Susanne Wenger
Susanne
Wenger,
also known as Adunni Olorisha (c. 1915 – 12 January 2009), was an Austrian artist who resided in Nigeria. Her main
focus was the Yoruba culture and she was
successful in building an artist cooperative in Osogbo.[1]
Susanne
Wenger was born to Swiss and Austrian parents, attended the School of Applied
Arts in Graz and the Higher Graphical Federal Education and Research Institute
and then studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna alongside, among others,
Herbert Boeckl.
From
1946, Wenger was an employee of the communist children's magazine " Our
Newspaper ", of which the cover of the first edition she designed. In 1947
she co-founded the Vienna Art-Club . After living in Italy and Switzerland in
1949 she went to Paris, where she met her future husband, the linguist Ulli Beier. That same year, after Beier was offered a
position as a phoneticist in Ibadan, Nigeria, the couple married in London and
emigrated to Nigeria. However, the couple moved from Ibadan to the village of
Ede the following year.
Wenger
became ill in Nigeria due to tuberculosis, after which she turned to Yoruba
religion and later became a Yoruba priestess. She became attracted to the
religion after meeting one of the few remaining priests of the religion. Wenger
and Beier ultimately divorced, with Wenger later marrying local drummer
Ayansola Oniru in 1959, by which time Wenger was establishing herself as active
in the revival of the religion. She was founder of the archaic-modern art
school "New Sacred Art" and became the guardian of the Sacred Grove of Osun goddess on the banks of the Osun River in Oshogbo.
Legacy/honours
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The
sculptures that were placed there from the late 1950s onwards, sculptures that
were created by her followers and local artists have belonged to the UNESCO World
Heritage Site
since 2005. For her efforts on behalf of the Yoruba, she was made an oloye of the tribe by the Ataoja
of Oshogbo.
Death
On
12 January 2009, Wenger died at age 93 in Oshogbo.[1]
Exhibitions
- 1995: Retrospective of the 80th Birthday, Minoritenkirche Stein an der Donau (outside the Old Town of Krems)
- 2004: On a holy river in Africa, Kunsthalle Krems
- 2006: Susanne Wenger - life with the gods of Africa, Graz City Museum
- 2016: Between the Sweet Water and the Swarm of Bees: A Collection of Works by Susanne Wenger, The Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University, Atlanta, GA
References
Obituary,
theguardian.com, 26 March 2009; accessed 2 April 2017.
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