Tag: museums

  • ‘Museums not mere repositories of artefacts’

    ‘Museums not mere repositories of artefacts’

    The Director General, National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Mr. Olugbile Holloway, has said museums are not mere repositories of artefacts but invaluable institutions that serve as hubs for learning, exploration and enlightenment.

    Holloway who spoke at this year’s International Museum Day held in Lagos, said that in an era marked by rapid technological advancements and globalisation, museums play a pivotal role in fostering a deeper understanding of our past, present and future.

    This year’s theme is Museums for research and education.

    The Director General who was represented by Curator National Museum Lagos, Mrs Nkechi Adedeji noted that museums serve as platforms for education offering immersive experiences that transcend traditional classroom settings..

    “Museums are crucial hubs for research, providing scholars and enthusiasts alike with access to invaluable resources and insights. Through rigorous study and analysis, we uncover hidden truths unravel mysteries and piece together the rich tapestry of human history,” he added.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Tinubu departs Lagos for South Africa

    He reaffirmed the commission’s commitment to harnessing the power of museums for the betterment of the society. “Let us strive to make our museums more inclusive and accessible and engaging for people of all ages and background.

    I am immensely grateful to all the museum professionals, volunteers, and supporters who work tirelessly to preserve our cultural heritage and promote lifelong learning. Your dedication is truly commendable and I am confident that together we can continue to make a meaningful impact on the world,” he tasked the commission management and staff.

    According to him, the theme of this year’s International Museum Day (IMD) resonates deeply with the core mission of the commission, which he said, is in tandem with the Renewed Hope Agenda of Mr. President in the area of education, cultural and creative economy.

    Every May 18, is set aside by International Council of Museums (ICOM), to celebrate museums across the globe as well as create awareness on the preservation, protection and appreciation of the rich cultural and natural heritage of humanity. However, this year’s celebration was held on May 31 due to some logistics.

    Guest speaker at the event, Mrs Victoria Okoloagu described museums as vital spaces where education and research converge to shape the understanding of the world. In her paper titled Museum for education and research, the former Assistant Director, National Museum, Onikan Lagos said the objective of the IMD as stated by ICOM, is to raise awareness about the fact that museums are important means of cultural exchange, enrichment of cultures and development of mutual understanding, cooperation and peace among people.

    “Each year since 2020, the International Museum Day supports a set of goals from the sustainable developments goals of the United Nations. In this year, it focuses on Goal 4: quality education-this ensures inclusive and equitable quality education and promotes life-long learning opportunities for all.

    “For IMD 2024, the aim is to invite people to rethink education and imagine a future where knowledge sharing transcends barriers, explores the wealth of knowledge museums have to offer, and together build a more informed and inclusive world.

    It also draws our attention to one of the very important roles of museum, which is providing educational opportunities and resources for students and researchers,” she said.

    Then event also featured presentations on museum and its objectives by some students drawn from schools in Lagos state.

  • Way forward for museums, by stakeholders

    In the wake of growing concerns, stakeholders of private and public museums converged on Freedom Park, Lagos to chart proactive ways of promoting museums in Nigeria, Jane Chijioke reports.

    ThE functionality of museums is the goal that private and public museums should achieve.

    This was the summary of the discourse at a symposium, tagged: Public Museums vs Private Collections: Synergy or Competition, organised by Goethe Institut, Lagos in collaboration with SMO Contemporary Art.

    The event, held at the Freedom Park, Lagos, had as speakers the Obi of Onitsha, Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe; Director, Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Arts, South Africa, Azu Nwagbogu; the pioneer Managing Director, Dangote Foundation, Dr Adhiambo Odaga, and Acting Director of Museums, National Commission for Museums and Monuments,  Nigeria (NCMMN), Edith Ekunke.

    Owners and managers of private and public museums were urged to leverage  each other’s experiences in developing museums.

    Museums are difficult entities to run, it was observed. While the private ones rely on individual effort or source for funds, the public ones are funded by the government and are faced with underfunding, unfavourable policy regulation, poor access to exhibitions and others. She, however, called for collaboration between private and public museums, saying it  would provide sufficient skills and expertise in managing exhibitions to attract attention, locally and globally.

    Although both entities have overlapping functions to co-exist, she was of the view that there are enormous opportunities to be derived from each partnering with the other.

    While observing that 95 percent of the African antiquities lie outside the country – majorly in private collections, she raised concerns over the fact that those collections may not be presented to the public for years. She, therefore, stressed that the aforementioned trend can be taken care of if private museums partner with public ones.

    “How come many years ago we were so meticulous, we produced such beautiful pieces of work. These are fundamental questions we need to ask ourselves because no country can go forward without looking back and appreciate where it is coming from. We need to decide that we love our heritage and will preserve it as best as we can,” Odaga asserted.

    Odaga, who is a former member of the Ford Foundation, commended the success of The Kingdom of Ife: Sculptures from West Africa exhibition in 2010, which saw the collaboration of the British Museum with Nigeria’s National Commission for Museum and Monuments (NCMM).

    Noting that the African artifacts were the biggest assets of that exhibition, she said the partnership would enhance the capacity of workers to conceptualise and curate exhibitions to attract local audience and also sell anywhere.

    Odaga decried the attitude of African governments towards preserving cultures and heritage, urging Museums should borrow a leaf British Museum that has led to its success.

    She said: “To what extent do we take our culture seriously? In Africa, we underfund to our detriment in preserving our heritage. The government has a greater role to play in ensuring there are well-drawn out policies to move the sector foreward. We need to be clear on what kind of museum we want? How much can be spent in building the capacity to put together exhibitions and to preserve the artefacts?”

    On his part, Achebe, who is a private collector in Onitsha, said historically, most public museums started as private museums and 90 percent of the antiquities in public museums were donated by private collectors.

    The monarch wondered if this could be the reason for the increase of private museums as the public ones were mostly established to oversee, manage curators and display what has been donated. He said though public museums were accessible, sometimes private collectors were dismayed about how their collections were stored without being exhibited for years.

    “If you donate to museums,  you have to give them money to manage it. You have to create that space for them to manage it. So many collectors won’t want to subject their collections to such treatment, rather they create their own museum” he noted. Achebe called for a better synergy to occur, public museums must respond to change and adaptation to modern realities to respond to audience demands with support from the private.

    Promoting audience interest, the discussants argued that the museum still holds its place in the technological age.  It preserves history and serves as a link between the past, present and future. It is an epistemology for the next generation and also a place of reorientation.

    The panel’s moderator, Nneoma Ilogu, said the number of museums globally was on the rise. While the United State has 35,000 museums, the United Kingdom boasts of 16,000. Nigeria has less than 20.

    According to the Private Art Museum report,  53 percent of the world private contemporary museums were established between 2001 and 2010, with South Korea having the world’s largest concentration of private museums. Despite this increase, Africa still records a low audience interest.

    The Director of Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art, South Africa, Nwagbogu ascribed the low patronage to the inability of people to relate to what they see in museums, noting that there is a disconnect the museum and the people.

    He compared the museum’s worth to a university where opportunities are created to provide knowledge, noting that a museum should be accessible.

    Meanwhile, to make the museum accessible, NCMM Acting Director, Ekunke said a token of N50 was required for entry, which has since been increased to N100. She added that efforts were in place to revive the museums. “These include building museum kitchen where traditional cuisines, spices, traditional drinks and entertainment in traditional music are available.

    “Others are craft villages where craft works would be done for the delights of visitors. These side attractions, she said, were parts of museums in the past. Evaluating the benefits of museums to boost tourism, she called on the private collectors to collaborate.”

    She blamed  lack of awareness of the average Nigerian which makes Nigerians to classify objects in the museums as “juju” that should be discarded, stating that museum pieces were not only displayed for beauty purpose but to tell a story.

    “My appeal is that we are asking the private museum to form a lobby group that will impress on the government the importance of museum.  Most of them do not know how important a museum is and that is why when they are budgeting for a certain aspect of the society, they view culture as last part. Let us partner to form a pressure group on the government to let them know that we can do something from these museums,” she said.

    On the repatriation of stolen objects, Nwagbogu suggested that stolen artifacts  should be returned with interest. He said it was painful to see stolen artcrafts abroad; while NCMM Acting Director, explained that returning them was a diplomatic and political matter.

    However, it was stated that a group has been established with some European countries to reason together as curators in making these objects accessible to the public. Ekunke stated that in the next two years, a museum would be built in Benin in partnershipwith NCMM to house returned objects.

    She said it was voted in the 2018 appropriation bill when repatriation was still ongoing.

     

  • How not  to preserve museums, cultural landscapes (II)

    How not to preserve museums, cultural landscapes (II)

    To this end, Part II section 18 of the legal instrument “forbids any person to willfully destroy, deface, alter, remove or excavate any monument else, the offender shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to fine of  N1000.00 or twice the value of such monument (whichever is higher) or to imprisonment for 12 months or to both fine and imprisonment”.

    Without mincing words, the statutory institution for the protection and preservation of monument in Nigeria whether as Federal Department of Antiquities or its metamorphosis; the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, have not fared well in this direction. Granted that the provisions of the legal instrument is fraught with glaring short comings because of the kid blow penalties for offenders, there is no       gainsaying that the Federal Department of Antiquities and its successor, the National Commission for Museums and Monuments have not performed creditably well in the preservation and protection of the Benin City Walls and Moats. It may be argued that the limitation on the part of the Federal Department of Antiquities stems from lack of trained personnel and funding. But the same cannot be said of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments whose funding can be considered as adequate and has the trained personnel at its disposal.

    Having pointed out the ineffectiveness of the agencies responsible for the protection and preservation of cultural landscapes in Nigeria, it must be recorded also for objectivity sake that the residents of Benin City living close to the moats as well as successive governments of the day from the Midwestern Region through Bendel and Edo  states have not helped matters in the protection and preservation issue. Against the sign – post caution and stern warning of the agents responsible for the protection and preservation of cultural landscapes, the recalcitrant residents turned the moats to building sites, burrow pits or rubbish dumps while the successive governments in the name of urban renewal bulldozed  the moats to serve as burrow pits or sewage for flood control. The state government approving agency for building plans is equally guilty as they approved building plans cited near the moats. In an ideal situation, as obtainable in developed countries, it is for government and the preservation agency to collaborate and forestall encroachment on cultural landscape.

    Apart from the Imperial Benin City Walls and Moats, there are other cultural landscapes and sites that have not received fair treatment from the statutory institution responsible for their maintenance. The most spectacular is the Museum of Traditional Nigerian Architecture popularly referred to as MOTNA in Jos Museum, first in Africa. MOTNA was a Mecca of a sort to tourists, local and international, who came to catch a glimpse of the finest examples of a painstaking and time consuming project of traditional architecture from different parts of Nigeria replicated by the indefatigable Polish landscape architect, Professor Zbigniew Dmochowski of blessed memory and documented in three volumes of publication. It was a pride to be part of the management of these cultural landscapes because of the complementing remarks on the lips of the numerous visitors and tourists who visited the site. But a close look today at a couple of some of the MOTNA photographs featured here tells the whole story of reckless abandonment by the successive leadership of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments which will cause Prof. Dmochowski’s body to roll in his grave over what he had spent a life – time to build.

    Other examples which are legion exist but cannot be chronicled here for want of space except for a selected few important ones spread across the country. These include, but not in order of importance, the Obu house, Elu Ohafia (Abia State), Rabeh’s house/fort, Dikwa (Borno State), Shira rock paintings, Shira (Bauchi State), Shadawanka rock paintings (Bauchi State), First mining beacon, Tilden (Bauchi State), Gobirau minaret, Katsina (Katsina State), Habe mosque, Bebeji (Kano State), Imperial Kano city walls, Kano (Kano State), Gidan Makama, Kano (Kano State), Lord Lugard bridge, Kaduna (Kaduna State), Zaria city walls, Zaria (Kaduna State), Kufena hills near Zaria (Kaduna State), Stone causeway at Batura, Tading and Forof in Bokkos (Plateau State), Old Residency, Calabar (Cross River State), Ilojo bar, Lagos Island (Lagos State), Old  Secretariat, Marina (Lagos State), Water House, Lagos Island (Lagos State), Ita Yemoo, Ile Ife (Osun State), Iwo Eleru cave near Owo (Ondo State), Sugbon Shrine (Ogun State) etc

    In conclusion, the theme of this year’s International Museum Day celebration is a big knock on the heads of those defaulting ICOM member states’ statutory organisations responsible for cultural landscapes. It is equally a wake – up call aimed at awakening  the sleeping cultural heritage power houses of ICOM member states to pay attention to intangible cultural heritage outside the museum walls. But as it relates to Nigeria, it is an indictment of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments now known for its knack for abdication and dereliction of responsibilities. This unfortunate situation puts a question mark on the leadership and composition of the boards appointed to govern purely professional parastatals in Nigeria as they appear to be square pegs in round holes and meant to satisfy political whims and caprices. If that is not the case, supervision of the various aspects of the museum is supposed to be one of the oversight functions of the governing board aside from acting as check and balance. This ineptitude which has brought the system to comatose is unacceptable and therefore, for the umpteenth time, make this  Macedonian call on the supervising ministry for proactive measure before we find ourselves clothed in shame in the court of posterity.

     

  • ‘National Commission for Museums and Monuments goofed’

    ‘National Commission for Museums and Monuments goofed’

    The National Commission for Museums and Monuments’ rejoinder to the article on ‘Museum at 70: Whither the Museum Service in Nigeria’ makes an interesting but laughable and off the mark reading as it neither addressed nor countered the issues raised.

    It was an enthronement of falsehood, half- truths and tissue of lies. At best, what the rejoinder succeeded in achieving was playing to the gallery as well as glorifying and dressing the director-general in borrowed robes while trivialising and undermining the achievements of the celebrated movers and shakers of the museum service in Nigeria.

    Considering the chronicle of the Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of the museum, the Director-General, Mallam Abdallah Yusuf towered above the rest, giving the impression that he has achieved even more than Kenneth C. Murray (the acclaimed father of the museum service in Nigeria), Bernard E. B. Fagg (the discoverer/author of Nok Terracottas and father of Jos museum) and the indefatigable Ekpo Eyo (the acclaimed father of modern museum service in Nigeria).

    The presentation of the achievements of the celebrated past CEOs was shallow and unimpressive, capable of causing many senior citizens of this country who have been following the development of the Nigerian museum service to be appalled by the ignorance of those who are supposed to be better informed. The disservice the rejoinder painted of these great men of honour in the annals of the museum service will cause their bodies to roll in the grave. What was written about K. C. Murray, Bernard E. B. Fagg and Ekpo Eyo was scratching the surface and not a true acknowledgement of their accomplishments.

    Nevertheless, one thing is clear, and that is, that the individual achievements of these forerunners far surpasses whatever achievement, imaginary or real, the   director-general who has been labelled to have come to kill and destroy what had been achieved by his predecessors lay claim to.

    Let me correct the skewed impression in the rejoinder that Sir Akanbiemu has some issues to settle with his former employers. Far from it as this is a figment of imagination on the part of the PRO employed barely in 2006 (a greenhorn and a neophyte in the museum profession) or whoever has scripted the rejoinder for her.

    It is an undisputed fact that the museum remains the primary constituency of Sir Akanbiemu, which explains why he has been deemed fit to occupy the prestigious position of the première Resident Curator of Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, Abeokuta when Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library Foundation was shopping for the right candidate. At his place of work in Abeokuta, he has proven his professional know-how and dexterity to the admiration of the Chief Promoter, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, the Board of Trustees and the firm of expatriate museum designers, Ralph Appelbaum and Associates (RAA).

    A Leicester (England)-cum Ekpo Eyo trained museologist and curator numero uno, he has been in the vanguard of championing museum professional issues in and outside the civil service and has written many articles in several professional books and journals as well as some  newspapers, including The Nation relating to heritage matters. Thus, what has been written on the Museum at 70 is what the author has telescoped from empirical museum professional viewpoint, which is giving both past and serving museum professionals nightmares.

    It is noteworthy that the views expressed in the article under reference had earlier been corroborated by the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed in his address to the CEOs of parastatals in his ministry and reported in The Nation that some of them are round pegs in square holes and that they do not exhibit professionalism. The Minister went further to complain that the two world heritage sites of Osun Osogbo and Sukur are under the threat of being de–listed because of lack of maintenance whereas South Africa, a late entrant into the world heritage list, boasts of eight sites. If one may ask, what was  Yusuf’’s achievement as the Director of Monuments, Heritage and Sites before his appointment as the CEO and in the position he has occupied for the past six years? To further lend support to the opinion expressed in the article, a one-time Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, decried the poor state of museums in the country as reported in The Nation of Wednesday, December 23, 2015, at the National Commission for Museums and Monuments 70th Anniversary exhibition at the Lagos Museum.

    According to him, “almost all the 45 museums across the country are in bad shape and poorly funded”. What is the corollary of this lamentation except that it buttresses and revalidates Akanbiemu’s position that things have gone awry in the museum arising from the tenterhooks of neglect and lack of professional direction by some directors-general.

    The claim that the Commission supervises 48 museums in the nation is not only misleading but erroneous if the International Council of Museum (ICOM) definition of a museum is anything to go by. Going by its definition, more than half of this purported number are symbolic buildings serving as administrative offices with no collections, storage, galleries et al which constitute the embodiment of a museum.

    Perhaps, the PRO did not understand the context the phrase ‘ignorant and inexperienced leadership’ was used in the article. It did not refer to all the museum’s directors–general as she claimed in the rejoinder. Rather, it referred to those that came after  Eyo. Let her re–visit the article for a clearer understanding. On her detour for the author to channel his energy to more productive and constructive ventures, it is unfortunate that she is ignorant of his immense contribution to the available museum literature and to the human capital development of professionals from within and outside the museum who pass through the Institute of Archaeology and Museum Studies (IAMS) in Jos Museum where he teaches Museum Management (MUS 512). He has been a source of inspiration to upcoming museum professionals who benefit from his wealth of experience as an encyclopaedia of museology and museography.

    Needless to delve into the unprecedented achievements of the forerunners of the museum service for want of space, suffice it to ask the leadership of the NCMM some pertinent questions that require unambiguous answers.

    • Does writing a foreword or preface to a publication confer the status of a publisher as the rejoinder portrayed? As a matter of fact, Yusuf has no intellectual contribution to the contents of the books and exhibitions but only wrote the foreword, which is honorary and a privilege. All the publications emanating from that institution way back in the days of the Federal Department of Antiquities to the time it metamorphosed to the NCMM before the advent of Yusuf have always bore the name of the institution as publisher and not the CEO. How come Yusuf is being projected as the publisher of five books funded with government cash?
    • Who were the architects of the new buildings in Esie Museum, which the rejoinder deliberately failed to acknowledge?
    • Under whose administration did museums suffer unprecedented burglary and theft of museum priceless objects?
    • What is the ownership status of the Museum of Traditional Nigerian Architecture (MOTNA) expanse of land encroached upon by intruders but was reclaimed by President Olusegun Obasanjo through the Brigadier-General Oluwole Rotimi’s panel of inquiry?
    • What informed the relocation of the PREMA course for the training of English- speaking African museum professionals from Jos Museum to Ghana?
    • How many sensitisation workshops on Sukur and Osun Osogbo were done in Adamawa and Osun states?
    • What happened to President Olusegun Obasanjo’s N500 million intervention fund for the Museum and Archives?
    • What happened to the looted Nok and Sokoto objects(ref.http/meoiredafri-que.com/en/nok galerieamis.php)
    • Was the MOTNA contract to the tune of N24million paid for and awarded to Ishola Ajagbe Metal Company in 2012 executed?
    • Where is the whereabout of N225million left in the coffers of the Commission by Akigun Roberts on his departure as Chief Executive of the Commission in 2008?
    • What happened to the balance of N12million from the N24million unofficial lease of the director-general’s residence at Adeola Odeku Street, Victoria Island, Lagos of which only N12million was officially declared to the ministry in 2013?
    • What happened to the balance of N70 million from the N318million in the coffers of the Commission after the purported refund of N248million to the ministry and was the refund receipted?
    • What happened to the N16million left over from the N47million personnel cost for the Institute of Archaeology and Museum Studies, Jos in 2013?
    • What happened to the $2million Ford Foundation fund for the rejuvenation of Lagos Museum?
    • Who of the directors received the purported tyres purchased in their names supplied by Batako Cleaning Services in 2013 for N1,618,200?
    • Where is the where about of the two lion cubs removed from Jos Museum Zoo in 2009 in exchange for a hyena by Yusuf, which he claimed was billed for Kano Museum but never got there?
    • What is the outcome of the antiquity Canon missing from Jos Museum since October 1, 2014?
    • What is the appropriateness of these payments to the following companies from the Over Head vote in 2013 which rightly falls under capital project? They include:
    1. a) N13,699,597 paid to Rohan Stone Global being second instalment for the construction of museum in Adamawa.

    (b) N4,402,517 to Royal Stone Global being first instalment for the construction of  administrative block in Maiduguri.

    ( c) N5,292,086 to Ell Services Limited being mobilisation fee for the construction of gallery, landscaping and fence at International Centre, Birnin Kudu.

    • What is the difference between Rohan Stone Global and Royal Stone Global?
    • Which bank did Yusuf, a civil servant, source the money to purchase his accommodation opposite the House of Representatives Deputy Speaker’s official residence in Apo, Abuja?

    As for the errand PRO, who has adorned the ‘candido mask’ for her master’s voice because of the benevolence of unmerited favours, it will be advisable that she treads softly with caution, lest she ends up in the tiger’s belly. Conversely, rather than Akanbiemu approaching the leadership of the Commission whose iron and steel doors are permanently shut to people willing to offer useful advice, it should, instead, approach him for mentor-ship in Museum Management being his erstwhile lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology and Museum Studies (IAMS) in Jos in the light of the state of the Commission which is in comatose.

    May the NCMM be rescued from the claws of the clique of a rapacious and looting gang of job hunters, opportunists, adventurers and clueless leadership.

     

    • Akanbiemu is Resident Curator,

    Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library, Abeokuta, Ogun State.  

  • Museums should be our source of storytelling, says Keith Shiri

    ARTISTIC Director of AFRIFF and international film curator, Keith Shiri, while contributing to the session stated that value should always be put first in film production.

    “I have been watching films for the past 20 years and I have seen over 800 films this year. And we put value first and enjoy them.

    “We don’t invest in the ideas of museums; which is about our history. The museum is a point of reference for us and such places should be invested in as they tell stories of our heritages,” he said.

    Before the commencement of the 5th Africa International Film Festival, Shiri was reported to have expressed the resolve of the organisers to use the festival as a platform to rewrite the history of film making on the continent.

  • Commission says museums are not shrines

    Commission says museums are not shrines

    The National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) has said that museums in the country are not shrines but tourism sites, contrary to the beliefs of some people.

    Malam Abdallah Usman, the Director-General of NCMM said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Abuja.

    “There is need to correct the misconception that museums in Nigeria are shrines, where idols are being glorified and worshipped,” he said.

    Usman said that the perception had affected the nation’s museum as parents do not find it suitable taking their children to museums for tourism.

    The commission’s boss said that a lot of publicity was needed to correct the impression, while calling on the media to help inform the citizenry and salvage the nation’s museum from collapsing.

    He said that the commission had embarked on sensitisation to correct such impression, adding that it would not do anybody any good to equate museums with shrines.

    Usman said that the museums served as tourists’ centres to showcase what the country has to the rest of the world in terms of artefacts.

    He said that every state in the country was expected to have at least one museum, adding that there were also specialised museums like traditional architecture museum, which were suitable for sightseeing for members of the public. .

    According to him, the commission has 48 museums across the country and some states like Osun, Ondo, Gombe, among others have two.

    He said that the commission was working on a programme to establish a museum in the states that do not have, including one for the nation’s capital.

    Usman disclosed that the commission has 100 monuments across the country, but stated that only 65 had been classified because of their functions and significance in terms of artefacts or history.

    He called on the Federal Government to provide security in all the museums across the country, adding that the commission had to rely on community policing to provide security at the museums to avoid theft of the items.

    “What we have is priceless and must not be allowed to be stolen by unscrupulous elements who want to sell our heritage,” he said.

  • Art collector makes case for private museums

    In a few months, Nigeria will host the world economic forum for Africa and artworks collections, including Chief Solomon Ogbonna‘s, will be among those to be showcased, the Minister of Tourism, Culture and National Orientation, Chief Edem Duke, has said.

    He said he was amazed by the magnitude of artworks in the care of a private collector, adding they are treasures that tell the history of a hundred years ago. He noted that such treasures should not be hidden from public view. He noted that not all Nigerians can preserve historic art for the benefit of the country as they would be enticed by money to sell them.

    “I praise this patriotic citizen. Nigeria owes you a huge debt because your artworks can compete with those in the National Museum of Nigeria,” he said.

    Duke, who praised Ogbonna for preserving the enormous art works, urged other Nigerians with similar collections to emulate him in developing private and government-owned museums. According to him, the most thriving museums in the world are privately owned. He spoke at the house of Ogbonna at Ajah, a Lagos suburb.

    Duke said: “For 37 years, the National Theatre has been there, people have ridiculed the President for abandoning it. That is why a decision has been taken to revive the place. The government is not transforming it into a hotel, neither would it be sold. But it is going to rehabilitate the dirty areas surrounding it for investors who are ready to redefine the place”.

    Ogbonna is involved in the advocacy aimed at protecting and preserving the art, culture and tradition of his people, especially those being eroded by western influence. He is seeking moral assistance and support of the government in creating a standard museum that will exhibit his artworks for Nigerians and the world.

    His words: “We should preserve art because it encompasses our culture and history, and culture shouldn’t die because of culture imperialism. The preservation of the art, culture and tradition of the people is a vision flowing in the blood of my family. My grandfather is an art collector, and so is my father,” he said.

    He said art is a form of culture and an extension of the mind and nothing would strengthen people as much as a proper appreciation and understanding of their history as recorded by their own people, in their own language.

  • Murray and growth of museums in nigeria

    Late Kenneth Crosthwaite Murray was born in England in the year 1902. He dropped out of School to study art in Birmingham and the client Hills of Worcestershire in the 1920’s

    He was appointed to the Education Department of the Colonial Government in Nigeria in November 1927. He was one time Art teacher at Government Colleges of Lagos, Ibadan and Umuahia . Some of his students were the late Ben Enwonwu, Dr S.O. Biobaku former Vice-Chancellor of University of Lagos and Dr. D.F. Salawu of Shanu Hospital in Lagos

    Murray was passionate about Nigerian Arts which was viewed in different quarters as been “primitive “or” fetish”. He was sympathetic towards the artistic heritage of Nigeria. He saw himself as a major means through which Nigerian arts, antiquities and monuments could be salvaged and protected. He and E.D. Duckworth, his friend, pressed for legislation to protect the artistic heritage of Nigeria and the establishment of a Survey of Antiquities.

    Murray had a strong belief that the primary aim of the department of antiquities is not only to record but also to see to the physical preservation of the culture of the Nigerian people in whatever format or medium they were presented.

    He was the first Nigeria’s Survey or of Antiquities. He was appointed to this post in the year 1943. He had the onerous task of locating, photographing and cataloging works of art of Nigerians. He engineered, in collaboration with others, the banning of the unauthorized export of Nigerian art.

    Murray worked for the Nigerian Government for forty years (40) and kept on working till he died in an auto-accident in the year 1972 on his way to Benin National Museum.

    Late Murray was a writer, a scholar, a researcher, an artist and enthusiast and he contributed articles and offered valuable contributions to journals such as Nigeria Magazines, Nigeria fields African Arts, etc.

    K.C.murray archival materials

    K.C. Murray had several field notes which were not published because he felt that once published, the information there in would be divulged, hence the arts/objects would be exposed to danger and theft.

    He had an extensive tour of different cultural areas in Nigeria before and during his tenure as the custodian of works of art in Nigeria. He had notes written on localities such as: – Ilorin, Bauchi, Gombe Ohafia, Benue plateau, Ijebu, Egbado, Ekiti,etc etc.. As an art teacher, he was fascinated by some of our arts and crafts.

    Murray had about two hundred and thirty six files (236) on various subjects. He also wrote on history of different ethnic groups or locations, their occupation and industries. He had different field notes on personalities that were colleagues to him or those that worked unclear him such as:-Z Dmochiowsk, J.S. Boston and William B fagg who also made valuable contributions to the development of the Museum in Nigeria.

    Some of his documented archival materials were on several fields of study, some of which are on Basketry, Dying, Pottery, Body painting, Weapons, Musical Instrument, Mat-making, Glass and Beads, Weavings, Bronze etc.

    Significance of his

    archival collections

    The significance of late Murray’s archival collections which spanned well over 30 years cannot be over emphasised. His collections are sought after mostly by researchers from within and outside Nigeria. Academicians and researchers on various subjects in the field of musicology found Murray’s writings very useful.

    References are made to some of his collections in different write-ups, articles, and essays by writers and researchers. Murray’s writings are valuable and remain much relevant to Museum professionals today and in future.

    K.C. Murray’s collections are authentic sources of in-depth information on any given subject. This is because he personally visited and interacted with communities, ethnic groups and personalities in different parts of the country

    These collections are also meant to preserve Nigerian arts, culture and our artistic heritage. They are meant to preserve for prosperity the cultural ingenuity of the people and their rich arts and crafts technology partly for the purpose for which they are being used today and also for the development of the museum in years to come.

    K. C. Murray’s collections are, in fact, good sources of factual reference materials on every facet of our cultural life.

     

    Oyediran, is

    Chief Librarian

    National Museum

    Lagos