XII. Face to Face
Print
1984 (made)
1984 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
In 1897, following a series of frustrated attempts to end a monopoly on palm oil and various other commodities held by the Oba (king) of Benin, the British led a punitive raid on Benin City. Justification for this brutal event was sought, in the British press, by depicting the Oba and his people as ‘savages’ who practised human sacrifice. However, the elaborately carved ivories and cast brass plaques and sculpture seized from the royal court, and dispersed to British museum collections, were evidence of a sophisticated and technologically-advanced society.
This unsavoury aspect of British history was reflected on by artist Tony Phillips in a 1984 series of etchings, History of the Benin Bronzes. In the series, Phillips adopts the unusual technique of reusing a printing plate to create a second image, with elements of the first image still visible. Thus, in this image, the last in the suite of twelve plates, we revisit a mask worn by one of the odudua dancers (scene five, E.52-1987) to find it encased in glass and spot lit in a gallery. The schematic way in which the gallery environment is depicted emphasises the means by which the mask has been forcibly removed from its original context.
This unsavoury aspect of British history was reflected on by artist Tony Phillips in a 1984 series of etchings, History of the Benin Bronzes. In the series, Phillips adopts the unusual technique of reusing a printing plate to create a second image, with elements of the first image still visible. Thus, in this image, the last in the suite of twelve plates, we revisit a mask worn by one of the odudua dancers (scene five, E.52-1987) to find it encased in glass and spot lit in a gallery. The schematic way in which the gallery environment is depicted emphasises the means by which the mask has been forcibly removed from its original context.
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Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Titles |
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Materials and techniques | Etching, printed in blue |
Brief description | 'Face to Face', etching from the series 'History of the Benin Bronzes', Tony Phillips, 1984 |
Physical description | Etching depicting a mask worn by one of the odudua dancers (scene five, E.52-1987), now encased in glass and spot lit in a gallery. |
Dimensions |
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Copy number | Plate XII of XII |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | In 1897, following a series of frustrated attempts to end a monopoly on palm oil and various other commodities held by the Oba (king) of Benin, the British led a punitive raid on Benin City. Justification for this brutal event was sought, in the British press, by depicting the Oba and his people as ‘savages’ who practised human sacrifice. However, the elaborately carved ivories and cast brass plaques and sculpture seized from the royal court, and dispersed to British museum collections, were evidence of a sophisticated and technologically-advanced society. This unsavoury aspect of British history was reflected on by artist Tony Phillips in a 1984 series of etchings, History of the Benin Bronzes. In the series, Phillips adopts the unusual technique of reusing a printing plate to create a second image, with elements of the first image still visible. Thus, in this image, the last in the suite of twelve plates, we revisit a mask worn by one of the odudua dancers (scene five, E.52-1987) to find it encased in glass and spot lit in a gallery. The schematic way in which the gallery environment is depicted emphasises the means by which the mask has been forcibly removed from its original context. |
Associated objects | |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.59-1987 |
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Record created | July 27, 2000 |
Record URL |
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