Nr. 104182047

Eine Bronzeskulptur - Zahnbelag - Benin - Nigeria
Nr. 104182047

Eine Bronzeskulptur - Zahnbelag - Benin - Nigeria
This Benin plaque depicts a classical representation of an Oba riding on horseback, accompanied by two attendants and a small figure positioned in the lower left corner. The scene does not appear to represent a military procession, but rather the mounted Oba being accompanied on a bird hunt. This interpretation is reinforced by the small figure at the lower left, who is shown carrying a trained bird perched upon a stand, suggesting the presence of courtly falconry or ritual hunting practices associated with royal authority. Please note that without any laboratory tests, the attribution and datation is provided for reference only, based on our expertise in the field. Therefore, the piece stays subject to authentication.
From an art historical perspective, the plaque appears to illustrate an important transitional phase in the development of Benin court bronzes, namely the shift from shallow flat relief toward increasingly sculptural high relief compositions. The horse already displays a pronounced sense of three-dimensionality, particularly in the modeling of the head, chest, and legs, while the accompanying figures still remain largely tied to the conventions of flatter relief carving. Only in later plaques do the attendants themselves emerge more forcefully into the foreground, acquiring the same volumetric presence as the central royal figure and his horse.
This gradual transformation reveals how Benin artists continuously expanded the spatial and sculptural possibilities of court representation. Rather than remaining static, the bronze workshops of the royal court developed increasingly sophisticated methods of modeling depth, hierarchy, and movement within the restricted format of the rectangular plaque. The juxtaposition between the more volumetric horse and the comparatively flattened attendants therefore provides valuable insight into the internal chronology of Benin bronze casting traditions.
Questions surrounding this stylistic evolution have been discussed in particular detail by Kathrin Wysocki Gunsch in her studies on Benin art, The Benin Plaques: A 16th Century Imperial Monument, where she examined the formal transition from linear relief structures toward the highly plastic narrative compositions of the later court plaques.
The plaque is relatively well preserved and shows a multilayered, naturally developed patina, which distinguishes it from more recent or modern examples. The surface build-up reflects long-term aging processes as well as prolonged exposure within an active historical context, rather than artificial or accelerated patination.
Condition report: Breakages are visible at all four corners, likely resulting from its original method of attachment. These perforations suggest that the plaque was once fixed to palace columns or architectural posts, in accordance with the installation practice of Benin court reliefs, where plaques were mounted to structure the visual program of royal architecture.
Philip J. C. Dark, 1973, An Introduction to Benin Art and Technology, Oxford University Press.
(Foundational study on bronze casting, court iconography, and workshop organization; discusses plaques as architectural decoration.)
Paula Ben-Amos, 1995, The Art of Benin, British Museum Press.
(Standard reference for Benin court imagery, including royal processions, attendants, and symbolic roles of figures.)
Barbara Plankensteiner (ed.), 2007, Benin: Kings and Rituals. Court Arts from Nigeria, Snoeck / Museum für Völkerkunde Wien.
(Extensive catalogue; key reference for iconography, court life, and interpretations of plaques including mounted figures and attendants.)
Nigel Barley, 2010, The Art of Benin, British Museum Press.
(Discusses iconography, stylistic development, and the narrative structure of plaques.)
Horsemen, Oba iconography, and court representation
Philip J. C. Dark, 1975, “Benin Bronze Plaques: A Reappraisal”, African Arts.
(Important for interpreting royal figures, regalia, and compositional reading of plaques.)
Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch, 2017, The Benin Plaques: A 16th Century Imperial Monument, Routledge.
(Core reference for your argument about compositional development, hierarchy, and the architectural system of plaques.)
Paula Ben-Amos, 1995, The Art of Benin, British Museum
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