Participants shortly after the event |
Stakeholders from the Nigerian visual arts gathered at the first OYASAF lecture of the year, held few hours ago, to brainstorm on the challenges of the rapid growing secondary art market as the guest lecturer Ozioma Onuzulike highlights the positive and grey areas of the local art auction scene.
Art Auctions in Nigeria: Ladders of Progress or
Shots in the Artists’ Feet?
Ozioma Onuzulike
Department of Fine and Applied Arts,
University of Nigeria
Nsukka
In
this lecture, I rely on a review of reports and debates on the history,
structures and operations of art auctions in Nigeria to join the dialogue
around their current impacts in the development of contemporary art in the
country. I examine the current euphoria surrounding the generally held point of
view that Nigerian art auctions have provided ladders of professional and
economic progress in the country’s visual art sector by raising the level of
art appreciation/awareness in the country and energising the local and
international art markets in a phenomenal manner.
I,
however, transcend the prevailing notions of progress by directly and
indirectly examining a number of issues related to the following
questions: What structures are in place
to create and sustain credible art auctions as against what can be described as
‘elitist sale-spots’ in Nigeria? What are the implications of the lack of
rarity in much of the lots on offer? What is the place of art history and art
criticism in the evaluation or appraisal of modern and contemporary art in
Nigeria? Do we have a viable art historical and critical culture in Nigeria
necessary for providing information to all players in both the primary and
secondary art markets in the country? What is the future of our art auctions in
the present absence of influential art historical and critical platforms?
My
goal is to provoke healthy debates and productive dialogues around the presence
or absence of credible and sustainable art auctioneering structures in the
country in a manner that helps us to critically review their low and high
points. It is hoped that my descriptions and analysis of key issues will
provide ample basis for suggesting ways by which art auctions can truly become
ladders of professional progress for Nigerian artists instead of constituting
weapons with which they unwittingly shoot themselves in the foot.
II
I tend to think that there are no
strange terms or variables in the title of this lecture. An auction is widely
known to be “a process of buying and selling goods or services by offering them
up for bid, taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder”1.
An art auction will then mean the process of selling art objects to the highest
bidder, especially in an auction house2.
An auction house traditionally operates a secondary
art market, as different from the primary art market. The “primary market
represents first-time sales of a work of art [such as at exhibitions and
galleries]; the secondary market represents resale [such as at art fares and
auction houses]”3. Kyle Chayka has observed that “auction houses
exist to help circulate the secondary market”4. In fact, “with the
exception of Damien Hirst’s massive blow-out Beautiful
Inside My Head Forever sale at Sotheby’s in September 2008, work
on the block at auction houses doesn’t come straight out of artists’ studios”;
it rather comes “from collections, from collectors and patrons who want to pass
on their purchases, or maybe flip them for a little more cash”5.
I
will thus be discussing issues relating to the structures and mechanisms of the
secondary art market in Nigeria, with a focus on how art works are collected,
valuated and sold by Nigerian auction houses. And because, through the
invitational approach of Nigerian auction houses, many artists have been taking
their works directly to them and are now increasingly relying on the
promotional and valuation structures of the auction houses, I am interested in
examining the circumstances in which such marketing and promotional channels
advance the artists’ professional careers (in that case, metaphorically
becoming ladders of progress) or disadvantage, inhibit or even kill their
careers. The latter circumstance leads to what I refer to as the artists being
shot, or rather shooting themselves, in the foot.
The
subject of art auctions invariably draws our attention to the investment value
of works of art. In other words, we are essentially dealing with art as
commodity. I subscribe to the theoretical framework upon which Prince Chukwuka
Samuel based his earlier study of the Lagos art market6. He
fittingly relied on two key theoretical texts – Karl Max’s The Capital, which theorises the work of art as commodity, and
Walter Benjamin’s The Work of Art in the
Age of Reproduction, which is a further commentary on The Capital. Based on the Marxist interpretation of a commodity as
“in the first place, an object outside us, a thing that by its properties
satisfies human want of some sort or another”7, Samuel argues that
since “the work of art is a product of human thought and labour made real in an
objectified form” it could then be acceptable to say that “art is a commodity
because it is a creation of the artist and meant for the aesthetic enjoyment of
the art public”8.
Some
other commentators have enunciated the Marxist definition of art as commodity.
One of them is Louis Proyect who wrote the influential text The Unrepentant Marxist: Art as Commodity in
which he examines the beginning of the emergence of art as commodity. Proyect
points to the mid-19th century as a period when “artists began to be
freed from their feudal ties”9 and when the advent of “the bourgeois
established an equal footing between artists and patrons”, ushering in “a
transmutation … in the art market system”10.
An
art market system, in the form of art auction, invariably endorses the Marxist
view of art as commodity. While the history of art auctions in the West is a
long one (dating back to the late 17th century), the history of its
adaptation in Nigeria is barely a decade and a half old.
III
The
young history of art auctions in Nigeria reveals its steady growth and
appreciable impact in the visual art sector, locally and internationally. The
Nimbus Art Gallery, run by Chike Nwagbogu, takes the pride of place as the
organiser of the first art auction in Nigeria. Entitled “Before the Hammer
Falls” and held in 1999, at the turn of the millennium, the auction was
historically timed and the result was revolutionary in the history of art and
art market in Nigeria. With the record sale of Bruce Onobrakpeya’s Palm Wine Women for N2 million, the
auction brought art to the front pages of the newspapers.11 A total
of N22 million was realised at the auction, a sum that was very significant in
the Nigerian economic context at that time and brought art to the front pages
of newspapers.
Prince Yemisi Shyllon |
Reflecting
on the Nimbus pioneering auction, Christopher Vourlias writes that its success
“was a clear indication that a local market for contemporary Nigerian art
existed”12. In other words, Nimbus’ successful experiment opened up
a revelation that apparently called attention to the field of art auctioneering
in the Nigerian art market. Held at the MUSON Centre, which was about one of the
most prestigious event centres at that time in Lagos, and attracting an array
of dignitaries, the auction of 1999 truly set the pace in educating the
Nigerian public on the investment value of the country’s modern and
contemporary art and for the recognition of the artists’ professional worth.
For
almost a decade later, the Nimbus auction initiative was not followed up until
Kavita Chellaram introduced, in mid-2007, what has been described as the
“premier art auction house in Nigeria today”13 called the Arthouse
Contemporary Limited. Located in Lagos, the company, as it announces in its
website, “is conceived as an international auction house with its greatest
level of expertise resting in the Art of West Africa and its greatest effort
focused on the parity of international recognition towards the talented artists
who are from or are based there”. Arthouse holds that the “success of auctions
focused on works from a specific region, as in the art of South Asia, China or
Southeast Asia, is [its] benchmark” and that its goal is to key into such
models, which “help [to] create awareness of the scope of that regionalized
art, passionate interest in individual artists, and serve as a working database
to be used for fair, market oriented valuations”. The company organised its
first auction in April 2008.
In
collaboration with the Terra Kulture Gallery, Nimbus Gallery was to come back
again on the auction scene in December 2008 when the works exhibited to mark
the Nigeria-hosted CHOGM conference were put on auction in Lagos. The Terra
Kulture/Nimbus Gallery collaboration yielded another auction in Lagos in April 2010.
It was entitled Golden Jubilee Art
Auction: Celebrating 2000 Years of Afrika14. In May 2011, the Terra Kulture initiated the “Lagos Art Auction”
(held in Lagos) and then in November 2011 the “Abuja Art Auction” (held in
Abuja). The November 2011 “Abuja Art Auction” was the first art auction to be
so organised in Nigeria’s political capital city and the beginning of a
collaboration with Mydrim Gallery in what has become known as the “Terra
Kulture/Mydrim Gallery Auction House”). By April 2012 and April 2013, the Terra
Kulture/Mydrim Gallery Auction House held the annual “Lagos Art Auction”. Earlier
in December 2009, the Tribes Art Gallery had organised its own auction15.
This was followed in April 2010 with another by Nike Art Gallery16. Operating
as both art galleries and auction houses, Terra Kulture, Mydrim, Tribes and
Nike art galleries apparently followed in the 1999 step of the Nimbus Art Gallery.
With another auction also coming from Didi Museum in 2013, it would appear that
a proliferation of auctions in Nigeria is well underway.
I
will rely mainly on the Arthouse auction results (and also on the auction
results of the collaborations between Terra Kulture/Nimbus and Terra
Kulture/Mydrim) for a close examination of price performances and for other
analyses important to the subject of this lecture. This is because they appear
to be the most prominent auction platforms. Data have also been made very easy
to access through Arthouse Contemporary’s standard virtual presence which
offers an impressive archive.
First,
Arthouse Contemporary’s auction of April 2008 inaugurated the first of its
series of auctions that, according to Christopher Vourlias, “quickly became de rigueur” events for a small but
dedicated band of serious collectors”17 It saw Bruce Onobrakpeya’s Greater Nigeria (2007) selling for an
impressive N10.120 Million. It also raked in a total of N74.845 Million
(representing the hammer price plus premium). The Arthouse has organised eleven
successful auctions so far between April 2008 and November 2013. Table 1 below
shows what has been hailed within the Nigerian art world as Arthouse’s
impressive outings.
Table 1: Arthouse Contemporary Auction Results
Summary
Auction Date
|
Total Hammer Price
Plus
Premium
|
No. of Lots
Sold
|
Highest Priced Artists
|
|
1
|
7 April 2008
|
N74,845,000.00
|
89
|
Bruce Onobrakpeya [N10,120,000.00]
|
2
|
19 Nov. 2008
|
N85,182,000.00
|
84
|
Yusuf Grillo [N8,800,000.00]
|
3
|
6 April 2009
|
N66,737,000.00
|
69
|
Ben Enwonwu [N4,500,000.00]
|
4
|
1 March 2010
|
N67,320,500.00
|
82
|
Simon Okeke [N4,200,000.00]
|
5
|
22 Nov. 2010
|
N83,541,000.00
|
93
|
Demas Nwoko [N9,900,000.00]
|
6
|
9 May 2011
|
N79,109,000.00
|
82
|
Ben Enwonwu [8,800,000.00]
|
7
|
21 Nov. 2011
|
N114,447,000.00
|
86
|
Ben Enwonwu [N30,800,000.00]
|
8
|
7 May 2012
|
N98,563,500.00
|
95
|
Demas Nwoko [7,700,000.00]
|
9
|
26 Nov. 2012
|
N90,963,500.00
|
81
|
El Anatsui [N12,540,000.00]
|
10
|
13 May 2013
|
N126,818,500.00
|
102
|
El Anatsui [13,200,000.00]
|
11
|
18 Nov. 2013
|
N112,769,000.00
|
76
|
Ben Enwonwu [N17,050,000.00]
|
Source: Arthouse Contemporary Limited, Lagos
Table2: Terra Kulture/Nimbus Gallery and Terra Kulture/Mydrim
Auction Results Summary
Auction Date
|
Total Hammer Price
Without
Premium
|
No. of Lots
Sold
|
Highest Priced Artists
|
|
1
|
Dec. 2008
|
N10,230,000.00
|
50
|
Ben Osawe [N2,000,000.00]
|
2
|
April 2010
|
N29,000,000.00
|
72
|
El Anatsui [3,800,000.00]
|
3
|
May 2011
|
N51,700,000.00
|
56
|
Ben Enwonwu [N13,500,000.00]
|
4
|
Nov. 2011
|
N27,605,000.00
|
51
|
Bruce Onobrakpeya [4,000,000.00]
|
5
|
April 2012
|
N38,125,000.00
|
59
|
Ben Enwonwu [4,600,000.00]
|
6
|
April 2013
|
N47,400,000.00
|
60
|
Kolade Oshinowo [3,900,000.00]
|
Source: TerraKulture Gallery, Lagos
Analysis drawn from the data in Tables 1 and 2
above shows that Ben Enwonwu’s works are the highest priced so far. His works are
apparently in very high demand and are, thereby, the most expensive. At the Arthouse auctions, Enwonwu’s works
have sold highest for four times, and twice at the Terra Kulture/Mydrim auctions.
For example, at the November 2011 auction, his 1956 bronze sculpture Anyanwu sold for N30.8 Million and at
the May 2011 Terra Kulture Gallery auction his untitled ink on paper piece was
sold for N13.5 Million. Data available in the auction catalogues show that
Enwonwu’s works have been featured in all the eleven Arthouse auctions and
twice in six collaborative auctions by Terra Kulture. His works have sold above
the N2 million mark twenty-six times in the Arthouse auctions. Similarly, as
shown in both tables above, El Anatsui occupies an important place in the Lagos
art market, selling thrice highest in April 2010, November 2012 and May 2013.
Also
from available data, the works of Demas Nwoko, Yusuf Grillo, Bruce Onobrakpeya,
Ben Osawe, Simon Okeke and Kolade Oshinowo have become very important in the
secondary art market. At the 2008 Arthouse auction, Onobrakpeya’s Greater Nigeria sold for N9.2
million. There have also been regular artists
in almost all the auctions, especially Erabhor Emokpae and Kolade Oshinowo. Arthouse
results between 2008 and 2013 show that while Oshinowo has recorded four works
selling above N2 Million, Emokpae has recorded five.
From
about N22 million generated in the first art auction of 1999 to over N110
million in the most recent auction of November 2013, there has been exponential
financial progress in the Nigerian secondary art market. At the Arthouse
Contemporary, its eleven auctions under review have recorded a total of
eighty-five works selling above N2 million. Although this is still a far cry
from auction results recording in the West, it is an evidence of significant
growth in the Nigerian context as a developing economy.
According
to the accounts by Tobenna Okwuosa,
Prince Chukwuka Samuel and a number of other writers and commentators, there is
a general excitement among many artists, art collectors, dealers and other
stakeholders in the Nigerian visual art sector that art auctions have greatly
activated the level of awareness among Nigerians regarding the commercial and
investment value of art. According to Okwuosa “the general assessment by the
players in the art industry is that the contemporary art market has never had
it so good”. He writes that:
Generally,
the art auctions have given artworks more value, particularly those of younger
generation of artists whose works have done well in the auctions such as Rom
Isichei (Nigeria), Abiodun Olaku (Nigeria), Fidelis Odogwu (Nigeria), Diseye
Tantua (Nigeria), Chidi Kwubiri (Germany), Duke Asidere (Nigeria), Ben Osaghae
(Nigeria), Sam Ovraiti (Nigeria) and Nnenna Okore (USA)18.
Indeed,
the younger generation of contemporary Nigerian artists have been favoured by
the latest improvement in the price of works at the auctions. An examination of
the results available at the Arthouse website shows that a number of them have
moved up to the N2 Million mark and beyond. For example, Peju Alatise (born
1975) and Nnenna Okore (also born 1975) have had their works sold beyond N2
Million three times between 2009 and 2013. In May 2012, Alatise’s 2011 work in
mixed media titled Ascension was sold
at N4.4 Million, recording her work as the best priced among emerging artists.
Following Alatise has been Nnenna Okore whose mixed media ceramic piece Egwu Ukwu sold for N3 Million at the
April 2009 Arthouse auction.
Apart
from the exciting prices being recorded at the auctions, Okwuosa has quoted
Kavita Chellaram19 as informing us that new collectors have been
built up in the country’s art market. Chellaram has also observed that the
auctions “have brought greater interest and attention to Nigerian contemporary
art locally and internationally which in turn led to the organisation of
African art auctions in New York in 2010 by Bonhams and Phillips auction
houses”.20
Responding
to Sylvester Ogbechie’s observation that “without formal auctions of this sort,
it is impossible to determine the value of modern and contemporary art in the
global marketplace when artists involved are not those contemporary African
artists who live and work in the West whose work is often used to represent
Africa in the global market”21, Prince Chukwuka Samuel writes that
the Nigerian art auctions are “a clever way of bringing our modern and
contemporary art into the global market…”22. In other words, the
auctions have “boosted the Nigerian art market”23.
Nigerian
art auctions have made salient impacts in other ways, including the provision
of regular exhibition platforms and better professional visibility for the
works of both old masters and emerging artists. Before series of auctions came
underway, artists had complained of the exorbitant fees charged by galleries to
show their works in their spaces. With the proliferation of auctions, many
artists now enjoy free exhibition platforms and even higher returns above and
over gallery exhibitions. Those who still find the need to work with galleries
have gained more confidence in themselves. It has been suggested that their
auction results, or those of their peers, are bound to embolden them to ask for
an upward review of their deals with the gallery owners and art dealers24,
although Nnenna Okore thinks that, “with the Nigerian economy in mind”, the
prospects of the artists’ success in making galleries “rethink and give more
value to work… is still a steep expectation”25.
Through
the auctions, many artists are happy to reap from their studio toils. A number
of them are of the opinion that the auction prices have helped to put official
bench marks on their works. They are also happy that the auction catalogues
have provided the much needed reference materials documenting or “gazetting”
the value of their works. In other words, the catalogues have become formidable
market tools for them and those who represent them, having become veritable
endorsements on their practice.
In a country without viable art historical and
critical publishing, the auction catalogues, in spite of their lack of careful
documentation26, have also doubtlessly provided invaluable records
of modern and contemporary Nigerian works of art. Its numerous images of
artists’ works are of standard print quality and are of important archival
value. Occasional artists’ statements and the brief texts usually provided on
selected artists and their works by artists, gallery directors, writers and art
historians also raise the art historical and critical worth of the catalogues27.
Nigerian
auctions have also provided alternative exhibitionary models. Before now, there
had been heated debates on the politics of representation in terms of how
“home-based players” are “benched” by our “coaches” or “technical advisers” in
preference to the “professionals” or the Diaspora “players”. It has been argued
that curators, including Nigerian international curators, have often relied on
artists in the Diaspora to speak for or represent Nigerian contemporary art.
When “local” artists are chosen, it has been observed, they are not drawn from
the majority who service the taste and preferences of the local art collectors
that are at the steering wheel of contemporary art “destinations” in Nigeria.
Rather, they are the minority who dare to speak the international artistic
language or those that have been accused of pandering to Western artistic
currents. There has been a consistent yearning in Nigeria for the promotion of
works which “truly” reflect what is on ground in the country, not presentations
of false pictures of the state of Nigeria’s contemporary art to Western
audiences. It would then appear that the auctions are now coming to the
“rescue” by presenting “the way we are” to both local and global audiences.
With Arthouse’ strong virtual presence, the works of many contemporary Nigerian
artists are becoming more visible “as they are” and many artists are generally
content with what they are doing in spite of criticism that much of the art is
repetitive and stagnant, showing no real signs of progress.
IV
I
now turn to an examination of the key critical debates and dialogues
surrounding the problematic sides of the Nigerian art market in general and the
art auctions in particular. Although there have been concerns raised on the
lack of proper documentation of their works by Nigerian artists as well as lack
of enabling laws in Nigeria that ensures that artists reap from their works
when resold in the secondary market28, I begin with Jacob Jari’s
OYASAF lecture on “The Price of Art and its implication on Art Practice in
Nigeria”, which tends to summarise the larger concerns raised on the subject of
art pricing or valuation in Nigeria.
Jari
argues that “there appears to be no logic in why a certain artist’s work
attracts a huge price against another artist’s work which sells for almost
nothing”29. To illustrate his point, he uses the example of the
sale, at an auction house in 2012, of the paintings by two reputable modern
Nigerian artists of the same training and similar professional background -
Jimo Akolo’s Untiled and Demas
Nwoko’s Praise Singer. While Akolo’s
painting sold for only N700 Thousand , Nwoko’s sold for a staggering N7 Million.
“By the way both artists are still alive”, argues Jari. “So, what parameters
were used?” he asks.
Narrating
his own personal experience as an artist, Jari writes:
Arthouse
has also auctioned a few of my works but I have never made it to any
significant figure with the auction house. In comparison, I have seen much
younger artists with shorter and, excuse the immodesty, less impressive CVs
than I raking in twice, thrice and quadruple my figures. Some of the works I
have sold recently include, Brighton at the Mojo Gallery in Dubai in
2011 for $10,000 and Untitled, a very small piece at the Bonham auction
in London in 2012 for £3,000. Compare these to The Hunt auctioned at the
Arthouse in 2012 for N800,000 and another Untitled at another Arthouse
auction earlier this year for N500,00030.
Jacob
Jari’s concerns regarding the valuation of his works at the Arthouse (as against
the works of other less accomplished artists) revolves around the same key
question: “So, what parameters were used?” – Professional background and
experience? Age of artist? Length of successful practice? Quality of work?
Comparative sales record? From my personal assessment of Jari and the valuation
of his worth overseas, he measures up to/with these parameters. So, what
parameters were used by Arthouse?
I
think it is very important to examine some of the factors (for there are,
indeed, a lot of other variables) that may have been responsible for the very
significant disparity between the valuation of Jacob Jari’s works at home in
Nigeria and those of other artists below his career level. By submitting his
works to Nigerian auction houses, might an artist like Jari be shooting himself
in the foot, considering the fact that the valuation of his works in Nigeria
might jeopardise the valuation of his works internationally. This example
illustrates the second part of my subtitle for this lecture.
During
my research for this paper, I found that the issue of the pedigree of valuers
or art appraisers who work for the Nigerian auction houses have remained a
troubling question on the lips of many artists and art administrators. Many do
not think that the valuations are transparent and credible. There are concerns
raised over favouritism for certain artists “well connected” to powerful
collectors who are influential players within the auction circles, and perhaps
strong valuers for some auction houses.
There
is also the question of lack of rarity in much of the works being put on
auction. Many emerging artists have become too regular at the auctions, almost
turning the auction arena into a primary market.
Tajudeen
Sowole has reported on the dialogues that surrounded the valuation and
consignment of “un-rare” works at the Nigerian auctions. Commenting on the
November 2008 auction of the Arthouse Contemporary, Peter Areh (the late
Director of Pendulum Gallery, Lekki, Lagos) held the following critical view
that is important to our further discussion. According to Areh:
The
results are not the true reflection of what the artists actually worth. How can
you explain that El Anatsui is worth less than Rom Isichei, for example?
Anatsui's last sale abroad was worth about N70 million. I think the bidders who
bought works at the [Arthouse] auction were not informed about what to buy. The
way I understand auction is that, artists that are not common command higher
prices than those you can get easily at galleries. In future, collectors would
rather go to galleries shortly before an auction to get some artists and pay
far less than coming to an auction31.
Sowole
has observed that “traditionally, the norms, over the ages would have works go
through the galleries to gain popularity and energy to attract collection at
auctions” but that tradition has been broken especially by Damien Hirst’s
historic auction sale of very recent works32. Sowole further
observes that “aside the fact that art auction is just taking off in Nigeria,
artists in this part of the world and their counterparts overseas appeared
(sic) to be asking for more of the art booties from dealers and galleries
alike. So, the commonality here is the new face, which art auction is likely to
take in the West and Africa, as demonstrated by Hirst's adventure in London and
Chellaram-led Arthouse Contemporary in Lagos”33. Sowole even
attempts to suggest Puju Alatise, whose fresh works command very high prices in
the Nigerian auctions, as an aspiring Damien Hirst of Nigeria. But I tend to
think that contemporary artists like Hirst are already well established and
deeply entrenched in the mainstream Euro-American art markets through not just
mere media hypes or the desperate props of art dealers and collectors but
through the tools and channels of art criticism and art history, which are
still underdeveloped in Nigeria.
Offering
her thoughts on the subject of the participation of young Nigerian artists in
the auctions, Nnenna Okore thinks that “while Nigerian auctions offer many
Nigerian artists, especially upcoming [ones], a great platform to be seen,
heard and collected … they also put these same artists at an economic
disadvantage given that their pricing may be too exorbitant for the average
Nigerian collector or gallery, or [also disadvantage them] when their works …
fail to sell repeatedly at the auctions”. She also makes the important point
that:
what
the auctions end up doing is raise the value of artworks, giving emerging
artists a false sense of accomplishment, such that they can only thrive among
auction dealers or wealthy collectors. Many galleries would struggle to sell
the same highly priced auction pieces to the average Nigerian buyer. Moreover,
unseasoned artists who participate in auctions may find it very difficult to
sell works at upscale galleries who don't believe their works … command as much
conceptual or technical depth34.
Okore’s
concerns relate to the fears I express about the artists disadvantaging
themselves by allowing the auctions to frame their sense of professional
accomplishments. With the measure of artists’ worth currently dictated
only by the collectors’ purse, the auction results can be deceptive in the
sense that it can make or mar the careers of emerging artists who may be
tempted to weigh their successes or failures on that false scale.
Perhaps
the other very important critical point to discuss is that of forgeries. In an
earlier public presentation, Jacob Jari had again brought the issue of forgery
to the front burners. Speaking on “Art, an Entrepreneurial Enterprise: Lessons
from Three Encounters” at the Society of Nigerian Artists conference in Calabar
(December 2012), Jari told a detailed story of the circumstances surrounding
the repeated forgeries and consignments of the paintings of late Nigerian
experimental painter Gani Odutokun at the Arthouse. One of the works in
question was Gani Odutokun’s Dialogue
with Mona Lisa, which has been noted as “probably the most iconic painting
Gani ever created”35. The picture that emerges from Jari’s detailed
description and analysis of the incidents, especially regarding the forgery,
alleged authentication and consignment of Odutokun’s Dialogue with Mona Lisa at the Arthouse36 is in three basic folds. First, there
was armchair research on the part of the auction house that attributed the
work’s provenance to the late artist’s estate, a provenance that was very easy
to ascertain or verify. Secondly, the auction house acted unprofessionally by
accepting an authentication certificate from a certain artist and art
administrator based in Lagos who should not have been the most reliable
“expert”, considering the existence of important Zaria-based art historians and
critics who had worked closely with Odutokun in his life time and who are
involved in the management of the late artist’s estate. Thirdly, a prominent
gallerist and President of the Art Galleries Association of Nigeria (AGAN), who
is reported to have consigned the painting to the auction house, simply
exploited the professional loopholes evident in the structures of the auction
house in question by turning in a blemished authentication certificate for a
work valued at N2.5 million – N3 million37.
V
What
do the issues so far raised reveal to us about the structure of art auctions
and auction houses in Nigeria? What kinds of professional or unprofessional
inputs have built the kind of structures that have so far shaped art
auctioneering in the country? What are the implications of such structures to
the future development of Nigerian art in a competitive global space? I attempt
to examine these questions in the light professional standards and global best
practices.
To
begin with, my research findings show that the working structures at the major
auction houses in Nigeria are similar. At Arthouse and Terra Kulture/Mydrim,
for example, a team of selectors decide the works to be put on offer for each
edition of the auction. When consignments are received, the jury examines them
and vote, where necessary, for those that meet the jury’s criteria. Asked about
what their criteria are, an Arthouse “specialist” listed “aesthetics”, “quality
and age of work”, “artist’s profile” and “quality of materials used”; a major
operator at Terra Kulture/Mydrim listed “how special or rare”, “style”, “colour
(aesthetics)” and “theme”.38
While
the Terra Kulture/ Mydrim Gallery Auction House explicitly lists rarity as a
criterion, I observe that their judges are limited to choosing from works
already consigned to the auction house by artists, galleries and art
collectors. As such, it can be argued that they have no way of discerning how
“rare” or “how special” consigned works are in relation to the artists’ entire
body of work. So, I find no significant difference or any difference at all, to
my mind, in the operational procedures for work-selection and valuation in both
auction houses.
It
is apparent that both auction houses do not devote time and resources to
scouting for rare works by living artists who are still in active production
and, especially, those by emerging talents. The artists’ rare pieces can be
more easily discerned through a deep knowledge of their entire body of works, a
knowledge that comes from field researches as against invitational consignment
of works at the door steps of the auction houses. This is especially the case
where many of the works have neither “lived” long enough to pass through the scrutiny of art criticism
nor been weighed in the balance of art history, so as to find their level in
the stream of modern and contemporary Nigerian art development.
I have also found that at the auction houses,
the identities of those who select works for their auctions are a closely
guarded secret. This raises question around the lack of confidence on the part
of the auction houses on the professional specialization and pedigree, as well
as interests, of those who decide the fate of artists there. The identities of
the valuers who work with or for the auction houses are also not published but
shielded from public knowledge. This lack of transparency falls short of
standard practice.
At
this juncture, one is bound to ask: What credentials should persons working as
specialists for the art departments of auction houses posses? Should the
identities of specialists and valuers be hidden? These questions are questions
that can become questions only in a country like Nigeria. At Bonhams,
Sotheby’s, Christie’s and other established auction houses, including new
entrants such as the Auction Room, for example, the identities (including
photographs, e-mail addresses, telephone contacts and bio-data) of their
specialists and valuers are posted on their websites for public information. Details
of the professional qualifications and work experience of these specialists are
advertised in a manner that builds public confidence on the operations of the
auction houses. In fact, at the Bonhams and Auction Room websites, for example,
schedules are available for face-to-face valuation of the works of artists, art
dealers, or collectors. Knowing the valuers and their qualifications help to
build confidence and sustainability and to dispense doubts in auction
business. A few examples of the
professional credentials and pedigree of specialists across major and minor
auction houses in Europe and America, from where we have imported the art
auction idea, might prove quite insightful.
Cheyenne
Westphal, Sotheby’s’ specialist for Contemporary Art (Sotheby’s Europe) is a
First Class Bachelor’s degree graduate of Art History from St Andrews in
Scotland and also has a Master’s degree in Contemporary Art from the University
of California at Berkeley, USA. Anthony Grant, Cheynee’s colleague at
Sotheby’s, in the Contemporary art Department (New York) holds a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Painting and Art History of the Rhode Island School of Design
and had previously worked for many years as a gallery Director for
PaceWildenstein gallery and later of his own gallery, the Anthony Grant Inc.
At
the Christie’s, Rene Lahn (a specialist in Post-War and Contemporary Art
Department) is a graduate of History of Art and Business Management and also
holds a Masters in Fine Art Management and Creative Curating from Goldsmiths
College. Lahn had previously worked at several art galleries as director.
At
the Auction Room, the specialist for Contemporary and Modern African Art is Ed
Cross who has a degree in History of Art from Cambridge University and has been
a gallery director and curator for many years with a specialty in contemporary
African art. Ed’s profile at the Auction Room website indicates that he spent
“over twenty years in East Africa working in Fine Art and publishing including
eight years working as a sculptor in Kenya, before returning to the U.K. in
2009”.
Simon
Cooper is advertised as the valuer for Auction Room London39. His
educational and professional qualifications are openly advertised in the
Auction Room website. Like many other specialist valuers, Cooper holds a degree
in Fine Art, belongs to a professional association of valuers and has had a
long working experience in the field. Auction Room also encourages its clients
to attend their scheduled valuation days.
At
Bonhams, the specialist for South African Art and for African Art, Hannah
O’Leary, has an MA degree in the History of art from the University of Glasgow.
She has also worked for many years at auction houses in Ireland and Australia.
She later specialised in South African art.
From
the foregoing survey, one finds that there is a balance between studio and
theory in the credentials of those who work as specialists in standard auction
houses. In other words, art historical expertise and studio knowledge are basic
qualifications, added to field experience in the primary and secondary art
markets. My research, however, shows that Nigerian auction houses do not have
in-house specialists in the professional sense of “specialists”40.
Rather, I find that gallery owners, Chief Executive Officers of auction houses
and prominent art collectors are the major gate-keepers of the selection and
evaluation of works for the auctions, and none of them holds the kind of
standard qualifications that distinguishes art specialists in comparable
auction houses outside Nigeria. While they are unarguably experienced in the
field, considering long years of collecting and selling art works, such
experience still does not turn them into specialists in line with standard
practice. This may have contributed to Jacob Jari’s predicament!
The
picture that emerges from the foregoing analysis is that operators of our art
auction houses are gamblers. Artists who submit to them may be lucky to find
the auctions becoming ladders of career progress; others may be unlucky to find
the auctions becoming veiled weapons with which they unwittingly shoot
themselves in the foot.
VI
I
now finally turn to the imperatives of art criticism and art history in the
development of the Nigerian art market and to examine the current situation in
the art auction sphere where there is an apparent lack of critical information
and art historical data (as evident in the auction catalogues) on many emerging
artists and even on most established ones.
Art
history and art criticism definitely play an important role in the art market.
Terry Barrett41 has told the
story of how when John Coplans was editing the influential Artforum in the 1970s “he was told that when he put an artwork on
the cover of the magazine, the gallery representing the artist would get a
stream of phone calls inquiring about purchasing the piece”. This is because
the specialist judgement of influential art critics and historians often shape
the taste of collectors and build their confidence in taking the risk to invest
in such artists. According to Barrett, and it is true, “art critics play a role
in the art market by increasing attention about certain art and increasing the
value of that art”42. But this is possible only where there is a
respectable, and credible, critical culture.
In
the 1950s, America had only a few journals devoted to art criticism but they
are many today at both regional, national and international levels. These
include New Art Examiner; Artweek; Art
Paper; Dialogue, Artnews, Art Magazine, Art in America, Artforum and Parachute. There are also Flash Art, The International Review of
African American Art and Art
International43.
American academic journals include Art
Journal and Exposure: The Journal of
the Society for Photography Education. Those devoted to definite art forms
include High Performance, which
publishes materials on performance art, and Afterimage,
which focuses on film, photography and video44. It has been
equally observed that while “many academic journals publish criticism of art
and reviews of books about art”, art criticism is also “included regularly in
daily newspapers in big and small cities and in magazines with national
circulations such as Vanity Fair and Connoisseur, as well as Time and Newsweek”45.
Considering
the above revelation, how does Nigeria fare? In the 1950s to the 1970s, the Nigeria Magazine and even Black Orpheus provided influential
platforms for critical reviews and essays on Nigerian modern and contemporary
art. A dominant voice before the late 1960s was Ulli Beier. By the late 1960s, Nigeria Magazine had specifically
created a review section where comments and reviews on art exhibitions were
published, especially by some fellow artists who laid the groundwork for the
phenomenon of artists-as-art-critics (or what Yemisi Shyllon describes as the
“writer-critic pattern”46) in Nigeria. The critical tone was
authoritative, sure and very influential.
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