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Maney Publishing The Exhibition and Conservation of African Objects: Considering the Nontangible Author(s): Stephen P. Mellor Source: Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, Vol. 31, No. 1, Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque, New Mexico, June 3-8, 1991 (Spring, 1992), pp. 3-16 Published by: Maney Publishing on behalf of The American Institute for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3179607 . Accessed: 15/06/2014 00:43 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Maney Publishing and The American Institute for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of the American Institute for Conservation. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 62.122.72.154 on Sun, 15 Jun 2014 00:43:42 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

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Page 1: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

Maney Publishing

The Exhibition and Conservation of African Objects: Considering the NontangibleAuthor(s): Stephen P. MellorSource: Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, Vol. 31, No. 1, Conservation ofSacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of theAmerican Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque, NewMexico, June 3-8, 1991 (Spring, 1992), pp. 3-16Published by: Maney Publishing on behalf of The American Institute for Conservation of Historic &Artistic WorksStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3179607 .

Accessed: 15/06/2014 00:43

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Maney Publishing and The American Institute for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works are collaboratingwith JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of the American Institute for Conservation.

http://www.jstor.org

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Page 2: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN

OBJECTS: CONSIDERING THE NONTANGIBLE

STEPHEN P. MELLOR

ABSTRACT--This paper examines the use, func-

tion, and maintenance of particular objects with non-

tangible significance in some African cultures.

Deductive observations about these objects allow

possible conclusions to be drawn regarding: (1) an African perception of magic, sacred, and power; and

(2) an African perception of culturally significant ob-

jects in and out of an indigenous context. The sug- gestion is stressed that it is the responsibility of the conservator to remain informed about an object's nontangible attributes and to treat African objects with cultural dignity.

1. INTRODUCTION

Many people in Western cultures view African

objects as culturally foreign and aesthetically challenging while readily acknowledging their nontangible attributes. Yet these nontangible at- tributes are often poorly defined and considered not only incomprehensible but also potentially dangerous. These attributes might include the concepts that objects embody supernatural spirits, personify ancestors, or maintain power inherently. As conservators, we work intimate-

ly on these objects; we understand the physical and chemical properties of these sometimes

complex constructions, but their nontangible aspects can still remain difficult curiosities that are partially addressed through courteous but uninformed acknowledgment, benign disregard, or even outright fear. This paper is an attempt to look at these nontangible attributes associated with African objects and how these attributes affect treatment decisions that we make in a

nonindigenous setting, that is, in art conserva- tion laboratories, studios, or exhibition planning meetings.

Some specific examples in African art where

nontangible attributes might have an effect on treatment decisions can be seen in the follow-

ing: 1. Should we look inside a Yoruba beaded

crown (fig. 1), considered to be the premier piece of divine regalia, to mend the textile

lining (fig. 2), or lend slides of its interior to the education department, when in cultural context it is forbidden for anyone, including the king, to view the interior?

2. Should we secure loose and detached frag- ments of sacrificial patination on a Bamana Komo headdress (fig. 3), when the amount and thickness of this incrustation (fig. 4) are

directly related to the degree and effective- ness of its cultural power?

3. Should we mend the shattered arm on a

Kongo nkisi figure (figs. 5-6), when cultural-

ly, destroying the object might be the only way to mitigate its unrestrainable power?

4. Should we feed, bathe, caress, or store in a

particular manner a Yoruba ibeji (figs. 7-8) to

placate the spirit of a deceased twin so that it does not call for the spirit of the surviving twin or its descendants?

5. How do we justify the public exhibition of an Igala shrine figure (fig. 9), which would have been restricted from public view and seen only by people of a specific age, sex, or initiate?

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Page 3: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

4 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

Africa is two and one-half times the size of the United States, contains 44 sub-Saharan countries, and thousands of linguistic and tradi- tional cultural groups. These factors--coupled with Africa's distance from the United States and its relative geographic inaccessibility, as well as the impact of culture change over time due to politics, religion, or colonialization-make ac- cess to the people who can best interpret an object's nontangible attributes difficult. In addi- tion, Africa lacks transcontinental advocacy groups who might actively address material cul- ture issues.

It is the intention in this paper to ascertain an indigenous perspective: how Africans feel about nontangible attributes, how Africans might view objects out of their cultural context, and how Africans might want us to treat their culturally significant objects.

2. THE AFRICAN VIEW OF NONTANGIBLE ATTRIBUTES

Without access to the people who made and used these objects, the best approach is to look at the use, function, and maintenance of objects in their cultural setting in an attempt to extrapo- late how Africans feel. The method of inquiry included an examination of the life histories of some objects in the Permanent Galleries at the National Museum of African Art (NMAfA), Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., as well as works in other collections with par- ticular nontangible significance. Curators, art historians, anthropologists, and Africans in the museum field who had contact with African cultures and could provide cultural insight were surveyed.

Curators are often our first source of infor- mation pertaining to collection objects. Their knowledge regarding manufacture, use, and col- lection history consistently refines a conservator's observations and treatment

proposals. However, the responses from curators when asked about nontangible aspects often seemed vague and ambiguous. One curator said, for example, that it was acceptable for

anyone to view the interior of the Yoruba crown on exhibition at NMAfA provided there were no Nigerians present. Other comments bordered on the pejorative, as in "I don't believe in ju-ju"-a reference to African

religion. From the literature, we can see that as early

as the 16th century, the nontangible attributes of African materials were being addressed. The text associated with a 1598 German engraving, titled Abjuration du Roi de Congo (fig. 10), argues that the forces emanating from some African

objects were so disturbing that it was necessary to burn them (MacGaffey 1990b). During the 19th century, when African objects increasingly entered Western cultural institutions, they were seen as curiosities and aberrations that did not fit within the realm of organized Western religions. Even today, some museum personnel admit to being slightly uncomfortable in African art storage and consciously avoid those areas.

Of course, in reality, complex cosmological and religious systems exist throughout Africa.

Simply stated, these systems exist to manipulate an invisible world that can directly affect the

day-to-day existence of a cultural group. In turn, they reinforce interpersonal interactions as well as political and economic systems.

In the literature, the terms "magic," "sacred," and "power" are often used randomly and inter- changeably in reference to African material cul- ture. To more clearly distinguish individual ob-

jects, distinctions among these categories are of- fered here. It should be presumed that in a cul- tural context there is less distinction between "magic," "sacred," and "power"; consequently, techniques for using these nontangible concepts

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Page 4: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS 5

and the interpretation of their results might ap- pear to overlap.

2.1 OBJECTS THAT ARE MAGIC

"Magic" is the most ubiquitous and also the most difficult concept to define. Magic transpires when supernatural forces are invoked to produce otherwise unexplainable, often in- dividualized results. The use of magic can be the domain of ritual specialists such as diviners, oracles, and witches as well as craftsmen who control the magic inherent in some raw materials.

A Chokwe divination basket (fig. 11) con- tains more than 100 reference symbols, such as small figures, miniature tools, or bundles of

plant and animal parts, that to the uninformed individual appear to become randomly con- figured when the basket is shaken. A diviner, however, can interpret these magic configura- tions. The diviner's abilities come from two

possible sources: He or she may have been trained by supernatural forces, or may be actual- ly spirit possessed during the consultation. These abilities allow the diviner to act on behalf of the

supernatural world to advise a client or solve a problem.

Interestingly, a diviner's prescription can result in the commissioning of a work of art such as a Baule female figure (fig. 12) (Anderson and Kreamer 1989) . The physical characteristics of the sculpture would be rigorously specified by the diviner. The Baule believe some spirits to be particularly hideous, with feet that point backwards, filthy skin, and wild red hair (Vogel 1973). In the case of this type of figure, it was the intention of the artist to create a sculpture that attains the highest cultural aesthetics, there- by placating a displeased or trouble-causing spirit. The commissioning and creation of the sculpture, rather than the actual existence of the

sculpture, magically intercede for the benefit of a client.

Similarly, a unique Akan double-headed akua'ba (fig. 13) was commissioned as a vehicle for supernatural forces to induce pregnancy. The akua'ba is carried by a woman for a specific period of time, adorned with beads, and suckled and treated as a real child, thus ensuring concep- tion and healthy delivery. After effecting preg- nancy, at which time it has fulfilled its function, the akua'ba can be relegated to a shrine as an advertisement for the success of supernatural in- tervention, or it might be sold, given away, or treated as any other secular object.

Throughout Africa, blacksmiths retain a high social standing because they control the in- herently magic raw material--iron. Among the Bamana, skill in smithing is seen as a mastery over the magic in nature and results in a con- centration of cultural energy (nyama) in the blacksmith himself This nyama affords the blacksmith tremendous authority, and his crea- tions, from farming implements to wrought sculptural forms (fig. 14), are a visible expression of this accumulated cultural energy.

2.2 OBJECTS THAT ARE SACRED

Sacred objects function within the more structured realm of traditional African religions and constitute the largest category of African material culture. Most African religions contain a broad and hierarchical pantheon of spirits often referred to as bush, water, and ancestral spirits. Within a community, these spirits can be reached through elaborate masquerades, within shrines or during annual ceremonies.

It is understood in Western cultures that masks such as a Kalabari water spirit mask or a Punu bush spirit mask (fig. 15) are only one component of a masquerading ceremony that includes an associated costume, dancing, music, and other ritual behavior (fig. 16). It is not well

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6 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

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Fig. 1. Crown, Yoruba peoples, Nigeria. Glass beads, basketry, textile, vegetable fiber, metal, H 30 3/4 in (78.1cm). NMAfA 24-1989-01 (private lender). Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

Fig. 2. Detail of fig. 1. Photograph by Dana Moffett

Fig. 3. Komo headdress, Bamana peoples, Mali. Wood, horn, porcupine quill, hair, metal, incrustation, Diam. 32 3/4 in (83.2cm). Seattle Art Museum, Katherine White Collection 81.17.18. Photograph by Steve Mellor

Fig. 4. Detail of fig. 3. Photograph by Steve Mellor

5 6 7.

5 6 7 8

Fig. 5. Nkisi, Kongo peoples, Zaire. Wood, iron, beads, vegetable fiber, glass, feathers, chalk, resin. H 31 11/16 in (81.4cm). Seattle Art Museum, Katherine White Collection 81.17.836. Photograph by Steve Mellor

Fig. 6. Detail of fig. 5; Proper right arm. Photograph by Steve Mellor

Fig. 7. Female twin figures (ere ibeji), Yoruba peoples, Nigeria. Wood, shell, vegetable fiber, takula, glass beads, pig- ment. H10 1/2 in (26.6cm). NMAfA 83-6-1.1, 1.2. Photograph by Ken Heinen

Fig. 8. Caretaker with memorial figures, representing three generations of twins in her family. Egbado, Yoruba. Photograph by Henry J. Drewal

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Page 6: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS 7

Fig. 9. (top) Icons: Ideals and Power in the Art of Afiica, exhibi- tion at the National Museum of African Art, 1898-90

Fig. 10. (center, left) Abjuration du Roi de Congo, Theodore and Israel DeBry, Frankfort, 1598. Engraving.

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Fig. 11. (center, right) Divina- tion basket, Chokwe peoples, Zaire and Angola. Basketry fiber and various materials, Diam. 15 3/4 in (40cm). NMAfA 86-12- 17.1-154. Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

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Fig. 12. Female figure (Blolo Bla or Asie Asu). Baule group, Akan peoples, Cote d'- Ivoire. Wood, metal, glass beads, vegetable fiber, H 18 3/4 in (47.6 cm). NMAfA 85-15-2. Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

Fig. 13. Akua'ba (male view), Asante group, Akan peoples, Ghana. Wood, glass beads, vegetable fiber, H 14 3/4 in (37.5cm). NMAfA 87-4-1. Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

Fig. 14. Staff top, Bamana peoples, Mali. Iron. H 9 1/8 in (23.2cm). NMAfA 85-19-1. Photograph by Kim Nielsen

Fig. 15. Mask, Punu peoples, Gabon. Wood, pigment, buttons, H 13 3/4 in (35cm). NMAfA 90- 6-1. Photograph by Dana Moffett

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Page 7: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

8 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

Fig. 16. Stilt dancer, Punu peoples, Gabon. Photograph by Michel Huet

Fig. 17. Shrine figure, Dogon peoples, Mali. Wood, patination. H 12 1/2 in (31.7cm). NMAfA EL81.67.2 (private lender). Photograph by the owner

Fig. 18. Male and female figures, Chamba peoples, Nigeria. Wood, pigment, incrustation. H 21 in (53.3cm). Private collection. Photograph by the owner

Fig. 19. Ancestor figure, Hemba peoples, Zaire. Wood. H 26 in (66cm). NMAfA 85-1-13. Photograph by Roger Asselberghs

16

17 18 19

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Page 8: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS 9

Fig. 20. Standing figure. Teke

peoples, Republic of Congo. Wood, clay, sand, tula, body cavity materials, H 14 3/4 in (37.5cm). NMAfA 90-2- 1. Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

Fig. 21. Figure, Songye peoples, Zaire. Wood, metal, shell, horn, ac- cumulated materials, H 26 in (66cm). NMAfA 86-4-1. Photograph by Jef- frey Ploskonka

Fig. 22. Komo headdress. Bamana

peoples, Mali. Wood, horn, por- cupine quills, feathers, incrustation. NMAfA Elisofon Archives.

Photograph by Eliot Elisofon

Fig. 23. Nkisi. Kongo peoples, Zaire. Wood, metal, raffia cloth, pigment, resin, shell, H 44 1/2 in (113.1cm). Field Museum of Natural History 109327. Photograph by Diane Alexander White

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Page 9: Conservation of Sacred Objects and Other Papers from the General Session of the 19th Annual Meeting of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. Albuquerque,

10 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

known, however, that masks never physically resemble or embody spirits but rather represent characteristics of the spirits such as aggression. Masks can also induce emotional responses such as fear and anxiety in the audience. Instead, it is the masker himself that is transformed into the supernatural spirit (Cole 1989). The entire ceremony activates spiritual power and mediates between the spiritual and visible worlds.

Shrines are found throughout Africa and vary widely in purpose, place, and form. A Dogon shrine figure (fig. 17) comes closest to typifying Western expectations of the appearance and use of shrine sculpture. The figure would have been placed on a personal altar and, amid incanta- tions, water and rice gruel would have been poured on it and probably several animals would have been sacrificed. For the Dogon people the sculpture serves several purposes. It identifies the individual who is asking for super- natural intervention, being made in his or her image and not that of a spirit. Moreover, the sculpture draws the attention of the supernatural beings to the proceeding, because the Dogon believe that these beings are inherently lethargic and have limited attention spans. Most impor- tant, the figure maintains constant contact with the supernatural world until its owner's problem is resolved. It is reported that the Dogon say "one cannot always kneel at the altar--but the statue can" (Van Beek 1988, 60). The sacrifice is pivotal, and without it the sculpture is con- sidered simply a piece of wood. A particularly successful statue that has been used in many sacrifices can become dangerous. For this reason, less frequent and less elaborate sacrifices deactivate the figure, and it can then be safely discarded.

The significance of sacred Chamba figures (fig. 18) is not in the individual sculptures them- selves but in their placement and association with other figures that identify a sacred grove in

the Benue River valley region of northern Nigeria. The grove is maintained as a dwelling place for spirits and provides an important way station in the transition of souls to the afterlife. It is reported that if the figures are removed, the

grove and indeed the Chamba people will wither and die (Stevens 1976). However, religious protocol indicates that it is imperative that these sacred figures be minimally sheltered and exposed to the elements over which the

spirits exercise control. Consequently, the peri- odic replacement of insect damaged or weathered figures is a prerequisite in their cul- tural care. In this situation, a new figure not

only replaces the old figure but actually be- comes the old figure. Continuity of the sacred is

maintained, and the old figure can be retired. Ancestor worship is thought to be an in-

tegral part of many non-Western religions. In

many African religions the deceased are regarded as having certain control over their descendants. They can influence childbirth, ef- fect cures, or ensure success. Ancestor sculptures like Hemba figures (fig. 19) are created as memorials to commemorate the deceased. The

sculptures act as a visual reminder of ancestral

power. The effectiveness of each object, how-

ever, is directly proportional to the extent of

living memory. After only a few generations, the individual commemorated by this type of

sculpture would not specifically be remem-

bered, and the sculpture would fall into a generic ancestral category in which it is less ac-

curately identified and less revered.

2.3 OBJECTS THAT HAVE POWER

The third category of African objects with

nontangible attributes deals with power. These

objects, simply by their constitution, maintain intrinsic power. Within their cultures, these ob-

jects are distinguished by the fact that they have a will of their own, can independently carry out

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THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS 11

deeds, and can control the behavior of human

beings. Notably, intrinsically powerful objects are geographically limited to the Congo River basin and certain areas in the Western Sudan

(Rubin 1974). The materials incorporated into these objects

impart power. Nonvisible elements known to be included in the construction of these objects include riverbed stones from the dwelling places of water spirits; certain red and white earths; medicinal plant substances with bush spirit power, bones, flesh, fur, or claws of a lion, leopard, or monkey; droppings of lightning found at the base of trees; bones and flesh of someone who committed suicide; fingernails and hair of sorcerers; or bits of warrior remains from a battleground. Visible embellishments can include animal horns, reptile skins, feathers, tex- tiles, nails, beads, metal, fur, shell (Hersak 1986), and all of those materials familiar to eth-

nographic conservators. The accumulated energy from these sig-

nificant elements is realized when included in an

object. The inclusion and association of ele- ments are never random but follow strict cul- tural guidelines and traditions drawing upon the

powers of ancestors, diviners, and spirits. As with magic and sacred objects in Africa, sacrifices, libations, ceremonies, and rituals, per- formed by a specialist, are required to invoke the power of power objects. However, it is the accumulation of additive elements over time and the buildup of sacrificial patination on these objects that continue to enhance their effective- ness.

Power substances in a Teke figure (fig. 20) are concealed in a cavity in the chest. After elaborate rituals, including anointing the figure with clays or imported camwood, tree sap, or blood and spit, the figure is considered to have been given birth and is invested with power. The power can be effective for economic suc-

cess in hunting and trading or useful against disease. Although the effectiveness of the figure's power is not always consistent, the Teke seldom consider the figure to be without power (Hottot 1956). When ineffective, the figure's health and therefore its power can be restored

through rituals that vary from exposing it to soothing music to beating it with a switch. Only in rare instances can a figure lose its power; sorcery or spiritual intervention invoked by another person directly against the figure can render it totally powerless.

A Songye figure (fig. 21) derives its power from accumulated substances. It would have been maintained in a shrine with limited access. The purpose of limited access is twofold: to

protect the community from the effects of over-

exposure to its power and, to protect the object from extraneous contamination that could

severely diminish its power and effectiveness. Should either event occur, the figure would be

replaced with a fresher, newer, more powerful construction.

The thickness of the incrustation (Mc- Naughton 1978), as well as the combination of additive elements, on one type of Bamana Komo mask (fig. 22) indicates the mask's degree of intrinsic power. The Komo mask is under the strict domain of Bamana blacksmiths, who are

responsible for maintaining a harmonious equi- librium throughout Bamana life. Through its construction and association with blacksmiths, the Komo mask harnesses great quantities of cultural power. In the event that the blacksmith is not judicious in his use of authority for the good of the community, it is likely that he would be challenged, thereby significantly diminishing his power and that of the Komo mask.

The Kongo people do not readily distinguish among human beings, animals, and objects as containers for power. After fabrication and

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12 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

being imbued with power through accumula- tions, multiple additions, and ritual, the Kongo nkisi figure (fig. 23) achieves a state of person- hood (MacGaffey 1990a), and, like any other

important member of the society, must be treated with the respect afforded it by its place in the social hierarchy of the community. For

example, should the nkisi fall over, those around it must fall to the ground as well and apologies made before it can be picked up. Invoking the

power of a nkisi by a ritual specialist for a client is a costly affair and assumed to require payment of a human life. Actually, activating the nkisi is

accomplished by annoying it, by the explosion of gunpowder, for example, or by insulting it by making derogatory remarks about its mother- in-law (MacGaffey 1990a). Driving a stake into the figure further angers it, and out of anger the nkisi retaliates. In general, the nkisi are con- sidered unpredictable and violently aggressive and are regarded with distrust and suspicion.

Despite the extraordinary power of nkisi

figures, one of the most effective ways the

Kongo people have to render them powerless is

simply to treat them with indifference, that is, to

ignore the behavioral restrictions required toward them or neglect their cultural status. The

power of a nkisi can also be mitigated if it is

deliberately destroyed, if its owner dies, or if it is sold or transferred (MacGaffey 1990a). In all these situations, however, there is the possibility that the nkisi will retaliate.

3. OBSERVATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS

From this brief look at how some African ob-

jects function in cultural context, several obser- vations can be made. In some African societies, objects are used as intermediaries, they mediate, placate, provide access to, respond to, or focus the attention of the supernatural world. Special- ized individuals and highly structured behavior or activities are required to make effective use

of the nontangible attributes of these objects. Unexpectedly, it is observed that although ob- jects can be passed on for generations, even magic, sacred, and powerful objects are routine- ly and systematically inactivated, replaced, dis- carded, ignored, or destroyed within their cul- tural context.

From these observations, several deductions that may be applicable to other African cultures can be made that begin to illuminate an African perspective about the existence, use, and main- tenance of nontangible attributes: 1. Magic, sacredness, and power are cultural

resources, and strict rules exist to maintain and perpetuate these resources. Naturally, these resources are most effective when they are retained within their cultural context.

2. Magic, sacredness, and power are activated by specific cultural behavior.

3. The use of magic, sacredness, and power is not static. Traditional African cultures are by nature dynamic and changing. This flexibility allows for the adjustment of behavior toward manifestations of the supernatural when pre- vious behavior proves to be ineffective or no longer necessary. Conclusions can be drawn that might express

an African perception of objects exhibiting non- tangible attributes and reflect an African percep- tion of these objects outside of their cultural context: 1. Africans do not view objects as having an

independent life of their own. Instead, ob- jects are an integral part of cultural activities and behaviors. These activities and behaviors are necessary to activate power and make ob- jects effective. However, behavior is readily adjusted when objects prove to be ineffec- tive. This dynamic and changing character of appropriate behavior toward magic, sacred, and power objects allows for a wide variety

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THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS 13

of options for the disposal of even culturally significant objects.

2. Africans do not consider objects to embody spirits or ancestors. Objects themselves are not seen as simply habitations for supernatural forces or strictly as analogous representations of these forces.

3. Africans do not perceive that objects carry magic or power outside of their cultural con- text. Objects embody the cultural resources of magic, sacredness, and power. These ob- jects are used and maintained within the society for the benefit of individuals within those societies. As a matter of fact, many traditional Africans find it curious that these objects have any significance to Western cul- tures.

4. IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATORS

These conclusions presenting a possible African view of indigenous material culture have impor- tant implications for conservators because they begin to broaden our understanding of the African objects we are responsible for and refine our treatment and exhibition care decisions.

Most important, it becomes clear that, as conservators, it is not necessary for conservators to treat African objects that are out of their cultural context with the same strict behavior required when they are within their cultural context; nor would Africans expect them to receive that kind of treatment. We need not feed these objects, wash them, dance them, suckle them, spit on them, beat them, insult them, sacrifice upon them, or subject them to limited visibility. Indeed, it is somewhat patronizing to presume that we could replicate these complex patterns of cultural behavior toward objects. Furthermore, we need not ap- proach African objects with uncertainty, fear, or trepidation.

Standard conservation decisions that might be relevant to African objects include, for example, the method and degree to bulk gap filling materials to provide structural stability to a wooden object; the choice of synthetic resin and technique of application to consolidate ap- plied incrustation; or the extent of filling and inpainting to provide visual integration to a painted surface. For example, the shattered arm on the nkisi in figure 5 was re-adhered and stabilized with Dow Coming RTV 3110 silicon rubber that was bulked with Union Carbide phenolic microballoons, BJO-0930. The ac- knowledgment and understanding of the non- tangible attributes of African objects may not have a dramatic effect on conservation treat- ments, but at least they should affect the way conservators think about African art. These con- servation decisions should be overshadowed by the conservator's responsibility to treat or par- ticipate in the installation of African objects in a manner that conscientiously respects the dignity of the cultures that produced them.

The interpretation of an object and its presentation for exhibition with dignity can be a difficult and subjective issue. The National Museum of African Art is in the initial planning stages of an exhibition of Kongo minkisi (plural of nkisi) and works by contemporary African artists who draw directly on the minkisi tradi- tion. The artistic intention of the contemporary artists may preclude the use of vitrines to protect their constructions; however, conservation sen- sibility of lending and host institutions would undoubtedly require the vitrining of the fragile minkisi figures. This contradiction between the exhibition of objects borne of the same tradition must be resolved by the institution. One might ask, as well, if it is appropriate to vitrine objects of such unmitigated power. The conservation problems associated with leaving such compli-

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14 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

cated objects unvitrined are obvious, even to the novice.

5. CONCLUSION

To care for African objects in a manner that

respects their aesthetic, formal, contextual, and

nontangible attributes, conservators must remain

vigilantly informed about African cultures. This can be a formidable task, particularly when we are confronted with objects for which the his- torical and contextual records are incomplete. However, by pursuing dialogues with Africanists, anthropologists, art historians, and Africans and by studying pertinent literature from dissertation studies to catalogues raisonn6s, conservators can constantly refine their under-

standing of African objects. When conservators are prepared to make informed conservation decisions concerning treatment and exhibition and offer enlightened opinions regarding ac-

quisitions, deaccessioning, or even repatriation, then they will be assured that they have treated these objects with dignity.

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STEPHEN P. MELLOR received his M.S. from the University of Delaware, Winterthur Art Conservation Program, in 1981 after com- pleting his internship in the Objects Conserva- tion Department for the Rockefeller collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He has worked as conservator for the Peabody Museum in Cambridge, Mass., and for the African, Oceanic, and the Americas Department at the

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16 STEPHEN P. MELLOR

Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. He is presently chief conservator for the Na- tional Museum of African Art, Smith- sonian Institution. Address: National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian In- stitution, Washington, D.C. 20560.

This paper was presented at the 19th an- nual meeting of the American Institute for Conservation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, June 1991, in the special session on the conservation of sacred objects. Received for review: August 1, 1991. Revised and resubmitted December 2, 1991. Accepted December 12, 1991.

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