The Bakersfield Californian

Sculptures, artifacts returned to Peru in LA ceremony

- BY STEFANIE DAZIO

LOS ANGELES — The United States on Friday returned several Peruvian antiquitie­s, including the intricate knotwork artifacts known as khipus, in a ceremony at the Los Angeles consulate.

The brief event came amid a push in recent years to have museums, universiti­es and government­s worldwide return cultural pieces to their home countries and tribal nations. Indigenous and African communitie­s, in particular, have pressed institutio­ns to reckon with their colonialis­t pasts and repatriate stolen or looted antiquitie­s.

The items returned to the Peruvian consul general included two khipus, intricatel­y knotted and colored sets of cords that experts believe were used by the Incas to count and keep records.

The repatriate­d khipus were turned over to federal investigat­ors two years ago by a private art gallery. They may have been donated to the gallery or abandoned there sometime between 2005 and 2012, authoritie­s said.

Also repatriate­d were several sculptures that Los Angeles-based agents from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security had seized in a since-closed investigat­ion dating back 15 years.

The FBI last year repatriate­d several Peruvian artifacts that had been voluntaril­y surrendere­d to federal agents. Those antiquitie­s included historical documents and a 17th century painting stolen from a Peruvian church in 1992. They also included a painting stolen from a different church in 2002 that was hand-carried into the United States by an art dealer, sold to an art gallerist in Santa Fe and later sold in 2016 to a buyer in California.

In 2021, the San Francisco Asian Art Museum returned two handcarved religious artifacts — sandstone lintels dating back to the 9th and 10th centuries — to the Thai government. The antiquitie­s had been stolen and exported from Thailand — a violation of Thai law — about 50 years ago and donated to the city of San Francisco, which owns the art museum.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES / AP ?? Claudia Bastante, Peruvian Deputy-Counsel in Los Angeles and profession­al archaeolog­ist, smiles as she looks at khipus, part of the recovered Peruvian cultural property in Los Angeles on Friday. The U.S. repatriate­d several Peruvian antiquitie­s Friday to the country’s Los Angeles consulate.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES / AP Claudia Bastante, Peruvian Deputy-Counsel in Los Angeles and profession­al archaeolog­ist, smiles as she looks at khipus, part of the recovered Peruvian cultural property in Los Angeles on Friday. The U.S. repatriate­d several Peruvian antiquitie­s Friday to the country’s Los Angeles consulate.

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