African Art at Bonhams in London, Giles Peppiatt, speaks during
an exhibition
of African art by Bonhams in Lagos on April 22, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Pius Utomi
Ekpei)
|
Culture
and heritage
"Nigerian
art collectors want a piece of their own culture and heritage and are prepared
to invest in that," added Bonhams' representative in Lagos, Neil Coventry.
"What's
fascinating is that these pieces are being found all over the world. In some
cases they are coming back to Nigeria where they are valued and appreciated the
most."
Coventry,
whose living room walls at his house overlooking the Lagos lagoon are covered
with major Nigerian works of art, cites the example of Enwonwu.
The painter
and sculptor, who died in 1994, was once as famous a name in Nigeria as
Britain, where he was notably the first black African artist commissioned to
make a sculpture of Queen Elizabeth II in 1957.
But his
name was forgotten and only rediscovered in recent years.
"He
was an international artist and Africa's premier modern artist," said
Coventry.
"Collectors
who bought pieces by Enwonwu early in his career are now getting older and
those who have inherited works may have no idea of the value of what they have.
"This
rediscovery of Ben Enwonwu's works is amazing."
Positive
image
![]() |
A piece by
late Nigerian sculptor Ben
Enwonwu is displayed during an
exhibition of African
art by Bonhams in
Lagos on April 22, 2015 (AFP Photo/
Pius Utomi Ekpei)
|
Nevertheless,
said Coventry, his work "is still massively under-valued, which is quite
unique for an artist who was so accomplished during his own lifetime".
Femi Lijadu
is one of several art collectors who will make the trip from Lagos to London
for the auction on May 20 and has already pinpointed Nigerian works "at
affordable prices".
He will be
in the British capital because he is proud of the image the major artists
portray of his country.
Lijadu, a
corporate lawyer, has some 500 pieces in his collection and remembers the time
he began earning a living in the 1980s and buying pictures by the "Grand
Masters" of Nigeria.
"At
the time we dreamt of the day where the world would finally start to take
notice of Nigerian and African art in general," he remembered with a
smile.
Judging by
the scale of the auction, that day has arrived.




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