The return of African art to Africa

Dahomey door quai Branly

Emmanuel Macron is right to want to return African art to Africa

He just needs to do it faster.

By Ido Vock (Ido Vock is a Europe correspondent at the New Statesman ) 2 March 2023

( Preferez-vous lire l'article en Français ? Macron a raison de vouloir rendre l’art africain en Afrique )

image above: A door from the kingdom of Dahomey in moder-day Benin, held in the Quai Branly Museum, France. Photo by Michel Euler / AP

“I cannot accept that a large share of several African countries’ cultural heritage be kept in France,” Emmanuel Macron said on a 2017 official visit to Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso. Speaking at the University of Ouagadougou, he acknowledged that there is “no valid, lasting and unconditional justification” for artwork taken from the continent during the colonial period to be held in Europe permanently. He added that he wanted “the conditions to be in place within five years for the… return of African heritage to Africa”.

Yet in the six years since, despite demands by multiple African countries for art taken from the continent to be returned, progress to repatriate looted artwork has been glacial. Tens of thousands of pieces are estimated to be held in France, yet only a handful have so far been returned.

In an apparent attempt to speed matters up, on 27 February 2023 Macron announced a bill to streamline the process of restitution. The proposed law will “codify the methodology and criteria for proceeding”, Macron said, ahead of his 18th visit to Africa since taking office. He added that he hoped the law would fit in with a larger effort of European countries restoring looted art to their places of origin.

The scale of the issue is staggering. Nearly all – 90-95 per cent – of sub-Saharan Africa’s cultural heritage is estimated to be located outside Africa. Statistics compiled by the historian Bénédicte Savoy and the Senegalese academic Felwine Sarr suggest that hundreds of thousands of artworks are held in the collections of European museums, many of which were created with the intent to show off their countries’ colonial enterprise.

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