Afrocentric Art Museums of Nigeria
Becky Oludayo Peleowo@beckyoludayoadenuga426965
1 month ago
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📍Onikan, Lagos State, Nigeria
DAY 23 - THE NATIONAL ART MUSEUM, ONIKAN, LAGOS
Imagine spending a night at a museum and then everything comes to live. Such is the experience at the National Art Museum in Onikan, Lagos State. Established in 1957, the museum is one of the best in the country.
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We see a museum as a bank of cultural resources, a collection of memories about man’s way of life, his achievements and progress over time. Museums are places where history is made tangible. Museums in Nigeria are memory banks that remind us of our past, inspire our present, and help us to plan for the future. The origin of man’s existence can majorly be traced through the works of arts. Museums render invaluable help to unlock memories.
Some memorable collections at the National Museum
The museum houses the collections of artifacts belonging to different cultures of the ethnic groups in Nigeria. The size of the collection is estimated at 47,000 objects made of different materials such as wood, ivory, metal and terracotta. The artifacts include masks, textiles, drums, dane guns and wooden figures. Among the artifacts, in the Yoruba section, the museum includes Egungun costumes and clay pots. The museum has a collection of statues dating from different periods of Nigeria's history.
The museum also houses traditional musical instruments such as sansas, fiddles and flutes. The museum also contains divination bowls and ancestral figures made of wood, including Mumuye figures, which are used by communities in Adamawa State as well as Ikengas wooden figures, which are part of the Igbo culture. Additionally, the museum also contains a collection of masks including Ekpo masks from Calabar and Gẹlẹdẹ wooden masks.
The museum contains jewelry and crafts, as well as a collection of textiles including Akwete cloth and other textiles from the Okene, Bida and Western States areas of Nigeria.
The museum has displayed works of art by Nigerian artists such as Nike Davies-Okundaye, Abiodun Olaku, Djakow Kassi, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Bolaji Ogunwo, Yusuf Durodola, Chinze Ojobo. Nosa Iyobhabha, Duke Sidéré, Ben Enwonwu, Nathaniel Hodonu, Northcote W. Thomas, Kelani Abass and Elizabeth Ekpetorson. In 2012, the museum presented an exhibition featuring artwork by artist Ndidi Dike. In November 2019, the museum organized an exhibition with art pieces by German-Nigerian artist Ngozi Schommers. The museum contains ancient crowns, Royal regalias, artifacts belonging to the Kingdom of Benin, cultural objects belonging to the Ibibio people, Igbo-Ukwu bronze artifacts, stone monoliths of the Oron culture and terracottas belonging to the Nok culture. The museum also contains photographs of the different presidents of the states of Nigeria. In the textile section, there is a collection of batik fabrics. The museum also has Ere figurines, photographs on the colonization of Nigeria and exhibits related to the culture of Ifẹ, an ancient Yoruba city.
The museum contains a variety of sculptures. Among these are the grave sculptures of the Dakakari people who inhabit Sokoto State. These types of sculptures are used in graves to commemorate the death of an important person such as a warrior, social leader or a chief. The museum also contains a sculpture of a Sukur woman in traditional dress from Adamawa State. At the entrance of the museum, also with a sculpture of a deity called Chukwu, of Igbo spirituality. The museum also houses stone sculptures of the Ekoi people. The museum also has sculptures of animals that are used in different cultures of the ethnic groups of Nigeria.
Photo Credit : Google Images
Reference: Property pro.ng, Wikipedia
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