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Dan Hicks, The Brutish Museums: the Benin Bronzes, colonial violence and cultural restitution. London: Pluto Press (hb £20 – 978 0 74534 176 7; pb £12.99 – 978 0 74534 622 9). 2020, 368 pp.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2021

Andreas Eckert*
Affiliation:
Humboldt University of Berlinandreas.eckert@asa.hu-berlin.de
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Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

In 1979 Eddie Ugbomah shot the movie The Mask. In light of the intransigence of British institutions to restitute or, at the very least, to lend museum objects of African provenance to the continent, the Nigerian filmmaker staged the retrieval of the Queen Idia mask from the British Museum as heroic theft carried out by the Nigerian secret agent Major Obi, acted by Ugbomah himself. In a flyer, the production team declared the film to be the dramatization of what Nigeria should have done in the real world to get back symbols of its cultural heritage. In a devastating critique published in the magazine West Africa, the writer and poet Niyi Osundare described the film as an accumulation of embarrassment. First and foremost, he lamented that The Mask, with its James Bond-style plot and aesthetics, had degraded the serious and existential topic of cultural objects into a vulgar affair. In this context, Osundare referred to the ‘unaccounted damage’ that the presence of looted art objects in European and North American museums meant to Africans. To him, these African objects in Western museums represented ‘monuments of a past injustice and menacing testimonies of Africa's ongoing exploitation and expropriation by Euro-America’.

At this point, the considerable efforts of African (and some international) institutions and individuals during the 1960s and 1970s to move Western governments and museums to restitute objects had failed. Institutions and politicians in the global North successfully blocked all such requests. In a book published earlier this year in German, the French art historian Bénédicte Savoy, who teaches in Berlin and Paris, described these unsuccessful attempts as ‘the history of a postcolonial defeat’. Savoy recently played a crucial role in turning the tide. Her 2018 report, co-drafted with Felwine Sarr and commissioned by the French president Emmanuel Macron, made a strong case for the restitution of the mostly looted art objects in European museums and almost immediately made massive waves. The so-called Benin Bronzes soon moved to the centre of attention, not least in Germany, where the newly erected and highly controversial Humboldt Forum in Berlin was planning to exhibit a number of objects from its ‘Benin collections’ at its belated physical opening scheduled for summer 2021.

At first sight, the story behind the Benin Bronzes is a familiar one. In 1897, the British launched a military expedition to Benin City in what was then the British protectorate of Nigeria to retaliate for the massacre of a small delegation of traders. The expedition turned into an act of unrestrained violence during which more than 10,000 bronzes, ivories and other objects – we will never know the exact numbers – were looted by marines and soldiers from the royal court. The objects are now dispersed across more than 150 known museums and galleries all over the world, and, in addition, are scattered in probably half as many unknown public and private collections. At least 145 objects stolen from Benin are held in the University of Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum, where Dan Hicks works as Curator of World Archaeology.

In The Brutish Museums, Hicks not only offers a powerful, sharp-tongued and critical account of the Benin Punitive Expedition and the supposed official nature of the looting and sale of the Benin Bronzes but also deconstructs with verve the narrative of the so-called ‘universal museum’, which, behind the façade of Enlightenment values, resurrects the violent legacies of European imperialism. Hicks nevertheless emphasizes that there is still a place for the anthropology museum and, in fact, that it needs to be defended ‘against the proto-fascism that co-opted them in the late 19th and early 20th centuries’. There can be no doubt, however, that ‘these institutions have an immense task to change themselves, dismantle, repurpose, re-imagine, disaggregate’. Without acts of return, Hicks adds, ‘this means nothing’. He regards restitution as necessary but unstoppable anyway, and part of ‘tackling the ongoing effects of racial violence, paying a debt, rebuilding a relationship’. One might add, however, that, following Achille Mbembe, whose work very much informs Hicks’ reflections, there should be no illusion about the fact that Europe has taken away things from Africa it can never return.

At the core of Hicks’ study is a substantial revisionist account of the British expedition to Benin City. He argues with good reason and evidence that this event was not isolated, as much earlier research has claimed, but was part of a broader ‘militarist colonialism’ to remove ‘uncooperative’ Benin sovereignty and replace it with colonial governance. He narrates the brutal asymmetry of warfare with much detail and, based on these observations, employs the concept of the three decades of European colonial rule in Africa since the Berlin Conference as ‘World War Zero’. While there is definitely no need to ‘nuance’ the brutal colonizer's violence that took place in Benin City, the image of colonial powers as irresistible violent war machines is problematic, not least because Africans appear as mere victims without any agency at all. Most Africanist historians of colonial Africa would instead subscribe to a perspective on colonial rule that Sara Berry has aptly conceived as ‘hegemony on a shoestring’, with colonial powers regularly in need of local cooperation and intermediaries, a context in which violence was often the manifestation of weakness, not unbounded power.

Knotty timber requires hard wedges, and Hicks does an excellent job in challenging many of his museum colleagues who resist the return of Africa's cultural heritage by hiding themselves behind the need for careful ‘provenance’ research, which might take forever, resembling the notorious ‘dictionary projects’ of German learned academies which, after 100 years, have reached the letter F. Hicks’ timely intervention is a must read.