Susanne Wenger, R.I.P.
by AFisherThe Nigerian Tribune printed the following tribute:
Osun goddess devotee, Susanne Wenger, is dead
13.01.2009
THE renowned artist and a great devotee of Osun goddess, Susanne Wenger, is dead. Popularly called Adunni Olorisa, Wenger, an Austrian, was a strong influence on the cultural rebirth that transformed the Osun groove into an exciting artistic enclave. Her remarkable artistic inclinations have turned the groove into a place of aesthetic delight, apart from the spiritual renewal it offers.
Reacting to the news of her death, the Ataoja of Osogbo, His Royal Majesty, Oba Jimoh Oyewale Matanmi, said the Osun devotee lived a fulfilled life.
Speaking through one of his chiefs, who is also a renowned artist, Chief Jimoh Buraimoh, the monarch said arrangements had been made for her burial, saying the burial rites had begun yesterday and would continue today.
Chief Buraimoh also revealed that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) had been notified of her death and the world organisation had sent its condolences to the people of Nigeria.
In his own reaction, the Osun State governor, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, described Wenger’s death “as a monumental loss to the entire world.”
According to Governor Oyinlola, Adunni Olorisa preserved the Osun groove for generations yet unborn and made it world renowned. “She came to this part of the world in the 1950s in search of knowledge and spiritual renewal and found both in the serenity and warm embrace of the Osun goddess.”
From Nigerian Tribune, Jan. 13, 2009
The Guardian newspaper (UK) marked her passing as follows:
Obituary
Suzanne Wenger
Austrian-born artist and priestess of the Yoruba religion
Keith Richards
The Guardian, Wednesday 25 March 2009
Suzanne Wenger, the Austrian-born artist and Yoruban priestess, who has died at the age of 93 in her adopted home of Osogbo in Nigeria, was unique in her absorption into traditional African religion. After her arrival in Africa in 1949, she worked hard to revive Yoruba among Nigerians who had drifted away from it under the influence of western culture and religion. She also made enormous efforts to protect the sacred grove of Osun, a forest along the banks of the Oshun river just outside Osogbo, which she turned into a sculpture garden filled with art made by her and others.
The simple message, distributed by one of her fellow artists, Chief Muraina Oyelami, that "our beloved colleague, mentor and Adunni Olorisha, responded to the call of Olodumare (God) some hours ago", belied a life of rich cultural complexity and courage.
Born in Graz, Austria, she studied art there and in Vienna before travelling to Paris in 1949, where she met Ulli Beier, a German linguist. When he was offered a position as a phonetician in Ibadan, Nigeria, shortly afterwards, they decided to marry so she could accompany him. At the wedding at a registry office in London, they presented the registrar with a selection of curtain rings. When he observed: "A wedding is not a silly joke," they replied: "How do you know?"
The couple quickly assimilated in Nigeria, he as a teacher and she as an artist, but they moved from Ibadan to the nearby town of Ede in 1950 to escape what Wenger called the "artificial university compound". In Ede, she met one of the last priests of the rapidly disappearing, ancestral-based Olorisha religion. She quickly became engrossed in his life and rituals, even though at that time she spoke no Yoruba. "Our only intercourse was the language of the trees," she said later.
During this period, she and Beier mentored a group of local artists that later became the New Sacred Art movement, creating many of the giant sculptural works that beautify the sacred grove.
When Wenger and Beier eventually separated, she remained in Osogbo to continue her work and became even more immersed in her training as a priestess. In 1959 she married a local drummer, Chief Alarape, and adopted more than a dozen Yoruba children, including the artist Nike Davies-Okundaye.
As her influence increased, the grove became a focal point for artists and those that celebrated Yoruba. The festival held to worship the goddess Osun that takes place at the grove every August continues to attract thousands today. But it also became a target for criticism from Christian and Muslim fundamentalists, whose position Wenger always rejected, saying there was little about Christianity and Yoruba that could not be reconciled. "Orisa [a spirit or deity] is merely a name which represents the supernatural forces which are basic expressions of life," she said. "It doesn't matter what you call it. It is a sacred force that represents the experience of life that informs human beingness."
In 2005, her efforts to protect the grove were rewarded by Unesco's decision to list it as a world heritage site. She was honoured in Nigeria in the same year by being made a member of the federal republic. Wenger's bougainvillea-covered Osogbo house became a pilgrimage site to many, despite her insistence that her life was one of devotion to the spirit and not of tourism. When I visited her with my son Tom, just a few weeks before her death, I asked her: "Mama, are you still working?" She responded: "No, but I am still dreaming."
• Suzanne Wenger, artist and Yoruban priestess, born 4 July 1915; died 12 January, 2009