Ben Enwonwu's legendary 'African Mona Lisa' painting smashes estimates with $1.7 million price


 Nigerian author Ben Okri poses with a work of art by Nigerian painter and sculptor Ben Enwonwu entitled 'Tutu', the "African Mona Lisa" sold at auction in London for £1.2 million (1.4 million euros, $1.7 million), setting a record for the artist




A long-lost portrait of a Nigerian princess dubbed the "African Mona Lisa" sold at auction in London on Wednesday for £1.2 million (1.4 million euros, $1.7 million), exceeding estimates and setting a record for the artist.
The 1974 painting of Adetutu "Tutu" Ademiluyi, by Nigerian artist Ben Enwonwu, was expected to fetch up to £300,000 (339,000 euros, $414,000) when it went under the hammer at Bonhams auction house.
It described the painting of an Ife royal princess which recently turned up in a London flat after not being seen in decades as "rare and remarkable".
"The portrait of Tutu is a national icon in Nigeria, and of huge cultural significance," said Giles Peppiatt, Bonham's director of modern african art.
He uncovered the work after a family in north London contacted him following lucrative recent sales of Nigerian artworks at auction.

 Nigerian author Ben Okri poses with a work of art by Nigerian painter and sculptor Ben Enwonwu entitled 'Tutu', the "African Mona Lisa" sold at auction in London for £1.2 million (1.4 million euros, $1.7 million), setting a record for the artist

Peppiatt added the family were "pretty astounded" to learn it was "a missing masterpiece".
"It is very exciting to have played a part in the discovery and sale of this remarkable work," he said.
Booker Prize-winning novelist Ben Okri told AFP earlier this month that the painting had taken on almost mythical status in his native Nigeria where it was thought of as "the African Mona Lisa".
"It has been a legendary painting for 40 years, everybody keeps talking about Tutu, saying 'where is Tutu?'" he said after a viewing at Bonhams.
"He wasn't just painting the girl, he was painting the whole tradition. It's a symbol of hope and regeneration to Nigeria, it's a symbol of the phoenix rising," Okri added.
The painter Enwonwu, who died in 1994, is considered the father of Nigerian modernism.
He made three paintings of "Tutu", the locations of all of which had been a mystery until the recent discovery.
The works became symbols of peace following the clash of ethnic groups in the Nigerian–Biafran conflict of the late 1960s.
Enwonwu's work "Negritude", also painted in the 1970s, sold for £100,000 (113,000 euros $138,000)in the same sale.
The auction was broadcast live to a Bonhams site in Lagos, where bidders were able to participate in real time.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

John Oliver has been sued by the coal baron he tried to take down, which he predicted would happen

NEWS

APC Chieftain cautions Kalu over comments on Buhari’s HealthABUJA – A founding chieftain of the All Progressives Congress APC in Abia state, Prince Paul Ikonne has cautioned a former governor of the state, Orji Uzor Kalu to avoid comments that could portray the party as incapable of keeping to its words. Ikonne was speaking against the backdrop of the former governor’s declaration that ailing President Muhammadu Buhari would return before June 12, urging him to refrain from acting as the president’s unofficial spokesman. “Last time, Dr Orji Uzor Kalu told Nigerians that President Buhari would return soon and he is not the spokesman of the President. Till now, the President is yet to return. He should keep quiet and learn to live like an elder statesman, not trying to take the job of the president’s spokesmen”, he said. Speaking with journalists Thursday in Abuja, Ikonne who was a governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria ACN, said 95 percent of the people of Abia are not happy with the way Kalu governed Abia for eight years.