Αρ. 99593761

Ένα κεφάλι από πηλό. - Ife - Νιγηρία (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)
Αρ. 99593761

Ένα κεφάλι από πηλό. - Ife - Νιγηρία (χωρίς τιμή ασφαλείας)
A fragmentary terracotta head, in the style of ife, Nigeria, several abaraisons and a weatherd condition.
The terracotta heads of Ife, dating primarily from the 12th to 15th centuries CE, represent one of the most accomplished and conceptually complex sculptural traditions in precolonial Africa. These works, produced in the sacred city of Ile-Ife in southwestern Nigeria, form part of a broader corpus of royal and ritual art in terracotta, stone, and metal that reflects the political, spiritual, and cultural centrality of Ife as the mythic origin of the Yoruba people. While bronze casting from Ife has often received greater attention due to its technical refinement, the terracotta heads are equally significant for their aesthetic sophistication, symbolic density, and archaeological importance.
Terracotta heads from Ife are typically life-sized or slightly larger than life and were modeled with remarkable sensitivity to human anatomy and expression. Despite being rendered in a fragile, porous material, the heads display a sense of permanence and dignity. Most portray idealized human figures, often identified as royal or ancestral personages. They feature detailed facial features including almond-shaped eyes, full lips, naturalistic noses, and carefully incised lines that may represent scarification, beaded veils, or spiritual markings. The heads are often hollow, with open necks and vents, suggesting that they may have been part of composite figures or mounted on bodies of perishable material. In some cases, neck rings are visible, possibly referencing status or ritual encasement.
The production of these terracotta works was likely the responsibility of specialized artists within the courtly and religious framework of Ife society. While individual artist names are unknown, the uniformity of style and consistent iconography across a range of excavated sites suggest a highly organized artistic system, possibly linked to palace workshops or priestly guilds. The heads have been discovered in a range of contexts, including shrines, royal compounds, and ritual deposits. The most significant archaeological discoveries were made in the 1930s at sites such as Ita Yemoo and Wunmonije, where terracotta heads were found alongside copper-alloy sculptures and other ritual objects.
The function of the terracotta heads is multifaceted. They may have served as commemorative portraits of royal ancestors, used in funerary or second-burial rites, or as objects of veneration in royal cults. Their aesthetic idealism suggests a philosophical orientation toward inner character (iwa) and divine authority rather than literal portraiture. The heads also reflect the Yoruba concept of the ori inu—the inner spiritual head—as a site of personal destiny and metaphysical power. Thus, the depiction of the head is not merely anatomical but cosmological. In Yoruba metaphysics, the head is the locus of fate, identity, and connection to the divine, and its representation in sacred art underscores its importance.
Despite their antiquity, the terracotta heads of Ife have become central to the construction of a broader narrative of African art history, particularly in debates surrounding African contributions to classical aesthetics. Early European scholars and colonial administrators were shocked by the naturalism of these works, leading to misguided theories of foreign influence, including speculations about Greco-Roman, Egyptian, or even Atlantean origins. These views have been definitively discredited, and contemporary scholarship firmly situates the Ife tradition within an indigenous Yoruba context, with deep roots in local religious, political, and philosophical systems.
Today, Ife terracotta heads are among the most important works in African archaeological heritage and continue to inspire scholarship, artistic reinterpretation, and debates over cultural patrimony. Some of the most prominent examples are housed in the National Museum in Lagos, the British Museum, and the Musée du quai Branly in Paris. Their presence in European collections is a legacy of colonial extraction, and recent restitution efforts have renewed questions about their rightful ownership and interpretive framing.
References:
Frank Willett, Ife in the History of West African Sculpture, McGraw-Hill, 1967.
Rowland Abiodun, Yoruba Art and Language: Seeking the African in African Art, Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Ekpo Eyo and Frank Willett, Treasures of Ancient Nigeria, Museum of Modern Art, 1980.
Babatunde Lawal, “Àṣẹ: Verbalizing and Visualizing Creative Power through Art,” Journal of Religion in Africa, Vol. 33, Fasc. 3 (2003), pp. 247–274.
Peter Garlake, Early Art and Architecture of Africa, Oxford University Press, 2002.
"I believe that the import of all art objects from Africa—whether copies or originals—should be prohibited to protect Africa." Quote: Prof. Dr. Viola König, former director of the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, now HUMBOLDTFORUM
Legal Framework
Under the 1970 UNESCO Convention in combination with the Kulturgutschutz Gesetz (KGSG) any claim for the restitution of cultural property becomes time-barred three years after the competent authorities of the State of origin obtain knowledge of the object’s location and the identity of its possessor.
All bronzes and terracotta items offered have been publicly exhibited in Wolfgang Jaenicke Gallery since 2001. Organisations such as DIGITAL BENIN and academic institutions such as the Technical University of Berlin, which have been intensively involved in restitution-reseaches (translocation-project) over the past seven years, are aware of our work, have inspected large parts of our collection and have visited us in our dependance in Lomé, Togo, among other places, to learn about the international Art trade on site. Furthermore, the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) in Abuja, Nigeria, has been informed about our collection. In no case in the past have there been restitution claims against private institutions such as the Wolfgang Jaenicke Gallery
Our Gallery addresses these structural challenges through a policy of maximum transparency and documentation. Should any questions or uncertainties arise, we invite you to contact us. Each matter will be reviewed diligently using all available resources.
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