alex braun
A detail of "Al Haji," a sculpture by Ghanaian artist El Anatsui. It sold for £146,500 (around $210,000) at an African Art auction held by Bonhams in London last October.
alex braun
A full view of "Al Haji," which stands 1.84 meters tall.
courtesy bonhams
A piece entitled "J'aime le culeur," by Congolese painter Cheri Samba, sold for £37,500 at the same auction.
courtesy bonhams
Another El Anatsui piece, "The Pilgrims," comes as an ensemble of 18 elements went for £32,500.
CNN
Nigerian Prince Yemisi Shyllon is a major art collector, with over 7,000 pieces which he displays at his house in Lagos.
CNN
Shyllon, who believes contemporary African art makes for a good investment, is planning to open a private art museum.
CNN
Lagos-based auction house ArtHouce Contemporary have started local auctions of contemporary African art in 2008. With two events a year, they have to date sold over 1,100 pieces for a combined $8 million.
CNN
Giles Peppiatt of Bonhams, with a painting by Cheri Samba entitled "Je suis l'homme qui mange de la peinture," which sold for £12,500 at auction.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
This painting by South African artist Marlene Dumas, entitled "The Visitor," was sold at auction in 2008 for £3.17 million ($4.9 million).
Teo Kermeliotis/CNN
"Sunflower," a piece Nigerian sculptor Olu Amoda, was co-winner of top award "Grand prix Léopold Sédar Senghor" at last year's Dakar Biennale.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Sudanese artist Ibrahim El-Salahi poses for a photograph in front of his painting entitled "Reborn Sounds of Childhood Dreams" at the Tate Modern in London.
PIERRE VERDY/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Nigerian artist Dilomprizulike poses near one of his pieces of art, "Waiting for Bus' (2003), at the Centre Pompidou in Paris.
Courtesy Primo Marella Gallery
Abdoulaye Konaté, "Composition de Plumes", 2012, Textile, 205 x 140 cm,

Story highlights

Circle Art auction offers best East African art to buyers

Value of art on continent has increased dramatically

CNN  — 

The champagne flows, the bidders haggle and the unmistakable crack of the gavel sounds.

The scene could easily be set at the dapper auction houses of London or New York.

But this is the Circle Art auction in Nairobi, Kenya – East Africa’s only contemporary art auction.

While hitting the million mark in Kenyan shillings might not be as significant as pounds or dollars, the thrill for local artists and buyers is just as exhilarating.

04:49 - Source: CNN
Nairobi bids high on art scene

“There is a lot of money around and people want to buy nice things, says veteran auctioneer Dendy Easton.

“I shall never forget what happened in 2013, never happened in my life before, after every lot I sold there was a round of applause. That is excitement. In England when you go to a sale room there are maybe 50 people and everyone is bidding on the internet and telephone. Here you get more than 200 people in the room.”

Buy low, sell high

Africa’s burgeoning art scene is currently experiencing a transformational moment.

Nigerian Okwui Enwezor became the first African to direct the Venice Biennale in its 120-year history in 2015 while the price of art on the continent has increased dramatically.

British auction house Bonhams has seen average lot prices increase five-fold – to about $50,000 – since it started specializing in contemporary African art in 2007.

ArtHouse Contemporary Limited, an auction house based in Lagos, Nigeria, notes that pieces bought at their very first auction, back in 2008, have increased up to 10-fold in value today.

Meanwhile, Sotheby’s took in an “outstanding” $84 million in 2014, compared to just $4 million a decade ago.

Although these impressive returns are a long way from those recouped at the Circle Art auction, which focuses specifically on East African art, the Kenyan event can still boast a tidy profit.

This year’s auction grossed nearly $200,000 in total. Pieces from artists from Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya were all on display.

04:46 - Source: CNN
Venice Biennale director discusses the business of art

According to art buyer, Brian Owango, the relatively affordable prices ensure there are wise investments to be had for those with a discerning eye.

“I think that East African art is a movement,” Owango says. “There are a lot of emotional buyers out there, myself included, and I believe in what they are doing.

“The wave is building, it has just started, so it’s from an investment perspective it’s wise to get in,” he adds.

Under the radar

Danda Jaroljmek, director, Circle Art Agency agrees. She points out that while the value of African art has increased greatly in recent years, many talented East African artists have flown under the radar.

Courtesy Magnin-A Gallery, Paris/Omar Victor Diop
From the series 'The Studio of Vanities', Diop's photography features in "Making Africa -- A Continent of Contemporary Design" at Guggenheim Bilbao.
Adjaye Associates/Johannesburg Development Agency
Commissioned by the Johannesburg Development Agency, David Adjaye was asked to design a new pavilion for Park Station. The result is 'Sunsum,' designed to complement the surrounding architecture.
Courtesy Ed Cross Fine Art Ltd, London/Mário Macilau
Born in Mali, Macilau began life working in a market at the age of ten. He started taking pictures in 2003, and went professional in 2007 when he traded his mother's mobile phone for his first camera. He never looked back, and today exhibits all over the world.
Pierre-Christophe Gam
The website for French-Congolese musician Taali M "should be understood as an invitation to an ancient African kingdom" according to Gam, the website's designer.
Courtesy CAAC. Courtesy Magnin-A Gallery, Paris/Ojeikere Estate
From the series "Hairstyles," Ojeikere's portfolio would be called "a love letter to Nigeria" after his passing in 2014. A giant of the African photography scene, he was a keen documenter of contemporary culture. This anthropological series about Nigerian hairstyle went on to achieve iconic status.
Courtesy Pascale Revert, London/Cheick Diallo
Trained as an architect at the Ecole d'Architecure de Rouen, Diallo is now based in Bamako, Mali, after establishing a studio in the mid-90s. Diallo specializes in furniture, such as the 'Sansa' armchair (pictured). He has featured at the Salon Maisons et Objects in Paris.
CARL DE SOUZA/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Kabiru created thrifty artworks made from found objects for his "C-Stunners" series. Here, he poses with one of his creations. The series is inspired by his father, who once fell out of love with his own spectacles after receiving a beating from his parents for breaking them.
Olalekan Jeyfous/Walé Oyéjidé
From the series "Our Africa 2081 A.D.," Afrofuturist Ikire Jones imagines the changes ahead for the continent. The population of Lagos itself is already 17.9 million people strong, and rapid urban redevelopment is necessary for the city to cope with future population growth.
Courtesy CAAC. Courtesy Magnin-A Gallery, Paris/Malick Sidibé
Sidibe is famous for capturing the transition between colonial and post-colonial Mali. CNN has featured the artist's intimate photography in the past.
Courtesy Wangechi Mutu/Gladstone Gallery/Victoria MiroGallery
Clocking in at just over eight minutes, Mutu's short film features American singer Santigold playing a Medusa-like figure in a post-apocalyptic backdrop.
Courtesy CAAC-The Pigozzi Collection, Geneva/Bodys Isek Kingelez
Kingelez also creates artwork from found objects to make statements about urban life in the Congo.

“It’s less known than the art market in South Africa or West Africa. We’ve had much less exposure,” Jaroljmek says.

“Prices are affordable and you know we are the new thing so people are interested in what’s happening.

“It’s so different, the art from Ethiopia, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, there’s such different characteristics, different history of art, different art schools - or no art school, so the art is incredibly varied.”

Four pieces at this year’s auction sold for more than a million Kenyan shillings ($100,000). That’s double the number of the year before - showing a marked growth potential.

And that trajectory, as well as the interest from both local and international clientele, is heading steadily upwards.