Fragments of the Fang
October 2007
Nonetheless, the art of Gabon remained at the very forefront of interest as the perceived classicism continued to inform most peoples perceptions of African sculpture. This interest was jolted by the appearance on the market of the Helena Rubinstein collection in New York in 1966. Rubinstein, founder of a cosmetics company and an international socialite, was intimately involved with the important artists of the mid-20th century, and had tremendous paintings by practically all the masters. She also put together an exquisite collection of African art that again reflected the dominance of the Francophone marketplace. Most numerous were works from the Ivory Coast and Mali, though, like the Epstein collection formed 50 years earlier, it was justly famous for its many examples of Fang statuary. While a Cameroon "Bangwa Queen," photographed by Man Ray, brought the highest price in the sale ($29,000), the Fangs as a group set records that elevated the market to a new level. African art until then had been for connoisseurs, but Rubinstein had the social connections to draw a whole new group of wealthy people who had never looked at this art form before.
The African art market flowed well at the new price levels, and with several high-profile sales in the 1970s and ’80s, such as the collections of James Hooper, George Ortiz and the Aga Khan, the market was always perceived as buoyant. This trend led to the private-treaty sale in the late 1980s of the core of the Epstein Fang collection for a rumored $20 million. However, the art market bubble burst, and for several years into the early 1990s, prices fell and pieces languished either in the galleries or in the auction rooms. The first ray of daylight was the 1992 New York estate sale of William McCarty-Cooper, another art-world socialite whose fine collection had a number of Gabon works, including exceptional Fang pieces. While the overall results were patchy, the Fangs lifted the sale, selling within or well above expectations.
Since then, many other regions of Africa have seen tremendous interest in their indigenous arts. Long neglected, the sculpture of East and South Africa has found a wide audience, with many exhibitions and books devoted exclusively to it. Unlike the more obviously figurative masking and sculptural traditions of West and Central Africa, which reflect static social structures, the art of these pastoral peoples was made to be portable, and the staffs, scepters and utilitarian objects show an individual inventiveness that often contrasts favorably with more formal figural sculptural canons. Also, the pure ethnographic forms of the Kabyle and Tuareg in the North have devotees who search for each and every variant type, building systematic collections as new pieces emerge.
Nonetheless, as a continuum from the very first moment of European artistic awareness, figural works of African art, and in particular, works from Gabon, still attract the most attention and the highest prices. Most recently, the Pierre Vérité collection of African art was auctioned in Paris in June 2006 by Enchères Rive Gauche. It was a large collection built by two generations of dealers and had for the most part never been seen. Again, the collection was led by Gabonese artworks, and the highest price, a world record for an African art piece at auction at more than $7.5 million, was for the magnificent Fang mask. Those African works that exhibit the human form, that express inner strength and the emotional human condition, are still the most universally desirable.
EVENTS
"Eternal Ancestors: The Art of the Central African Reliquary" Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Oct. 2–March 2. 212.535.7710
Los Angeles Asian & Tribal Art Show Santa Monica. Nov. 10–11. 310.455.2886
San Francisco Tribal and Textile Fair Feb. 8–10. 310.455.2886. caskeylees.com
New York International Tribal & Textile Arts Show May 2008. 310.455.2886
caskeylees.com
Brussels "Bruneaf" Fair Held annually the second week of June at galleries around the Sablon. bruneaf.com
Parcours des Mondes Paris Held annually during the second week of September at galleries around the 6th district. rikgadellaconsulting.com
Kevin Conru, a dealer in Brussels and London, is the co-author of Bernatzik: South Pacific and The Art of Southeast Africa. He established the Tribal Art and Antiquities departments at Bonhams.
Alain de Monbrison, Paris 011.33.1.46.34.05.20
Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association (ATADA) atada.org
Christie’s Paris 011.33.1.40.76.85.52
Claes Gallery, Brussels, Belgium 011.32.2.414.1929
James Willis Tribal Art 415.885.6736
John Giltsoff, Brussels 011.32.476.572.198
Kevin Conru, Brussels 011.32.2.512.7635
Los Angeles Tribal Art Dealers Association ata-la.com
Pace Primitive, New York 212.421.3688
San Francisco Tribal Art Dealers Association sftribal.com
Sotheby’s New York 212.606.7000
Tambaran Gallery, New York 212.570.0655
Tribal Art magazine tribalarts.com


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