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Source: MiBAC |
At the beginning of 2013 I made a number of
predictions. I drew attention to Cambodian antiquities and we have seen items
returned. Sotheby's has also agreed to
return a piece that had been due to be auctioned.
I also thought that more material would be identified from the Medici archive. This has been the case for items surfacing on the market (e.g.
Gnathian krater, the
Ackerman Apollo, an
East Greek warrior, the
Symes torso, the
Symes Pan, the
Medici Pan, and
other items) as well as in established collections such as the
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (and
here).
The J. Paul Getty Museum agreed to return the terracotta head of
Hades. The Italian enquiry into a curator at the
Princeton University Art Museum came to an end. However there has been no movement on the
Villanovan bronze hut. We continue to await the return of material to Greece from the
Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University.
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Bothmer fragments reunited |
New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art has continued to place a veil over the formation of the
Bothmer collection of pot fragments. However one partial cup will be returning to Rome after Dr Christos Tsirogiannis made the link with a fragment in the
Villa Giulia.
Cornell will be returning
cuneiform tablets to Iraq.
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SLAM |
And we have not forgotten about the mummy mask in the
St Louis Art Museum.
Italian authorities netted Etruscan antiquities in
Operation Ifegenia. A fragment from a tomb at
Paestum has been intercepted in North America.
The AAMD does not seem to have resolved some issues with items appear on the
Object Register.
Turkey has yet to press hard for the return of material such as the Bubon bronzes. However
Michael Bennett of the Cleveland Museum of Art has decided to add his voice to the debate. There has also been some discussion of a
sarcophagus spotted in Geneva.
Little further work has been done on European (including UK) museums and their acquisition of material from Robin Symes, Giacomo Medici and Gianfranco Becchina. This is perhaps a task for 2014. We did however draw attention to the situation in
Copenhagen.
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Church theft in Devon |
In the UK Simon Thurley (and see his
Men from the Ministry) took up the case of
Heritage Crime. I have also added my voice for the return of the
Icklingham Bronzes. This was a theme taken up during an outdoor seminar during the excavations at
Leiston Abbey in Suffolk. There have been some significant instances such as the
paintings from a church in Devon.
On different fronts I revisited my thinking on the
Universal Museum. The Cleveland Museum of Art has published its position on the
Apollo and I have responded in an
academic article. A small publication on the
Crosby Garrett helmet appeared (and has done little to answer concerns about how it was removed from the ground). British Prime Minister
David Cameron has expressed his views on the Parthenon marbles. I was able to hear Paul Barford present a seminar on
portable antiquities during his visit to East Anglia. I have returned to my analysis of the value of the
antiquities market. I also delivered my
inaugural lecture on one of the founders of modern archaeology.