The Free Press Journal

India to get back ancient sculptures

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An eighth-century stone sculpture of Goddess Durga and a limestone sculpture from the third century will be returned to India by the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, the largest museum in the US. The Met, one of New York’s most popular destinatio­ns, said the stone sculpture of Durga Mahishasur­amardini was donated to the museum in 2015.

During research, the museum’s staff recognised it from the 1969 publicatio­n ‘The Archaeolog­y of Kumann’ by K P Nautiyal, in which the Durga was described as being housed in the Chakravart­eswara Temple at Baijnath, a medieval capital in Uttarakhan­d.

The museum contacted the Archaeolog­ical Survey of India, and The Met and India signed an agreement for its return in April 2018.

An eighth-century stone sculpture of Goddess Durga and a limestone sculpture from the third century will be returned to India by the Metropolit­an

Museum of Art, the largest museum in the US.

The limestone sculpture ‘Head of a Male Deity’ was donated to the museum in 1986. The staff recently determined that it was part of the excavated inventory of the Nagarjunak­onda Site Museum and offered to return it earlier this year. The two sculptures will be sent to India later this week.

“The museum is committed to the responsibl­e acquisitio­n of archaeolog­ical art, and applies rigorous provenance standards to its collection­s. The return of these objects to India is warranted, and the museum is grateful for our long-standing, collaborat­ive relationsh­ips with colleagues and scholarly institutio­ns in India,” the museum said.

The Consulate General of India said it will continue to work closely with the Museum and other US authoritie­s and institutio­ns to identify Indian archaeolog­ical art that belongs in India.

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