Nigeria's 'Mona Lisa' shown at home for
first time since it resurfaced
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[November 07, 2018]
By Seun Sanni and Angela Ukomadu
LAGOS (Reuters) - The Nigerian Mona Lisa, a
painting lost for more than 40 years and found in a London flat in
February, is being exhibited in Nigeria for the first time since it
disappeared.
"Tutu", an art work by Nigeria's best-known modern artist, Ben Enwonwu,
was painted in 1974. It appeared at an art show in Lagos the following
year, but its whereabouts after that were unknown, until it re-surfaced
in north London.
The owners - who wished to remain anonymous - had called in Giles
Peppiatt, an expert in modern and contemporary African art at the London
auction house Bonhams, to identify their painting. He recognized
Enwonwu's portrait.
"It was discovered by myself on a pretty routine valuation call to look
at a work by Ben Enwonwu," said Giles Peppiatt, director of contemporary
African art at Bonhams. "I didn't know what I was going to see. I turned
up, and it was this amazing painting. We'd had no inkling 'Tutu' was
there.
How it got there remains a bit of a mystery, Peppiatt said.
"All the family that owned it know is that it was owned by their father,
who had business interests in Nigeria. He traveled and picked it up in
the late or mid-70s."
The family put the portrait up for sale, and it was auctioned for 1.2
million pounds ($1.57 million) in February to an anonymous buyer. The
sale made it the highest-valued work of Nigerian modern art sold at
auction.
"Tutu" was loaned to the Art X Lagos fair, held from Friday to Sunday,
by Access Bank, the organizers said in a statement. Peppiatt said Access
arranged the loan but is not the painting's owner.
"'Tutu' is referred to as the African 'Mona Lisa' by virtue of this
disappearance and re-emergence, and it is the first work of a modern
Nigerian artist to sell for over a million pounds," said Tokini
Peterside, the art fair's founder.
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Workers install a painting entitled "Tutu", an artwork by late
Nigerian artist Ben Enwonwu, for the Art X Lagos fair, in this
handout picture obtained by Reuters November 5, 2018. ARTX
Team/Handout via REUTERS
The original Mona Lisa, Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece, was stolen
from the Louvre in 1911. The thief, Vincenzo Peruggia, eventually
took it to Italy, where it was recovered and in 1914 returned to the
Louvre.
The Nigerian painting is a portrait of Adetutu Ademiluyi, a
grand-daughter of a traditional ruler from the Yoruba ethnic group.
It holds special significance in Nigeria as a symbol of national
reconciliation after the 1967-70 Biafran War.
Enwonwu belonged to the Igbo ethnic group, the largest in the
southeastern region of Nigeria, which had tried to secede under the
name of Biafra. The Yoruba, whose homeland is in the southwest, were
mostly on the opposing side in the war.
Enwonwu painted three versions of the portrait. One is in a private
collection in Lagos, while Peppiatt is hunting the third in
Washington D.C., the expert said. Prints first made in the 1970s
have been in circulation ever since and the images are familiar to
many Nigerians. Enwonwu died in 1994.
(Reporting by Seun Sanni and Angela Ukomadu, writing by Paul Carsten,
editing by Larry King)
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