Cultural Encounters: Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa

Lecture, delivered on the official acceptance of the office of Extraordinary Professor of “Ethno-Aesthetics: Tropical Art in an Intercultural and Interdisciplinary Perspective” at Tilburg University on 4 February 2011 by Wilfried van Damme.

The extraordinary chair “Ethno-Aesthetics: Tropical Art in an Intercultural and Interdisciplinary Perspective” is endowed by the Treub Foundation for Scientific Research in the Tropics.

Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 1 Mijnheer De Rector Magnificus, Leden van het Bestuur van de Maatschappij voor Wetenschappelijk © Tilburg University, The Netherlands, 2011 Onderzoek in de Tropen (Treub Maatschappij), ISBN: 978-94-61670-13-7 Zeer gewaardeerde toehoorders

All rights reserved. This publication is protected by copyright, and permission must be obtained from the In his book Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration, the world historian Felipe publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by Fernández-Armesto suggests dividing the history of humanity into two parts: divergence any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise. and convergence. Divergence refers to the gradual drifting apart of human populations, after our species, Homo sapiens, had arisen in Africa some 200,000 years ago. Human www.tilburguniversity.edu dispersal became especially marked when, more than 100,000 years later, people left the continent eventually to colonize the rest of the habitable world. The process of diver- gence takes up by far the largest part of human history. Convergence, as discussed by Fernández-Armesto, is a much more recent phenomenon, and refers to the reconnecting of human populations over ever larger distances. Initiating this coming together again of groups of humans, it is stressed, are voyages of exploration, prompted by a spirit of adventure and commerce.1

As befits a world historian, Fernández-Armesto considers the process of gradual con- vergence from a multifocal point of view, discussing the geographical explorations of, say, Chinese, Europeans, and Meso-Americans alike. Convergence not only issues from various places and dates in recent human history, but can be seen to operate on various geographical scales. When it comes to convergence on a global scale, the beginnings of this process are to be found in Europe around 1500. It is here and then that indig- enous seafarers started not only to intensify contacts with Africa, India, and China, but to connect the “Old World” with the Americas and later Australia and the island worlds of the Pacific. Human populations that had diverged sometimes tens of millennia ago were slowly beginning to be incorporated into global networks, albeit not always to their own consent, eventually leading to the degree of interconnectedness that characterizes our world today – again, not to everyone’s satisfaction.

The reconnaissance of ever larger parts of the globe, wherever it was instigated, led to a substantial extension of geographical and maritime knowledge, as described by Fernández-Armesto. However, extension of knowledge also occurred on other planes. The increased spatial interconnections engendered by exploration led to a growing awareness of the existence of other peoples and their cultural traditions. This in turn prompted the slow accumulation of knowledge about these other human populations, their customs, beliefs, and cultural products. This is a process that again occurred in various places

Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 3 around the globe, as attested, for example, in the Islamic world, Europe, China, and Japan especially. It then becomes pertinent to ask how scholarship in various traditions world- (Fig. 1). In some cases, the interest in other peoples and their cultures would eventually wide has gathered knowledge on art forms from what to them are foreign cultures, in lead to asking questions about the human condition more generally. This quest for what order also that intercultural learning today might profit from examining previous endeav- it means to be human, which should arguably be at the forefront of the humanities today, ors in studying art across cultural boundaries.4 would also profit from taking into account current insights into humans’ shared bioevo- lutionary history. Indeed, no “understanding society,” Tilburg University’s motto, without The question of how students of the arts around the world have engaged with the visual understanding the human animals that make it up. culture of traditions other than their own, leads to a whole series of subquestions. For example, what motivated these students’ scholarly dealings with foreign art forms? In what intellectual and sociocultural environment did they carry out their examinations? What were their assumptions, what questions did they ask, and why? What were the sources on which they based their analyses and what methods did they use? What did they achieve and how have others received their results?

In this lecture, I will broach the history and intellectual contexts of one particular case of intercultural art studies. My example concerns Western scholarly engagements with the statuary sculpture of the Fang from equatorial Africa. How have North Atlantic scholars approached this type of visual culture from tropical Africa? What aspects of the sculp- tures did they focus on? What were their frameworks of analysis and what are the intel- lectual roots of the perspectives they applied? I will discuss three different approaches or paradigms in the Western study of Fang sculpture in the last half-century or so. The term paradigm I use in a fairly loose sense of referring to a particular mental framework that guides the scholarly approach of a given subject matter, including the conceptualiza- tion of this subject matter, the questions that are asked of it, and the methods applied to answer these questions. The three paradigms in the study of Fang statuary I will consider may be summarized as (i) the stylistic approach, focusing on the objects themselves and aimed at a quantitative analysis; (ii) the culturalist approach, based on a qualitative under- standing and aspiring to comprehend the sculptures in their local context of meaning and Fig. 1 Dutch woman and man (from: Nishikawa Joken, Zoho Kaitsu Shoko. Kyoto: Kakuyo Shorin, 1708; value; and (iii) the postcolonial approach, marked by reflexivity and a shift of attention photograph: World Imaging, Wikimedia Commons) away from the Fang to the Western appropriation of their objects. My consideration of these three paradigms will be far from exhaustive. Rather, by briefly discussing the appli- There does not yet exist a global history that documents and examines the ways in which cation of these approaches to Fang sculpture, it is my aim to introduce you to a varied disparate traditions around the world have gone about describing, analyzing, and inter- field of study that is little known in academia. Concerned as it is with the examination of preting what from their perspective is culturally alien or unfamiliar.2 It will not come as a art in those cultures that have traditionally been studied by Western anthropologists, this surprise, then, that we are also lacking a comprehensive study discussing how different is a field that has been commonly known for the last three decades as the anthropology cultural traditions have dealt with the visual art forms of other traditions, specifically in a of art.5 manner that might be called scholarly in the broadest of terms.3 Yet analyses of such inter- cultural or transcultural art studies would be most welcome today, now that the exami- nation of art is developing a global perspective under the banner of “world art studies,”

4 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 5 The Fang of Western Equatorial Africa In western equatorial Africa today live some one million people speaking mutually intelligible dialects of a Bantu language known as Fang. In the anthropological literature these Fang speakers are usually divided into vari- ous subgroups, or what the older literature calls subtribes. There is no scholarly consen- sus about this subdivision, and some anthropologists question its relevance. Suffice it here to say that the ways of life of more northern groups are frequently considered differ- ent enough not to include them in discussions of Fang culture generally.

Fang speakers can be found in three modern African states: in southern , , and northwestern . They arrived in these parts of West Central Africa fairly recently. According to their oral traditions, Fang groups originate in a savan- nah area to the northeast of their present habitat. Migrations from that area appear to have started in the eighteenth century or earlier. These migrations may have been trig- gered by the military invasions and slave hunts of Fulani nomads, forcing Fang speaking groups to seek refuge in the tropical rainforest. Practising slash and burn agriculture, Fang lineages gradually expanded in a southwestern direction. They would reach the shores of the Atlantic Ocean only in the early twentieth century. By that time, the Atlantic coast had already attracted substantial numbers of Europeans and Americans for decades – traders, hunters, explorers, abolitionists, missionaries, and finally colonialists. Fig. 2 Fang villagers (from: Harry Alis, “Au pays des M’Fans,” Le tour du monde LX, 1888) The Fang make their appearance in Western writings in the second half of the nineteenth century, when travellers ventured into the equatorial rainforest from the coast and report- It was in the last decades of the nineteenth century also that statues, , and other ed on their meetings with Fang people (Fig. 2).6 Rumoured to be cannibals by coastal objects of the Fang first made their way into Europe, especially France. In the early twenti- Africans, and with a reputation of fearsome warriors, the Fang nevertheless made a posi- eth century, Fang masks, anthropomorphic figures, and sculpted heads would attract the tive impression on some Westerners. For example, Mary H. Kingsley (1862-1900), in her attention of French artists now considered to belong to the modernist avant-garde. Thus, widely-read Travels in West Africa (1897), reported on having developed a special liking of in a well-known example, the Parisian painter Maurice de Vlaminck bought a Fang the Fang: fierce, but intelligent, courageous, and handsome. from one of his father’s friends in 1905.7 Shortly afterwards he sold it to his colleague André Derain, who had insisted on buying it, and who showed it to his friends Picasso and Matisse. This now famous mask is held to have influenced the work of all four artists. Derain later also bought other Fang sculptures, including a female figure and a carved head. Fang masks, and especially heads and full figures became prized objects in the private collections of a growing number of enthousiasts in both France and abroad. One such figure made a huge impression when it was first exhibited in Paris in 1930 and became known as “the Black Venus.”

6 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 7 Avant-garde artists, while inspired by the formal qualities of African sculptures, and some- Proportions and Anatomical Detail: times their “magical aura,” seem to have cared little about either the meaning and role of these objects in their original settings or indeed about their African colleagues who A Stylistic Approach to Fang Statuary Fang statues would created them. Although the sociocultural context of Fang masks remains understudied to become the subject of a life-long study by the French anthropologist Louis Perrois. It was this day, already in the early twentieth century it was known that the carved heads and fig- the famous prehistorian and anthropologist André Leroi-Gourhan who suggested in 1964 ures of the Fang served within the context of an ancestor cult. This is related, for example, that his student Perrois work on the topic of Fang figures, considered “one of the mythical in the work of the German ethnographer Günter Tessmann, who lived among the Fang gems of ‘Negro art’.”9 The idea was to first study examples of Fang sculpture available in for several years between 1904 and 1909.8 In brief, the male and female statues of the European collections and in publications. This would allow a close focus on the objects Fang, called beyima bieri, figures of the ancestor cult (sing. eyima bieri), were used to pro- themselves, which Perrois was requested to carefully look at, draw, and, if possible, touch tect ancestral skulls and bones that were kept in cylindrical barrels made of bark (nsuk) (Fig. 4). The second stage of the research would involve going to Gabon and study both (Fig. 3). The figures are therefore also known as reliquary guardians. Anthropomorphic the creators of these statues and the figures’ place in the socioreligious life of the Fang.10 heads inserted into the top of the bark barrel served the same purpose. The reliquary, to Such local and contextual art research in Africa had been pioneered by a few scholars in which full figures were attached by means of a back post or projection, was placed in a the 1930s,11 and in the postwar years the prospect of gaining knowledge and insight by corner of the house of the leader of the ancestor cult. doing “fieldwork” was generally perceived as the most exciting development in the study of African art. In 1965 Perrois indeed set off for Gabon, where he would work among the Fang and Kota, especially. He found, however, that due to the success of various religious reform movements from the 1930s onward, the practice of producing and using Fang stat- ues had virtually died out.12 This may explain in part why Perrois would eventually hold on to a formal or visual analysis of the statues themselves, although he augmented his research by what he was able to learn on site.

Fig. 3 Fang reliquaries, taken outside to be photographed, c. 1913 (from: Karl Zimmermann, Die Grenzgebiete Fig. 4 Fang statue, eyima bieri (Afrika Museum, Berg en Dal, Netherlands, inv. nr. 43-42; Kameruns im Süden und im Osten. Berlin: Mittler und Sohn, 1914; photograph: Hans Gehne) photograph: Ferry Herrebrugh)

8 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 9 This brings us to the first paradigm in the study of Fang anthropomorphic sculpture, an into substyles, two for the northern region and four for the southern one.18 These sub- approach variously known as morphological or stylistic analysis. This method implies styles, he suggested, coincide with “subtribal” divisions among the Fang (Ntumu, Okak, studying both the formal components of works of art and the combination or arrange- Betsi, etc.). ment of these components into a visual whole. When constituent elements assume regu- lar shape, and especially when their combination adheres to certain rules or recurring Perrois’s proposals have been severely criticized by the anthropologist James Fernandez principles of organization, one may speak of a style. Perrois follows Henri Focillion in and his wife Renate, who worked among the Fang at the end of the 1950s.19 The defining style as “un ensemble cohérent de formes,”13 a coherent or consistent assem- Fernandezes argue, among many other things, that Perrois seriously underestimates the blage of forms. intergroup mobility of individuals among the Fang, making it hard to pinpoint the “sub- ethnic” identity of sculptors and their work. They also demonstrate that individual Fang In the study of African figurative sculpture, stylistic analysis had been pioneered by the carvers produced statues in varying styles that on the basis of Perrois’s analysis would Belgian scholar Frans Olbrechts, a Professor at Ghent University. In the late 1930s, he have to be ascribed to disparate so-called subtribes. had applied this type of analysis to statues from the then Belgian Congo, resulting in the delineation of a handful of “style areas” in Central Africa, each made up of several sub- Time does not allow me to delve much deeper into the characteristics and scholarly value styles, most of them “tribal.”14 His students, including Albert Maesen, as well as other of the stylistic approach, or the style area paradigm in the study of so-called tribal art more Africanist art historians, would later refine this classification, discerning ever more styles generally.20 But let me briefly point to a few topics that need further elaboration in view of and clusters of styles.15 It was Maesen also who tutored Perrois in the application of stylis- this paradigm’s intellectual history. First, although Africanist art scholars like Perrois fail tic analysis at the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Tervuren, near Brussels.16 Following to mention this, the morphological and style area approach had already been applied to Olbrechts and Maesen, Perrois would concentrate in his examination of Fang sculpture the art of New Guinea as early as the late nineteenth century. In the field of Melanesian on both the proportions of figures, especially the relationships between head, torso, and art studies, this approach would prove popular for almost a century.21 Interestingly, the legs, and on the design of anatomical details such as eyes, ears, and mouths. first scholar to adopt a style area approach to New Guinea, Alfred C. Haddon, had trained as a zoologist.22 To his mind, he was applying to the realm of art the same taxonomical In 1972, Perrois published the results of his stylistic analysis of a corpus of some 270 approach he was used to in zoology.23 The intellectual roots of stylistic classifications in statues ascribed to the Fang, most of them found in Western collections or publications the study of the art of small-scale societies outside the West are thus not limited to the and frequently with only scant information as to their exact geographic provenance. The field of art history, with which the examination of style is usually associated,24 or archaeol- majority of these objects had arrived in Europe in the decades around 1900, and Perrois ogy, where stylistic and related typological analyses seem equally common. established the late nineteenth century as the time frame for his examination. The overall aim of his analysis was to contribute in an “objective” manner – some would say a “posi- Haddon’s taxonomical approach also leads us to another topic. It has been suggested tivistic” manner – to the nascent study of African art. Perrois conceived of this new field that, growing out of a more general nineteenth-century desire to provide “visual encyclo- of study as pertaining specifically to Africa’s bewildering variety of sculptural styles, which pedic inventories” of the world, its peoples, and their products, the practice of classifica- he felt had hitherto been dealt with in too superficial and exploratory a manner. Detailed, tion became a tool for imperial and colonial ambitions, allowing for surveillance and con- in-depth studies of the style characteristics of a given African art form, here Fang figura- trol over subjected peoples.25 Along the same lines, postcolonial analysis often considers tive sculpture, would mark the beginning of what he saw as a truly scientific approach to the subdivision of African and other populations into “tribes” or ethnic groups a colonial African art.17 invention facilitating administration and control. Being inherently classificatory, stylistic analyses and especially style area approaches could then perhaps be construed as rooted Perrois proposed that there are two stylistic regions among the Fang, a northern one, in a nineteenth-century Western tendency to map the world and to attempt to at least made up of elongated figures longiform( ) and showing highly stylized anatomical details, symbolically master it, as one possible line of historical investigation among others.26 and a southern one, consisting of more stocky statues (breviform) and a tendency to more naturalism in the rendering of body parts. These two style areas he then divided further

10 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 11 From a more pragmatic point of view, one may note, finally, that stylistic approaches seem Most of Boas’s students carried out research in Native American societies, but some especially popular in cases where data other than the objects themselves are lacking or adopted his approach and thematic emphases in studying cultures in other parts of the sparse, because these data are no longer, or not yet, available. Be this as it may, in the world. One such student was Herskovits. A champion of cultural relativism, Herskovits study of African art we see that the style paradigm becomes less prominent when, increas- would focus his attention on Africa, and the African diaspora, devoting a substantial part ingly in the decades after the Second World War, anthropologists and art historians start of his research to the visual arts, among both the Fon in present-day Benin and the so- to carry out local research on African cultures and their visual arts. These scholars tended called Maroons of Suriname.29 Although one has to be careful in drawing up intellectual to shift attention from style to studying the sociocultural contexts of these arts. Indeed, genealogies, against this background it does not come as a surprise that Herskovits’s stu- although the Fang case discussed so far might suggest otherwise, these researchers more dent30 Fernandez was to pay considerable attention to the arts and their embeddedness in often than not found indigenous art traditions alive and well, as some do up to this day, the local universe of values among the Fang.31 allowing them to examine the creation, use, function, and meaning of art on site. In an early publication, Fernandez addresses the question of what counts as aestheti- Form and Value: cally pleasing among the Fang.32 Interestingly, in dealing with this question he considers a whole range of phenomena in Fang life, including village layout, notions of personhood, A Culturalist Approach to Fang Statuary One such and even social organization. He begins his analysis, however, with Fang aesthetic evalu- researcher is James Fernandez, who spent some eighteen months among the Fang ations of their anthropomorphic statues. Indeed, Fernandez found both practising sculp- between 1958 and 1960. His main focus of attention was Bwiti, a syncretist cult combin- tors and audiences still in touch with the creation, use, and function of reliquary guard- ing African religious views and practices with elements of Christianity.27 Fernandez also ians. When asked to assess the visual qualities of these sculptures, Fang critics talked showed great interest, however, in Fang art, artists, and aesthetics, devoting several stud- about the balance that a figure should display. Specifically, they stated that there had to be ies to these topics, especially in the early years of his publishing career. Whereas Perrois an equilibrium between the left and the right parts of the statue, whether arms, legs, eyes, opts for a quantitative approach to Fang sculpture, Fernandez elaborates a qualitative per- breasts, or shoulders. Without this balance between opposite body members, they said, spective. His emphasis is on understanding how the Fang experience their statues and the figure would lack vitality. And it is this vitality that the Fang appreciate aesthetically, other forms of expressive culture against the background of the Fang value system. argues Fernandez, whether in sculpture, music, dance, or various other cultural phenom- ena. Fernandez is a student of the American anthropologist Melville Herskovits. Herskovits himself was trained by the German-born scholar Franz Boas, generally regarded as the One question that arises is: How can the balance between opposite body members, founder of American anthropology. Boas was greatly interested in art, and encouraged meaning their symmetrical rendering, generate the desired quality of vitality in a statue?33 his students to take into account artistic objects and their creators when doing on-site In order to answer this question, we have to consider the way in which the Fang, accord- research. Indeed, Boas was among those who in the early twentieth century promoted ing to Fernandez, conceptualize the idea of vitality.34 For that purpose, we have to go so-called fieldwork as a methodological prerequisite in anthropological research. Through beyond Fernandez’s essay on aesthetics and take into account his other work on the Fang, this procedure, investigators would get to know a culture “from within.” The ideal was to especially his extensive Bwiti, a study of more than 600 pages that may be considered describe a given culture in and on its own terms, to elucidate the “native’s point of view.” Fernandez’s ethnography of the Fang.35 In the Boasian tradition that developed in the USA, emphasis was placed on a culture’s myths, beliefs, and values, rather than, say, its kinship system or economy, even though a Vitality is Fernandez’s translation of the Fang concept ening. This concept, he says, can neat division between these domains does not seem possible. In addition, these ideation- also be interpreted as “life” or “the capacity and determination to survive.” It is the quality al dimensions of culture were held to be reflected in a culture’s art forms.28 The “world that is strived for in all areas of Fang life, including Bwiti. The traditional Fang emphasis view” that these art forms were understood to express, moreover, was seen as unique to on vitality can be understood in light of both the hardships of their migratory history and given culture, a distinctive product resulting from local historical processes, like the rest the subsequent turmoil caused by colonization and missionary activities. Now ening or of culture. It is this historical particularism, and especially the resulting stance known as vitality is thought to arise when two complementary opposites are brought together into a cultural relativism, that Boas and his school became best known for. 12 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 13 balanced relationship. This balance or equilibrium the Fang refer to as bipwé. The contras- ated with the female qualities of reflection and thoughtful direction. In human beings, it tive yet complementary elements that need to be balanced are essentially those of male- is hoped that these contrastive but complementary forces work together harmoniously ness and femaleness, and of qualities associated herewith. Male qualities include activity, in order to produce proper action. Now in statues we usually see a muscular torso that, willfulness, and determination, whereas female qualities comprise reflection, deliberation, together with the posture of the arms, suggests strength and determination. Contrasting and thoughtfulness. Although these qualities are gendered, they do not exclusively belong this, the face often appears to expresses composure and reflection. It is as if the female to males or females, respectively. Moreover, they can also be found in phenomena other qualities of calmness and thoughtfulness control and direct the potentially unbridled and than human beings, for example social life in the village or the Bwiti cult. Male quali- destructive male energy that seems about to be released. In this manner, too, statues ties may be summed up by the term elulua, meaning appropriate activity or pleasurable seem to balance male and female qualities, thus giving them vitality (Fig. 5).38 animation; female qualities are encapsulated by the term mvwaa, tranquility and even- handedness.

The Fang value both male and female qualities, with some contexts requiring so-called female modes of behaving, whereas others call for male types of action. The generation of vitality, however, requires the balanced presence of both. Moreover, such an equilibrat- ed relationship ensures that neither male nor female qualities take excessive and hence undesirable forms. Indeed, the Fang recognize both excess of activity and excess of tran- quility. Thus, people or situations can progress from elulua into the state of ebiran, where over-active behavior leads to destruction and social disorder. Similarly, from mvwaa one may depart into the condition of atek, docility, laziness, or lethargy. In an equilibrated rela- tionship between male and female qualities, in contrast, such excesses are avoided, since one set of values counterbalances the other, thus preventing it from going to extremes. With male and female qualities thus preserved in pristine form, their equilibrated relation- ship at the same time creates the conditions for the emergence of vitality.

Against this background we may return to the Fang evaluation of statues and the idea that Fig. 5 Fang statue, eyima bieri (Afrika Museum, Berg en Dal, Netherlands, inv. nr. 13-45; vitality is brought about by the balance of opposite body members. Now the symmetrical photograph: Ferry Herrebrugh) rendering of a human body creates an equilibrium of spatial opposites. Vitality, however, is said to arise from the balance of contradictory yet complementary oppositions. The In the type of analysis presented just now, Fang aesthetic preference in sculpture is mere formal or visual opposition of body members thus does not seem to suffice to pro- explained entirely with reference to the Fang universe of values, seen as the unique prod- duce ening. It therefore needs pointing out that in other contexts Fernandez observes that uct of Fang culture and its history. Such an approach where culture is explained exclu- for the Fang the left side of the human body (efa meyal) counts as female, whereas the sively in terms of culture is sometimes referred to as culturalist. In its most extreme form, right side (efa meyom) is regarded as male.36 A symmetrical statue may thus indeed be it is an approach that presupposes that human beings are born with a blank slate, a tabula said to balance opposing yet complementary qualities, and to generate vitality as a result. rasa that enculturation will inscribe with culturally relevant and indeed relative mean- Fang statues, moreover, seem to unite male and female qualities also in another way.37 ing. In anthropological practice, it is then up to outside scholars to delve deeply into a In this respect it needs observing that the Fang regard the torso of a human body as given culture in order to gain an intersubjective understanding of that culture, albeit it the repository of energy and power. The torso may therefore be associated with the male one based on as many empirical data as possible. When trying to account for a particular qualities of activity and vigour. The head, on the other hand, is considered the body part cultural phenomenon, such as aesthetic preference, attention is drawn to other cultural that controls and directs the power residing in the torso. The head may thus be associ- phenomena, such as the local value system. In Boasian as well as many other forms of

14 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 15 anthropology, this culturalist and to some extent hermeneutic approach is so much taken anthropologists involved in this field, but also for art historians specializing in African art. for granted that it seems hardly to require a label. Most of them have adopted the methods and interpretive procedures of anthropologists, especially those of Boasian anthropologists like Fernandez. The “semantic contextualism” The culturalist paradigm, however, does not provide the only approach to understanding that these anthropologists propound in fact chimes well with the iconological approach cultural phenomena. It also does not offer the only explanatory approach to aesthetic developed by the art historian Erwin Panofsky, an approach on which many Africanist art preference. In view of the latter, it may have occurred to you that the Fang preference for scholars in the second half of the twentieth century are likely to have been fed. Like the symmetry in sculpture, when stripped off its cultural associations, is not all that exotic or Boasians, and equally influenced by the tradition of German Idealism, it seems, Panofsky remarkable. Indeed, intercultural comparative analyses suggest that symmetry is an aes- suggested to contextualize works of art, in his case European art, against the background thetic universal. If all human beings appreciate visual symmetry, then it becomes tempt- of a culture or period’s systems of thought and value.41 ing to explore the possibilities of applying not a culturalist but a naturalist approach to this preference. Such a naturalist approach draws attention to the biological heritage of Appropriation and Value Creation: human beings, who are conceived, like all other living organisms, as products of bioevo- lutionary processes. It is an approach that assumes that humans are born with innate A Postcolonial Approach to Fang Statuary One art his- tendencies and indeed preferences. One such well-documented preference concerns the torian who has applied this Boasian and Panofskian approach to the study of African art symmetry of the human body. It is argued that there are good evolutionary reasons why is the American scholar Susan Vogel. Specifically, she has used this approach in studying this preference has become innate, reasons having to do with symmetry of the body being the sculpture of the Baule of Côte d’Ivoire. In a way similar to Fernandez, Vogel argues an index of health and thus an important factor in mate choice. 39 The perceptual bias for that Baule aesthetic preferences in sculpture can be explained by reference to the socio- bodily symmetry, as it is called, can then be easily seen at work in the evaluation of carved cultural values of this people.42 Here I will not dwell on Vogel’s research among the Baule, human bodies as well. but will be concerned instead with one of her later projects, one that provides the third and final approach to Fang sculpture to be discussed this afternoon. One other explanatory option, finally, concerns an approach that, while basically natural- ist, might be situated in between a purely culturalist and a purely naturalist perspective. I In the late 1990s, after a distinguished career as a researcher, curator, and museum direc- am referring to the so-called embodied cognition approach. Briefly, in an embodied cog- tor, Vogel went back to school and trained as a filmmaker at New York University. For nition approach it is argued that our ways of thinking and making sense of the world are her graduate film she wrote and directed Fang: An Epic Journey. The film, which mixes fundamentally based on our bodily experiences. These experiences are thus held to struc- documentary and fiction techniques, was produced in 2001 and released the following ture on a basic level the way we conceptualize the world and give meaning to it. One such year.43 In this speedy, eight-minute production, Vogel narrates the fictional “life history” experience is the sensation of bodily balance, a sensori-motor equilibrium that we learn of a Fang statue, after it had left its original context of use in Africa in the early twentieth to achieve early in life and which we foster ever after.40 Applied to the Fang case, one may century.44 The intellectual framework of Vogel’s production can be characterized as that of then ask: Could it be that the fundamental and positive experience of bodily equilibrium postcolonial reflexivity, enhanced by various other postmodern themes. Before elucidat- forms the basis of a system of meaning and value that is founded on this very experience ing this context somewhat more, let me first sketch the contents of the film. of balance, now used metaphorically to articulate a desired state of being? Put differently, might we be dealing with a world view that, while taking into account a variety of con- The opening scenes bring the viewer to New York in 1970. A scholar is sitting in his study, textual factors, is a mental elaboration that ultimately stems from a fundamental bodily with a statue identifiable as Fang standing on his desk. The Fang figure appears to be in experience? the possession of a woman who has lent the statue to the scholar for the purposes of a book he is writing. She requests him in a letter to return the figure, now that his book is These interdisciplinary musings, inspired by fairly recent developments in evolutionary about to be finished, for she has agreed to lend the sculpture to an exhibition that will tour theory and cognitive science, are far removed from the world of African art studies, which various European cities. is thoroughly culturalist, or if you like, social-constructivist. This holds not only for the

16 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 17 A flashback then transports us to Cameroon in 1904. A figure in colonial dress, based on New York, 1948. A posh-looking woman living in an elegant apartment has inherited the the ethnographer Tessmann, is sitting at a table adding an inventory number to a Fang top half of the Fang sculpture. She begins a correspondence with Dr. Locke, the African art statue in front of him. The colonial authorities, we are informed, have recently confiscated specialist whom the viewer has met in the opening scenes. It soon becomes clear to her both the “idol,” as the object is called, and its bark barrel, violently destroying in the pro- that the Fang figure is incomplete and she starts a search for the missing half. One day a cess the shrine in which the reliquary had been placed. The Tessmann-like character says package arrives containing a lamp whose base consists of the lower half of the statue. The he is still looking for evidence of cannibalism among the Fang, and complains that the figure now complete again, it will later feature in Dr. Locke’s book. natives are cunningly hiding everything. According to the booklet accompanying the film, the Dr. Locke character is based on the In the next scene, the feathered figure, now referred to as a “cannibal doll,” is offered for African-American philosopher and patron of the arts Alain Locke (1885-1965). The female sale to a shopkeeper in Paris, together with its bark barrel. The shopkeeper agrees to buy owner of the Fang figure, who has apparently stayed in touch with Locke ever since her the statue but not the barrel. This character, inspired by the young Paul Guillaume, who first request for information, is said to be inspired on the socialite and political activist would later become a famous dealer of African sculpture, refers to the object as a “fertil- Nancy Cunard (1891-1965).48 Towards the end of the film, we see her host the official pre- ity god.” We remain in Paris, it is now 1907, and we see an artist at work in a room that sentation of Dr. Locke’s book, whose discussion of African creativity she feels will contrib- reminds one of the studio of the Cubist painter Georges Braque, as shown in a photo- ute to solving the “race problem in America.” The film ends by suggesting that the Fang graph of 1911. The artist is struggling to make sense of the visual composition of the Fang figure, having made its European tour, will be donated to a New York art museum, seen as statue, which he unsuccessfully tries to render on canvas. He calls the statue a “fetish.” its “final home.”

Ten years later the Fang sculpture surfaces at a sales exhibition in Paris. It is labelled Asked to comment on this production prior to its release, Africanist art historian Jean “Primitive idol (19th cent.)” and is offered to buyers for 500 francs. Visual cues in the film Borgatti sighed that the film addresses in eight minutes what would take her two lec- suggest that African sculpture is in ever-larger circles no longer seen as an exotic curiosity tures to cover.49 Vogel’s film indeed takes up a host of subjects, most of them topical. but as a form of art, one that anticipated the avant-garde art produced in Europe at the Specifically, the film considers a range of object-related issues that became the focus of time. We then see someone tampering with the Fang figure, apparently in order to accom- much attention in the social sciences and humanities at the end of the twentieth cen- modate it to the prevailing taste of Western collectors. The statue’s penis is removed,45 tury, issues that are still with us today. Central among these in the present context is as are the metal rings around its neck. The figure, which has long since lost its feathers, the so-called social life of things, or the life histories of objects, a theme initiated by a is thus made to look more like a “pure sculpture,” as appreciated by modern art lovers. volume edited by Arjun Appadurai in 1986.50 It is argued that throughout its existence an Moreover, the light-colored statue is blackened by what seems to be shoe polish. Thus object changes contexts, and that each change of context is accompanied by shifts in the transformed, it is again put up for sale. Now called “African sculpture (13th century),” its meaning and value ascribed to the object. It was soon realized that this line of reasoning price has risen to 300,000 francs. could profitably be applied to the “cultural biographies” of objects that had arrived in Europe and America from colonized areas outside the West. Much attention focused on The scene then shifts to Berlin in 1933. We see a depressed German scholar hanging in the acquisition itself of objects within the context of Western colonialism. In the second his chair. A student of African kinship systems, he had bought the Fang figure some time half of the 1990s and the early years of the twenty-first century, this led, for example, to before because he felt it testified well to the shared humanity among the world’s peoples. a whole series of edited volumes on the topic of colonial collecting.51 One key concept in The anthropologist calls the figure an “ancestor statue.” He remembers the day the sur- this connection has since become a household term in critical scholarship: appropriation, realist photographer Man Ray had visited him and taken pictures of the sculpture. A new or making one’s own, usually employed with negative overtones of illegitimacy and indeed age of intercultural understanding seemed to have dawned. But how different things look moral disapproval. today. He fears that the Nazis will confiscate both the book manuscript he is working on and his collection of “African art,” as he calls it. The anthropologist, in whom we rec- ognize Julius Lips,46 has therefore decided to take drastic measures to save his favorite sculpture. He saws it in half47 and sends the two pieces separately to friends abroad. 18 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 19 Once they had arrived in the West, objects, especially figurative objects, were variously consideration or even interest in the beliefs, values, and assessments of the people who categorized, as Vogel’s film illustrates. They were labelled idols or fetishes, and eventually produced and used these objects in the first place. Thus, of the creation, deployment, sculptures and works of art. If the collecting and subsequent ownership of these objects function, or evaluation of Fang statues in their original cultural setting we learn nothing in could be called “material appropriation” – admittedly a rather thin characterization that Vogel’s film.54 Indeed, there must be a whole generation of scholars by now who think that leaves out symbolic dimensions – then this labelling of objects against the background the anthropology of art is basically about colonial appropriation, representation of the of Western analytical categories might count as “conceptual appropriation.” A third type Other, and the role of artistic objects as commodities in globalized art markets. of appropriation addressed in Vogel’s film is “artistic appropriation,” as evidenced by the allusions to Cubist painters and the work of the photographer Man Ray, inspired by or incorporating African works of art. Finally, there are suggestions of “scholarly” and Envoy Ladies and gentlemen, taking the Fang as my case study, in this lecture I have “museological” appropriation, since the Fang statue in the film ends up featuring in both tried to give you some idea of the varied ways in which Western scholars in the last half- a learned book and a museum. Issues of appropriation in turn evoke the much-discussed century have approached the visual art of small-scale cultures outside the West. I have topics of power and authority, exercised by those involved in the various types of appro- also briefly suggested how disciplines outside the humanities might provide us with fresh priation mentioned. perspectives on the empirical data that scholars have gathered on art and aesthetics in these cultures. My survey of approaches is not nearly complete and could be extended fur- The booklet edited by Vogel and published together with the film is titledIdol Becomes Art! ther back in time, taking into account evolutionist, diffusionist, and functionalist perspec- This suggests that for Vogel the changes in the statue’s classificatory meaning and the tives on art, as developed by anthropologists and art scholars between, say, the 1880s accompanying shifts in value, including monetary value, are themes central to the film. and the 1950s. Indeed, it is my intention as holder of this extraordinary chair to further the This corresponds well with a Marxist-inspired postmodern emphasis on commodification research into the history of the Western scholarly reception of the art of small-scale soci- and value creation. Indeed, objects arriving and journeying in the West are frequently ana- eties from outside Europe. Specifically, I intend to focus on the late nineteenth century, lyzed as items that have exchange value within the international market systems in which the period when the art forms of these cultures were first systematically incorporated into they tend to circulate, notably art markets. This framework of analysis also lends itself Western scholarship. It is hoped that a focus on the early days of studying these arts will well to raise yet another favorite topic of recent scholarship, namely authenticity, seen as shed light on later developments as well, if only since later efforts tend to respond to for- a mere social construction, not an essential quality.52 In Vogel’s film the topic of authen- mer endeavors. Apart from the logically inspired desire to start at the beginning, another ticity is addressed in a rather straightforward manner by reference to the removal of the source of inspiration for these plans consists of an interesting body of scholarly work that bark barrel, feathers, metal rings, and other accoutrements of the statue. These material has recently come to my attention through a form of serendipity.55 I have learned from changes, also including the blackening of the object, are in turn related to processes of this work that the end of the nineteenth century holds quite a few surprises for someone value creation in the art market. like myself who was brought up academically to view this period in the study of the art of small-scale societies as hopelessly marred by racism, colonialism, and sociocultural evo- The Western elite taste that the art market caters for is one of several other topics that lutionism. Although the influence of these -isms is at times indeed discernible to varying Vogel’s film broaches. The film might also be interpreted as raising such issues as unequal extents, they do not all appear as dominant in the contemporary literature as most later power relations in colonial situations, cultural property, the ethics of representation, resti- commentators would have us believe. Specifically, these commentators ignore the cosmo- tution, and more. In sum, it is easy to symphatize with Borgatti’s sigh. politan approaches of scholars who were eager to consider the art of the whole world in examining the artistic and aesthetic dimensions of being human. Some revisionism of this Yet, at the same time, one may also wonder how many lectures it would take to properly intellectually exciting period thus seems in order. I am therefore glad to announce that I introduce all the dimensions of Fang sculpture that the film does not address. For, how- have been able to team up with my new Tilburg colleague Kathryn Brown in organizing a ever much all the film’s varied topics have been foregrounded as of critical value to post- conference that will include attention to nineteenth-century Western dealings with artistic modern and postcolonial analysis, and however much these topics continue to demand objects from around the world. scholars’ attention,53 their discussion appears to have almost completely replaced any

20 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 21 To the Treub Foundation for Scientific Research in the Tropics I express my sincere grati- tude for their willingness to establish an extraordinary chair devoted to the examination of art forms that Western academia tends to neglect. In considering this neglect, we need not only take into account that these art forms were produced in cultures outside the European tradition; we also have to consider that they originate in regions of the world that, unlike some other regions outside the West, presently cannot usually afford the establishment of university chairs to promote the research of their artistic heritage. My thanks therefore extends to Tilburg University’s Faculty of Humanities, whose Dean Arie de Ruijter, an anthropologist, showed no hesitation in giving this new chair an institution- al home. Behind the scenes, my good colleague Raymond Corbey has been instrumental in bringing all parties together. Ray, I can only hope that I will prove worthy of the trust that you, the Treub Foundation, and Tilburg University have put in me.

Ik heb gezegd.

Notes

22 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 23 1 Felipe Fernández-Armesto, Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration (New York: W. W. 8 Günter Tessmann, Die Pangwe: Völkerkundliche Monographie eines westafrikanischen Norton, 2006). Negerstammes (Berlin: Ernst Wasmuth, 1913; reprinted by Johnson Reprint Corporation, New York, 1972, with a new “Geleitwort des Verfassers zu seiner Pangwe-Monographie”), I: 275; II: 116ff. 2 But see Siep Stuurman, De uitvinding van de mensheid. Korte wereldgeschiedenis van het denken over gelijkheid en cultuurverschil (Amsterdam: Bert Bakker, 2009), a study that focuses on how vari- 9 Louis Perrois, Visions of Africa: Fang (Milan: 5 Continents Press, 2006), p. 7. See also Perrois, La ous traditions of thought around the world (especially Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Greek and statuaire faη, Gabon (Paris: ORSTOM, 1972), p. 9, n. 2. Chinese philosophy) have dealt with people outside their own circles in terms of their “humanity.” 10 Perrois, Visions of Africa: Fang, p. 8. 3 To be clear, I am not having in mind the influence that distinct visual art traditions have exer- cised on the art forms of other traditions, although this “artistic convergence,” if you like, is to 11 Hans Himmelheber, Marcel Griaule, P. Jan Vandenhoute, and Albert Maesen, among others. varying degrees often part of the encounter between cultures. Indeed, my Leiden colleague Kitty Zijlmans and I are promoting examinations of this phenomenon under the heading of “intercultur- 12 “les ‘byéri’ faη ne sont presque plus utilisés de nos jours, on ne les trouve que dans les musées; alization in art,” conceived as one major subject of analysis within the new field of world art stud- l’art faη est un art disparu, ou plutôt mort ….” (Perrois, La statuaire faη, p. 9; see also p. 12, and ies. See World Art Studies: Exploring Concepts and Approaches ed. Kitty Zijlmans and Wilfried van Visions of Africa: Fang, p. 9). For a recent discussion of the reasons for the demise of Fang anthro- Damme (Amsterdam: Valiz, 2008). pomorphic sculpture, see Jessica Levin Martinez, “Ephemeral Fang Reliquaries: A Post-History,” African Arts 43.1 (2010), pp. 32-33. The main argument of Martinez’s essay, for that matter, is that 4 For more on this topic, see Wilfried van Damme, “‘Good to Think’: The Historiography of the memory of Fang statues lives on in various ways in Gabon to this day. Intercultural Art Studies,” World Art 1.1 (2011): 53-69. 13 Perrois, La statuaire faη, pp. 7-8. 5 For a more extensive analysis of the history of the label “anthropology of art,” and its vari- ous interpretations, see Wilfried van Damme, “Anthropologies of Art,” International Journal 14 See Frans M. Olbrechts, Plastiek van Kongo (Antwerpen: Standaard Boekhandel, 1945). The of Anthropology 18.4 (2003): 231-44; reprinted in adapted form as “Anthropologies of Art: Three manuscript of this book was finished in 1940, but the Second World War delayed its publication. A Approaches,” in Exploring World Art, ed. Eric Venbrux, Pamela Rossi, and Robert L. Welsh, pp. French edition was published in 1959 (Les arts plastiques du Congo belge (Brussels: Erasme; transla- 69-81 (Long Grove: Waveland Press, 2006). See also, for example, The Anthropology of Art, ed. tion A Gillès de Pélichy). For summaries and discussions of Olbrechts’s morphological and style Howard Morphy and Morgan Perkins (London: Blackwell, 2006). area approach, see Daniel Crowley, “Stylistic Analysis of African Art: A Reassessment of Olbrechts’ ‘Belgian Method’,” African Arts 9.2 (1976): 43-49, and Constantine Petridis, “Olbrechts and the 6 For more elaborate discussions of these “first contact” situations, see James W. Fernandez, Morphological Approach to African Sculptural Art,” in Frans M. Olbrechts: In Search of Art in Africa, Bwiti: An Ethnography of the Religious Imagination in Africa (Princeton: Princeton University Press, ed. Constantine Petridis, pp. 119-40 (Antwerp: Etnografisch Museum, 2001). 1982), pp. 29ff., and Xavier Cadet, Histoire des Fang, peuple gabonais. Les Tropiques entre mythe et réalité (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2009). Louis Perrois describes the Western acquaintance with and 15 See Petridis, “Olbrechts and the Morphological Approach to African Sculptural Art,” and idem collecting of objects in western equatorial Africa from the 1850s to the 1930s in “The Western “‘A Remarkable Exhibition in the City Festival Hall’: Congolese Art in Antwerp (1937-38),” in Frans Historiography of African Reliquary Sculpture,” in Eternal Ancestors: The Art of Central African M. Olbrechts: In Search of Art in Africa, pp. 177ff. Reliquary, ed. Alissa LaGamma, pp. 63-77 (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art / New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007). 16 Perrois, Visions of Africa: Fang, p. 8. Perrois also notes that his mentor Leroi-Gourhan was him- self pursuing stylistic analysis at this time, focusing on Paleolithic cave paintings in Europe. 7 See, for example, Ben-Ami Scharfstein, Art Without Borders: A Philosophical Exploration of Art and Humanity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009), p. 279. 17 Perrois, La statuaire faη, pp. 7-8.

24 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 25 18 Although he has since made a few modifications, Perrois, having by now extended his corpus to 25 Raymond Corbey, “Natuurlijke historie als exploratie en exploitatie,” in De exotische mens. some 1000 works, basically retains his classification of Fang statuary (see Perrois, Visions of Africa: Andere culturen als amusement, ed. Patrick Allegaert and Bert Sliggers, pp. 67-75 (Tielt: Lannoo, Fang). 2009).

19 James W. Fernandez and Renate L. Fernandez, “Fang Reliquary Art: Its Quantities and 26 From what I know, and perhaps not surprisingly, no scholar involved in style area approaches Qualities,” Cahiers d’Etudes africaines 25.4 (1975): 723-46. Sydney Kasfir, “One Tribe, One Style? mentions this as a motivation for their efforts (as anthropologists might say, their emic motivations Paradigms in the Historiography of African Art,” History in Africa 11 (1984): 163-93, has criticized do not correspond to the incentives suggested by etic analyses). Rather, one usually states as one’s the tendency among Africanist art scholars to equate “styles” with “tribes” more generally, point- aim the attribution of previously nonclassified objects in space, and possibly time, thus also intro- ing, for example, to the ahistorical character of this approach. ducing attempts at reconstructing cultural history through objects as one possible goal of stylistic analyses in scholarship; for the latter, see, for example, Carl A. Schmitz, “Style Provinces and Style 20 For a reappraisal of style studies in the anthropology of art, see Pieter ter Keurs, “The Return Elements: A Study in Method,” Mankind 5.3 (1956): 107-16. of Style Analysis: A New Exploration of an Old Subject,” in Framing Indonesian Realities: Essays in Symbolic Anthropology in Honour of Reimar Schefold, ed. Peter J.M. Nas, Gerard A. Persoon, and 27 See Fernandez, Bwiti. Rivke Jaffe, pp. 161-76 (Leiden: KITLV Press, 2003). 28 For Boas and his school, as Paula Girshick has suggested, art was seen as “an expression of the 21 The most extensive example is Reimar Schefold, Versuch einer Stilanalyse der Aufhängehaken deepest cultural values” (“Envisioning Art Worlds: New Directions in the Anthropology of Art,” in vom Mittleren Sepik in Neu Guinea (Basel: Pharon Verlag, 1966). World Art Studies: Exploring Concepts and Approaches, p. 219). The idea that the visual arts reflect or embody a culture’s mind-set had already been suggested by various eighteenth- and nineteenth- 22 Alfred C. Haddon, The Decorative Art of British New Guinea (Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, century scholars in Germany and elsewhere, including not only Herder and Hegel but also Boas’s 1894). See also his Evolution in Art, As Illustrated by the Life-Histories of Designs (London: Walter mentor in anthropology, Adolf Bastian, who regarded artistic objects as the “incarnations of folk Scott, 1895). Another early study is Konrad T. Preuss, “Künstlerische Darstellungen aus Kaiser- ideas,” and even the “sole imprints” of a people’s “folk spirit” (as cited by Paola Ivanov, “‘… to Wilhelmsland in ihrer Bedeutung für die Ethnologie,” Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 29 (1897): 77-139. observe fresh life and save ethnic imprints of it.’ Bastian and Collecting Activities in Africa During the 19th and Early 20th Centuries,” in Adolf Bastian and the Universal Archive of Humanity: The 23 This is in itself in accordance with the scientific rather than scholarly approach that the first Origins of German Anthropology, ed. Manuela Fischer, Peter Bolz, and Susan Kamel, pp. 238, 239 two generations of anthropologists in the second half of the nineteenth century followed in their (Hildesheim: Georg Holms Verlag, 2007)). studies of extra-European societies, including their material culture and art. Indeed, anthropol- ogy being to a large extent a museum-based science in those early years, its practitioners often 29 See, for example, Melville J. Herkovits and Frances S. Herskovits, “Bush-Negro Art,” The Arts focused on objects, seen as the hard, scientific evidence on which to base the analysis of culture. 17 (1930): 25-37, 48-49, dealing with the arts of the Maroons, descendants of enslaved Africans in See, for example, Frances Larson, “Anthropology as Comparative Anatomy? Reflecting on the Study Suriname. For a survey and analysis of Herkovits’s writings on the arts of the Fon, see Suzanne P. of Material Culture During the Late 1880s and the Late 1900s,” Journal of Material Culture 12.1 Blier, “Melville J. Herskovits and the Arts of Ancient Dahomey,” RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics 16 (2007): 89-112, for British anthropology, and H. Glenn Penny, Objects of Culture: Ethnology and (1988): 125-42. Ethnographic Museums in Imperial Germany (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002) for German anthropology. 30 Many of Herkovits’s students would devote attention to visual art and artists in African cul- tures, including William Bascom, Justine M. Cordwell, Daniel J. Crowley, Warren L. d’Azevedo, 24 As an interesting aside, it has been suggested that the emphasis on style in African art stud- John C. Messenger, Simon Ottenberg, and James H. Vaughan. With the exception of Cordwell and ies has until the 1960s served as a way of making African sculpture acceptable as a subject for Ottenberg, all these scholars, also including Fernandez, contributed to the volume The Traditional the discipline of art history, characterized at the time by stylistic analysis, under the influence in Artist in African Societies, ed. Warren L. d’Azevedo (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1973; part of modernist formalism. See Marie-Jeanne Adams, “African Visual Arts from an Art Historical reprint 1989, with a new Preface). The volume, which is still the most comprehensive of its kind Perspective,” African Studies Review 32.2 (1989), p. 56. 26 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 27 today, is dedicated to Herskovits “for whom individual creativity was the essence of humanity, and recognized by the Fang as a source of a statue’s quality. For more details, see Fernandez, “Principles who persistently urged his students and colleagues to discover the art in culture.” of Opposition and Vitality,” p. 59 (reprint pp. 365-66).

31 Fernandez (1982: xx) relates that it was Herskovits “who focused my African interests on reli- 39 See, for example, Wilfried van Damme, “World Aesthetics: Biology, Culture, and Reflection,” gion and it was he, out of his … pronounced relativism, who initiated my interest in the ‘creation of in Compression vs. Expression: Containing and Explaining the World’s Art, ed. John Onians cultural realities’.” Fernandez also mentions that “To me the best work in anthropology has been (Williamstown: Clark Art Institute, 2006), pp. 164, 168-69. done, to speak only of a generation or age grade now passed on, by Malinowski, Ruth Benedict, E.E. Evans Pritchard, Marcel Griaule, and Clyde Kluckhohn” – not so much because of the theoretical 40 See, for example, Edward Slingerland, What Science Offers the Humanities: Integrating Body perspectives their works propound but because of “their embeddedness in the local idiom, their and Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), esp. pp. 163-64, referring to Mark skillful presentations of local points of view ….” For more on Fernandez’s approach to culture, Johnson’s The Body in Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination and Reason (Chicago: albeit with an emphasis on his later work, see Jerry D. Moore, Visions of Culture: An Introduction to University of Chicago Press, 1987). Anthropological Theories and Theorists (Walnut Creek: Altamira Press, 1997), chap. 21. 41 See, for example, Erwin Panosky, Meaning in the Visual Arts (Garden City: Doubleday, 1955). 32 James W. Fernandez, “Principles of Opposition and Vitality among the Fang, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 25.1 (1966): 53-64; reprinted in Art and Aesthetics in Primitive Societies, ed. Carol F. 42 Susan M. Vogel, Beauty in the Eyes of the Baule: Aesthetics and Cultural Values (Philadelphia: Jopling, pp. 356-73 (New York: Dutton, 1971). On Fang sculpture and its creators, see also his “The Institute for the Study of Human Issues, 1980). Exposition and Imposition of Order: Artistic Expression in Fang Culture,” in The Traditional Artist in African Societies, pp. 194-220. 43 Fang: An Epic Journey. Written and directed by Susan M. Vogel (Prince Street Pictures Inc. [New York], 2002). 33 Indeed, the symmetrical character of the figures would seem to Western eyes to give them a static rather than dynamic character, cf. Frank Willet, African Art (London: Thames and Hudson, 44 At the beginning of the film, a caption reads: “This is a work of fiction – but everything in it is 1971), p. 220. based on real events ….” In the booklet accompanying the film, Vogel is careful to qualify this state- ment by adding that “No single object followed this entire path, but many different African objects 34 I am not aware of any other scholar (Western, Fang, or otherwise) discussing this concept. followed parts of it” (note the adjective African rather than Fang), “The History Behind the Film,” in Incidentally, Fang visual art and aesthetics seem not to have been examined by scholars of Fang Idol Becomes Art! Notes and a Roundtable Discussion, ed. Susan M. Vogel (Prince Street Productions descent. [New York], 2002), p. 1. The scholarship on which the film is based could be subjected to further analysis. 35 Cf. Alan Barnard, History and Theory in Anthropology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 172. 45 At least, this is what is suggested in Vogel, “The History Behind the Film,” p. 1; it is not all that clear in the film itself. 36 Fernandez, Bwiti, pp. 390, 578. 46 Julius E. Lips (1895-1950) was Director of the the Rautenstrauch Joest Museum, Cologne’s 37 Fernandez, “Principles of Opposition and Vitality,” p. 55 (reprint pp. 360-61). ethnographic museum. Having been hounded from his post by the Nazis, he fled to the USA in 1934, where he would teach at various universities. In 1937 he published The Savage Hits Back, Or 38 It is not quite clear whether the second part of this additional analysis can be supported by the White Man Through Native Eyes (New Haven: Yale Universiy Press), a study of the ways in which overt Fang views, but the interpretation is consistent with what we know about Fang conceptu- Europeans had been depicted in sculptures from outside the West. As Lips describes in his chill- alizations. Fernandez discusses yet another type of balanced opposition in statues, namely ing Preface to The Savage Hits Back, it was his collection of photos for this book that infuriated the between references to infants and intimations of old age, an opposition that is said to be explicitly Nazis, who desperately tried to get their hands on what they considered insults to the “Aryan race.” Lips returned to (East) Germany in 1948 to teach at the University of Leipzig. 28 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 29 47 “This is the only event in the film not based on a known case” (Vogel, “The History Behind the 54 In the roundtable discussion on the film that is reported in Idol Becomes Art!, Alissa LaGamma, Film,” p. 5). curator of African art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, comments: “One thing that is lacking here is the complete [life] history [of the statue] – the original Fang context in which it 48 Vogel, “The History Behind the Film,” pp. 5-6. served. The film does not take into account the original source of inspiration for carving the sculp- ture, the world of ideas and beliefs that were part of its reason of being.” To which Enid Schildkrout, 49 Blurb text of Fang: An Epic Journey. curator of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History, New York, replies: “The film is not about Africa and doesn’t try to be. …. The problem is for people who are concerned with 50 The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, ed. Arjun Appadurai (Cambridge: Africa … because they care about that. .… the life history of the piece in the Western art world … is Cambridge University Press, 1986). Most influential have been Appadurai’s “Introduction: what the film is actually about” (p. 10). Commodities and the Politics of Value” and Igor Kopytoff’s contribution “The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process.” 55 Indulging my old love, “the anthropology of aesthetics,” I searched the worldwide web for Ethnologie+Ästhetik in early 2009 and found a reference to an 1891 essay written by Ernst Grosse, 51 See, for example, The Scramble for Art in Central Africa, ed. Enid Schildkrout and Curtis A. titled “Ethnologie und Aesthetik” (Vierteljahrsschrift für wissenschaftliche Philosophie 15.4: 392-417). Keim (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998); Collecting Colonialism: Material Cultural Researching this programmatic essay and its intellectual context led me to consider the global and Colonial Change, ed. Chris Gosden and Chantal Knowles (Oxford: Berg, 2001); Hunting the examination of art in the work of several late-nineteenth-century scholars. See also Wilfried van Gatherers: Ethnographic Collectors, Agents, and Agency in Melanesia, 1870s-1930s, ed. Michael Damme, “Ernst Grosse and the ‘Ethnological Method’ in Art Theory,” Philosophy and Literature O’Hanlon and Robert L. Welsch (Oxford: Berghan Books, 2001); Treasure Hunting? Collectors and 34.2 (2010): 302-312. Collections of Indonesian Artefacts, ed. Reimar Schefold and Han F. Vermeulen (Leiden: CNWS Publications, 2002); Colonial Collections Revisited, ed. Pieter ter Keurs (Leiden: CNWS Publications, 2007). An early study is Douglas Cole, Captured Heritage: The Scramble for Northwest Coast Artifacts (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1985; reprint 1995). See also, for example, Colonialism and the Object: Empire, Material Culture and the Museum, ed. Tim Barringer and Tom Flynn (London: Routledge, 1998), Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture, ed. Elisabeth Edwards, Chris Gosden, and Ruth Phillips (Oxford: Berg, 2001).

52 On trade, collectors, the international art market, and the notion of authenticity, see, for exam- ple, Christopher B. Steiner, African Art in Transit (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994); Unpacking Culture: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds, ed. Ruth B. Phillips and Christopher B. Steiner (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999); Raymond Corbey, Tribal Art Traffic: A Chronicle of Taste, Trade and Desire in Colonial and Post-Colonial Times (Amsterdam: KIT Publishers, 2000).

53 See, for example, Exploring World Art, Christraud M. Geary and Stephanie Xatart, Material Journeys: Collecting African and Oceanic Art, 1945-2000 (Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 2007), Girshick, “Envisioning Art Worlds.” Also, for example, the Fifteenth Triennial Symposium of African Art, UCLA, May 2011, has as its theme “Africa and Its Diasporas in the Market Place: Cultural Resources and the Global Economy.”

30 Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa Western Scholarship and Fang Statuary from Equatorial Africa 31