Daily Archives: October 28, 2021

Science Update: New Type of Ancient Human Discovered

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Yale Center for British Art redisplays controversial painting of Elihu Yale and enslaved child – Yale Daily News

Courtesy of YCBA

The Yale Center for British Art has redisplayed a painting of the University’s namesake after investigating the identity of an enslaved Black child depicted in the portrait.

Tamaki Kuno & Gamze Kazakoglu 2:22 am, Oct 27, 2021

Contributing Reporter & Staff Reporter

After a year-long investigation, the Yale Center for British Art has put the controversial 18th-century group painting of Elihu Yale — an early benefactor and namesake of the University — back up on its walls.

Completed around 1719 and believed to have been painted at Yale’s house in London, the painting portrays Yale alongside members of his family and an enslaved Black boy with a silver collar and padlock around his neck. The painting was removed from the gallery a year ago following feedback from visitors and staff on the distressing depiction of an enslaved child, according to the Elihu Yale Portrait Research Team. It was replaced with a work by Titus Kaphar, a New Haven-based African American sculptor and painter. Kaphar’s piece reframed the painting, focusing solely on the child as an individual, and removing the collar present in the original painting.

Since the painting was removed from the gallery’s walls, the YCBA has conducted an investigation on its history and the individuals within its frame. Researchers have discovered the painting dates between 1719 and 1721. The child it depicts was likely born around 1712, and brought to England around the age of five. The researchers searched baptism, marriage and burial records, but were unable to recover the child’s name. Still, the painting, with additional context and a new name that highlights the enslaved child, was put back on display earlier this month.

“The painting [of Yale] is ugly both in meaning and aesthetics and deserves the same treatment as the stained-glass window smashed by Corey Menafee,” said Sean O’Brien, visiting fellow at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. “I echo the sentiment of Titus Kaphar in his piece ‘Enough About You’ — perhaps if the original portrait were transformed to honor the enslaved child in it, there might be some good to come from that.”

Kaphar told Artnet in 2019 that his aim behind the piece was to “imagine a life” for the child, with “desires, dreams, family, thoughts, hopes” that the original 18th-century artist — thought to be a Dutchman active in Britain named John Verelst — was likely indifferent to. “Enough About You” parodies the original painting of Elihu Yale by crumpling up the depictions of Yale and his family and putting a frame around the enslaved child’s face. For six months, Kaphar’s painting hung in the exact spot the group portrait previously hung, but as of May it has been returned to its owners.

In August 2020, two months before the Yale painting was removed from the gallery wall and replaced with Kaphar’s, museum Director Courtney J. Martin formed the Elihu Yale Portrait Research Team to identify the enslaved boy of African descent depicted in the work. The Team consists of YCBA staff members Eric James, Abigail Lamphier, Lori Misura, David K. Thompson and Edward Town.

“The recovery of someone’s name is a basic step in any attempt to work against the dehumanizing acts of marginalization and enslavement,” the team told the News. “Hopefully this work will spark more conversations about what institutions can do to reckon with these types of objects and inspire more close looking at collections in an effort to contextualize and better understand these paintings.”

According to the team, the research entailed establishing the painting’s date of creation, author and subjects. A significant breakthrough was made through scientific analysis of the painting undertaken by members of the Center’s Painting Conservation team and colleagues from the Institute for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage at Yale.

Together, they narrowed down the painting’s date of creation and aided in the identification of other subjects in its frame. The identification of Dudley North — an English merchant, politician and economist who married Yale’s daughter and is also depicted in the painting — also allowed the Center to embark on a search through his personal papers, which have survived in a manuscript archive in Britain.

The team consulted with a pediatrician and discovered that the enslaved boy appears to be about 10 years old. The curatorial investigators noted that records from the early 18th-century demonstrate the recurring pattern of shipping boys of African descent below 10 years of age to Britain for them to serve as domestic servants in affluent households.

Although slavery was not legal in Britain at the time of the painting’s creation, many Black individuals were brought into the country in a similar servitude to slavery, given that the country had a significant investment in the transatlantic slave trade. The child in the painting wears a silver collar on his neck, reflecting the common practice in British society of making captives wear either silver, steel or brass collars.

Despite some historical discoveries, the research process posed challenges for the team. Neither personal nor private papers of either Lord James Cavendish, who owned the painting, or Elihu Yale, who may have commissioned the painting, are in sufficient shape to reconstruct the composition of their respective households. Records pertaining to enslaved people from this period are scant, if existent at all, which adds to the difficulty of tracing the child’s life.

In part because of the loss of his personal papers, it is not clear to what extent Yale profited directly from involvement in the Indian or Atlantic slave trades, according to research done by Teanu Reid GRD ’23 and Town as part of Yale’s broader study into its ties to slavery.

“While it remains unclear if Yale owned this enslaved child, Yale’s status and wealth were nonetheless reinforced by his presence,” Reid and Town wrote. “Additionally, there is no doubt that Elihu Yale was comfortable having his portrait made alongside figures who were demonstrably enslaved. His relatives in New Haven were slave holders; the company he worked for oversaw slave-shipping in the Indian Ocean; and even in London, where the law did not make provision for existence of chattel slaves, Yale and his sons-in-laws chose to have their portrait made alongside an enslaved child over whom they would have claimed ownership.”

According to the research team, the investigation into the painting’s context is one of many similar initiatives across the cultural sector in which institutions allocate resources to better understand marginalized and neglected histories. Portraits in Western art that depict children of African or Indian heritage fall into this category, as “historically their presence has barely been acknowledged and rarely been the topic of scholarly enquiry,” the team added.

“Emotional responses to the painting and what it depicts have certainly been a motivating force, and have added to the sense of urgency and importance of this research,” the team said. “Individually and collectively, there is a feeling that the work undertaken thus far has been worthwhile but there is a strong acknowledgement that the work needs to be sustained and built upon by others.”

For the Elihu Yale Portrait Research Team, the painting’s public display raises awareness about the child and may encourage others to contribute to the search for his identity. The long-term plan for the display of this group portrait is still under discussion and will be shaped by the feedback that visitors can leave via the Center’s website.

Edward Rugemer, associate professor of African American studies and history, said the painting should remain on display to allow the University to reckon with its history, as opposed to hiding from it.

“The alternative is not to display the painting,” Rugemer said. “And it seems to me that if the University decides not to display the painting, then the University is enchanting to its dimension of legacy. I think especially today, with race and racism playing such an important part in national discourse, Yale needs to come to terms with [the fact] that one of its founders was involved in slavery.”

Rugemer also said that Elihu Yale is not the most obvious choice to be blamed for his involvement in slavery, as “there are many Yalies involved in gaining wealth from slavery.”

O’Brien, who previously penned an opinion piece entitled “Yale Must Change Its Name,” wrote in an email to the News that “Elihu Yale’s legacy is a stark reminder of a horrific and traumatic past that should not be forgotten.”

“However, Elihu himself should never be honored or lend his namesake to any institution that values its community and abhors racism,” O’Brien added. “Though another year has passed, Yale has still not shed the name of Elihu the slavemaster.”

YCBA currently has a small display that presents some of the research undertaken alongside a selection of works. There is also a survey on the YCBA’s website to hear the public’s thoughts on the painting.

See related:

Why Isn’t Trump Being Held Responsible for Mass Murder?


Thom Hartmann Program108 viewsOct 28, 2021
Birx testified, before the House Select Subcommittee, that Trump’s White House failed to take steps to prevent more virus deaths. Dr. Birx said that tens of thousands deaths could have been prevented after after the pandemic started if Mr. Trump had pushed mask-wearing, social distancing and other efforts to slow the spread of the virus.

Letting Americans die to win elections. Is that how low today’s GOP has sunk? What other possible explanation could there be?

The Grim Reality of Live Animal Exports


NowThis NewsOct 28, 2021
2 billion animals are exported live each year so that they can be butchered locally and eaten fresh — photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur captures the grim reality of the situation (warning: distressing)Food-matters,

Webinar 4: Meet the Soil Regen Pros

Food-matters,

Keynote Address – GLC Annual Conference: Yale and Slavery in Historical Perspective

The Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition

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Contested Asante trophy head to shine in Wallace Gallery’s new room

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This is the largest surviving gold work of art from Sub-Saharan Africa
The Wallace Collection, London

Martin Bailey 18 June 2018

The largest surviving gold work of art from Sub-Saharan Africa is to be highlighted in an exhibition at London’s Wallace Collection this month. Until now, the mysterious Asante trophy head from Ghana has been displayed in what may seem an unexpected location, the museum’s Oriental Armoury, where it attracts relatively little attention.

The golden head—nearly life-size and weighing three pounds—was seized by British troops during the Anglo-Asante (or Ashanti) war in 1874 and eventually became the subject of restitution claims. It is in a similar category to the Maqdala treasures and Benin bronzes in UK collections, which are claimed by the governments of Ethiopia and Nigeria.

The punitive expedition against the Asante people ended with the occupation of Kumasi, their capital. The treasures of Kofi Karikari, the Asantehene (king), were seized as war booty and auctioned off, most of it coming to the UK. Richard Wallace, who later left his collection to the nation, bought 16 Asante pieces from Garrard, the London jewellers. These included the gold head, for which he paid £500.

In 1974, a century later, restitution claims were filed against several UK museums by the reigning Asantehene and submitted through the Ghanaian government. The British government rejected the claims, arguing that national museums, such as the British Museum and the Wallace Collection, are unable to deaccession.

Although the Asante head has been displayed at the Wallace Collection since 1900, a museum spokeswoman admits that it has “not been extensively studied”. This is surprising, considering that the museum says that it is quite exceptional and “one of the great masterpieces of African art”.

The current label dates the head rather vaguely as “19th century or earlier”, but it was probably made during the first half of that century. Its function remains a mystery, although specialists believe that it may have been hung from the ceremonial sword of an Asante warrior, to threaten enemies with an impending attack. Made by an Asante craftsman, the head has earrings, which suggests that it depicts the features of a defeated warrior from a neighbouring ethnic group. The head has suffered some damage at the top, most likely when it was looted in Kumasi.

The gold head is now to be displayed in the exhibition Sir Richard Wallace: the Collector (20 June-2 January 2019), the inaugural show in the museum’s new exhibition gallery. Xavier Bray, the Wallace’s director, says that he is “keen to work with scholars and researchers in Ghana and internationally to develop our understanding of this incredible work of art”. The director is now making plans for a new permanent display of Asante art next year, after the temporary exhibition.

See related:

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as well as:

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and the ongoing research of international scholars on African historical cartography: