19/03/2026
This drawing was adapted from the incredible art by .n exhibited at the fair. Three Basins that hold nostalgic and sentimental value to me (and no doubt many Nigerian millennials, as they used to be our little household stores) exhibited heads that seemed trapped in memory.
I'm reminded, too, by this wondrous piece about how we've lost many of our historically valuable vessels and art pieces to the looting thieves that was the British colonial government. Like Jasmine/Badroulbadour of the Arabian tale, we've been duped of the old incomparable pieces of our heritage in exchange for trendy trinkets that have done us little good.
How have we paid for this loss?
First, the cruel British magician now has power over our story. When artifacts travel, so does the power to explain them. Western curators put them in cases with labels that lie. The world learns about Nigerian culture through foreign eyes. The tools for telling the tale, like Aladdin's lamp, are in someone else's hands.
Second, cultural amnesia. Those objects were our libraries. When they left, the stories left with them. Now, new generations try to piece together their past through fragments, often described to them by the very places that took them.
Third? The money. Nigerian treasures now fill fancy museums in London, Paris, New York, draw crowds, sell tickets, and fund research. Meanwhile, the communities they came from? Nothing.
What is more? The doubt. A crippling genie of doubt has been rubbed awake from each piece by pale colonial hands, and they've yanked violently at our self-esteem. That nagging feeling that maybe our own wasn't good enough? That we should look outward for artistic and cultural excellence instead of inward? That's the greatest harm that this loss has caused us.
We MUST get back what is ours.
n 's piece was one of my favorites of the exhibition, and I'm pleased with the thoughts it ignited in my head.