A collection of 666 works by 135 Afro-Brazilian artists has been voluntarily returned in the largest repatriation of its kind in Brazilian history. The pieces had been held for three decades in Detroit and were returned to the National Museum of Afro-Brazilian Culture (Muncab) in Salvador, Bahia.
Coordinated by Brazil’s cultural ministry, the repatriation is an unprecedented milestone for Brazilian cultural heritage. The collection spans paintings, sculptures, photographs, sacred and ritual objects, woodcuts and engravings reflecting a wide array of generations, regions and artistic practices. Artists represented include J. Cunha, Goya Lopes, Zé Adário, Lena da Bahia, Raimundo Bida, Sol Bahia and Manoel Bonfim.
“This is a unique case, marked by the conscious and voluntary decision of those who legally acquired the works yet recognised the historical and cultural legitimacy of returning them to their territory of origin,” Margareth Menezes, Brazil’s cultural minister, tells The Art Newspaper. She further emphasises the decisive role of the Brazilian state and the importance of institutional cooperation, noting that the process involves legal, technical, logistical and diplomatic complexities.
For Menezes, the return goes beyond administrative procedures. “This reunion with history represents a profound gesture of symbolic reparation and appreciation of Afro-Brazilian memory,” she says. “The 666 works returning to Brazil carry narratives, knowledge and cosmologies that shape the country’s cultural formation. From the state’s perspective, the repatriation reaffirms a commitment to cultural policies that recognise the centrality of Black cultures in the construction of national identity.”
Brazil’s cultural minister, Margareth Menezes, speaks at the repatriation ceremony at Muncab on 26 January Photo: Lucas Lima
The US artist Barbara Cervenka and the art historian Marion Jackson originally assembled the pieces as part of their Con/Vida collection, which the pair started in 1992. According to the curator Paula Santos, both women chose to have the works permanently returned to Brazil, as she explained during a late-January press conference at the museum in Salvador. Cervenka died in Michigan a few days later, at age 86, having seen her wish fulfilled.
The works are now part of the collection at Muncab, a museum devoted to the preservation, study and dissemination of Afro-Brazilian culture. Its programming examines Black memory and identity—from Africa as the birthplace of humankind, to the transatlantic slave trade, to the quilombos (settlements founded by people who escaped enslavement). The museum also covers gastronomy, religion, popular festivals and music traditions from samba to maracatu.
A celebration on the beach dedicated to Iemanjá, the Afro-Brazilian goddess of the sea, marked the museum’s final public event before closing for a month to prepare the exhibition that will feature part of the repatriated collection. The opening is scheduled for early March, while Muncab continues adapting its permanent storage facilities for the newly acquired works.
