GHANA'S SEAT OF STATE |
The Seat of State is made up of various Ghanaian traditional (adinkra) symbols and some borrowed ideas.
Kofi Antubam, one of the chief
‘state artists’ of the Nkrumah era crafted The Seat of State in the early 1960s
(Hess 2001: 72).
Antubam also painted a number of
murals and carved wood reliefs for public buildings, among them Accra’s Central
Library, the Ambassador Hotel and the main assembly hall of the old Parliament
House, and he organised state ceremonies and artistic events for the Arts
Council of Ghana.
He was part of a remarkable
generation of dreamers and nation builders who developed the cultural identity
of Ghana.
His works and performances brought
together European representational conventions, ‘neo-Ghanaian’ elements such as
the Black Star, and motifs borrowed from ‘traditional’ regional and local artistic
styles, preferably from Asante, but also other ethnic groups and regions.
Antubam
believed, according to Kojo Vieta, ‘that Art must reflect the values and ideas
of a society ..., should be applied to utility objects... [and be made] a vital
part of everyday life’ (2000: 115−6).
In his published views about what the ‘serious
modern Ghana artist’ should create, Antubam maintained that the new Ghanaian
artistic identity would be ‘neither Eastern’—a reference to the Soviet Union’s
tradition or socialist realism—‘nor Western and yet a growth in the presence of
both with its roots deeply entrenched in the soil of the indigenous past of
Africa’ (1963: 129, 23, quoted in Hess 2001: 73−4). Ghana’s new art needed to be
based on ‘the lasting values of a people’s traditions’, but should also take advantage
of the ‘better and more progressive implements, skills, and knowledge’ that the
history of European art provided (Antubam 1963: 13, 129).
A
look at the Seat of State reveals that its base is modelled after an Asante
chiefly stool. Such stools are regarded as central objects of power that
connect the chief with the ancestral world and the power of his predecessors.
They often represent proverbs that address the relationship between wealth,
wisdom and authority, and other constituents of chiefly office. The specific
stool ‘quoted’ in Antubam’s Seat of State is the kotoko dwa, a stool that
represents one of the central symbols of the Asante nation, the porcupine
(kotoko).
The
Asante nation, according to a well-known proverb, works like the quills of the
porcupine: when one falls, hundreds of others will come to its aid. The
porcupine thus stands for solidarity and combativeness.
The
artist’s use of the stool simply depicted his intent to link the Ghanaian
President’s authority to pre-colonial traditions of state-making and royal
power. The bright golden sheen of the Seat of State and the carved stool at its
base evoked, indeed, the Golden Stool, the venerated image of Asante statehood
which was, as McCaskie put it, ‘construed as being the enabling instrument, the
representation, that all at once underpinned, validated and guaranteed the
legal exercise of sovereign right. In Asante political philosophy, the Golden
Stool ... was understood to be symbolic of the highest level at which power
might be exercised’ (1983: 30).
The
seat also invokes not only African pre-colonial emblems of power, but also
European aristocratic imagery. The upper part, and the arm rests which are
topped with small golden crowns, are designed like a British monarch’s throne.
It
is believed that Antubam must have visited Westminster during studies in London
and drew some inspiration from the royal throne in the House of Lords where the
British Queen sits when she opens a new parliamentary session and addresses the
nation.
More
generally, as the long-standing parliamentary clerks K. B. Ayensu and S. N.
Darkwa put it in their history of the Ghanaian parliament, ‘Ghana adopted the
Westminster model of parliamentary democracy’(1999: 119), including most
aspects of parliamentary procedure.
The English Coronation Chair
may have been another of Antubam’s sources of inspiration because it bears a
highly significant ‘traditional’ object of power at its base, known as the Stone
of Scone.
One may speculate if
Kofi Antubam perhaps quite deliberately placed the Asante stool in a position
analogous to the one occupied by the Stone of Scone in the English throne,
namely as incorporation of an ancient tradition symbolic of the foundation of
power as well as a celebration of the victory of the new regime over the old
authorities. Given that Nkrumah had to face, and overcome, quite significant
resistance from Asante nationalists and prove himself sovereign over the
pre-colonial, and later colonially backed, chiefdoms, this interpretation may
not be too far-fetched.
The crescent (or the
Osramfa) which forms the actual seat symbolizes the influence of feminine
disposition and nature on the well-being of the society and State. The egg or
oval shape (Okosuasii) which forms the backrest symbolizes perfection in all
that is beautiful in the existence of the society.
The zigzag symbol used
on the arm-rest and as a border in the oval shaped back-rest counsels the
occupants of the seat on the exercise of prudence and diplomacy in all
dealings.
The box-like seat has a
red cushion bearing a black Nkyinkyin symbol of selfless service. The red colour
stands for youthful life and vigour.
The rectangular hand rests represents
Mbensu and bears on the sides a frieze of zigzag motif called Ovu-Koforo-Adobe,
symbolizing exercise of wisdom or prudence.
This symbol appears on
the sides chair as a way of emphasizing importance of the fact that the Head of
State must be an embodiment of the qualities of wisdom.
The side-stands of the
seat, which have the form of dome, symbolizes God's grace. The footstool or
rest bears on the front of it a Fihankera, the symbol of a perfect house.
Finally, Antubam
decorated the Seat of State with one of Ghana’s most prominent
‘neo-traditions’, as one may perhaps call them, namely the Black Star, the
Lodestar of African Freedom, which Ghana also displays in her coat of arms,
flag and, very visibly, on the Independence Arch.
For Nkrumah and other
CPP leaders, the Black Star therefore symbolised hopes not only for the
decolonisation of the African continent, but also for a liberating impact of
Ghana’s and other African countries’ independence on racial emancipation in
America.
REFERENCES
Allman,
Jean. 1993. The Quills of the Porcupine: Asante Nationalism in an
Emergent
Ghana. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Antubam, Kofi. 1963. Ghana's Heritage of Culture
Ghana
Observed: Essays on the Politics of a West African Republic. Manchester:
Manchester University Press. Ayensu, K. B. and S. N. Darkwa. 1999.
The
Evolution of Parliament in Ghana. Accra: Sub-Saharan Publishers. Ayensu, K. B.
and S. N. Darkwa. 2006.
How
our Parliament Functions: An Introduction to the Law, Practice and Procedure of
the Parliament of Ghana. Accra: Sub-Saharan Publishers.
Hess,
Janet B. 2000. Imagining architecture: the structure of nationalism in Accra,
Ghana. Africa Today 47 (2): 35−58.
Hess,
Janet B. 2001. Exhibiting Ghana: display, documentary, and ‘national’ art in
the Nkrumah era. African Studies Review
44: 59−77.
Kimble,
David. 1963. A Political History of Ghana. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
McCaskie,
T. C. 1983. Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history. I. To the close
of the nineteenth century. Africa 53 (1): 23−43.
McCaskie,
T. C. 1995. State and Society in
Pre-Colonial Asante. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Vieta,
Kojo T.. 2000. The Flagbearers of Ghana. School Edition I. Accra: ENA
Publications.
Wilks,
Ivor. 1975. Asante in the Nineteenth Century: The Structure and Evolution of a
Political Order. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Wilks,
Ivor. 1993. Forests of Gold: Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante.
Athens: Ohio University Press.
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