A new critical work is reigniting long-standing debates about African art, intellect, and historical continuity. In The Harbinger (Crimson Fusion, Lagos; 2025), cultural strategist and curator Oriiz U. Onuwaje confronts the persistent Western framing of African creativity as isolated brilliance rather than the result of sustained civilisational intelligence.
From the Benin bronzes and Nok terracottas to Ifẹ portraiture, Igbo-Ukwu metalwork, Ekpo masks, Niger Delta wood carvings, and even the 8,000-year-old Dufuna canoe, African artistic production has often been admired without being fully understood. These works are frequently treated as anomalies—astonishing objects stripped of ancestry, context, and continuity.
The Harbinger, the opening volume of a larger project that will culminate in A Window into the Soul of a People: 8000 Years of Art in Nigeria, argues against this fragmented reading of African history. Onuwaje asks difficult questions: How did African genius come to be seen as accidental? Why is African intellect perceived as discontinuous? And what has been lost when a people’s memory is broken into museum fragments?
In the book’s prologue, Onuwaje notes that Africa’s encounter with the West interrupted rather than advanced its historical self-understanding. For over a century, African art has been displayed as disconnected marvels—an Ifẹ head here, a Benin bronze there—often in institutions far removed from the cultural systems that produced them. The result is admiration without memory.
The Harbinger seeks to restore that memory. By repositioning African art within a long, unbroken intellectual tradition, the work reframes these objects not as miracles without origin, but as evidence of deep cultural continuity. In doing so, it echoes Chinua Achebe’s famous rejection of narratives that deny Africa’s humanity and history, asserting instead that the continent’s past has always been alive, coherent, and self-aware.
This publication marks an important intervention in how African art history is written, remembered, and claimed—particularly by Africans themselves. It is both a challenge to inherited narratives and a call to repair cultural dignity through historical clarity.
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