Nigerian painting fetches £1.1 million after Google search
"Christine", by 20th century master of African modernism Ben Enwonwu, had been in the sitter´s family home ever since it was painted in Lagos in 1971.
LONDON: A painting by the Nigerian artist responsible for the "African Mona Lisa" sold at auction in London on Tuesday for £1.1 million after the family who owned it googled the signature and realised its importance.
"Christine", by 20th century master of African modernism Ben Enwonwu, had been in the sitter´s family home ever since it was painted in Lagos in 1971.
"The family were unaware of the significance of the painting or the importance of the artist, until a chance "googling" of the signature led them to Sotheby´s free Online Estimate Platform," said the London auction house.
The painting fetched over seven times the pre-auction estimate, finally going under the hammer for £1.1 million (1.3 million euros, $1.4 million).
The work precedes the artist´s 1974 painting of Ife royal princess Adetutu "Tutu" Ademiluyi, which recently turned up in a London flat after not being seen in decades.
The portrait is a national icon in Nigeria, with Booker Prize-winning novelist Ben Okri telling AFP that it was thought of as "the African Mona Lisa".
Enwonwu, who died in 1994, is considered the father of Nigerian modernism.
He made three paintings of "Tutu", the locations of all of which had been a mystery until the recent discovery.
The works became symbols of peace following the clash of ethnic groups in the Nigerian-Biafran conflict of the late 1960s.
-
Columbia university sacks staff over Epstein partner's ‘backdoor’ admission
-
Ohio daycare worker 'stole $150k in payroll scam', nearly bankrupting nursery
-
Michelle Yeoh gets honest about 'struggle' of Asian representation in Hollywood
-
US, China held anti-narcotics, intelligence meeting: State media reports
-
Goldman Sachs’ top lawyer resigns over Epstein connections
-
Manhunt continues for suspect who killed 2 at South Carolina State University
-
Trump considers scaling back trade levies on steel, aluminium in response to rising costs
-
Trump revokes legal basis for US climate regulation, curb vehicle emission standards