Los Angeles Times

1,917 of collection’s artifacts fail the test

Mexican Museum in San Francisco learns 96% of its oldest items aren’t the real deal.

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SAN FRANCISCO — A majority of the oldest artifacts in the permanent collection of the Mexican Museum in San Francisco are either forgeries or not up to national museum standards, a new report has determined.

Only 83 of the 2,000 artifacts in the museum’s pre-Columbian-era collection could be authentica­ted, the report said.

The other 1,917 are considered decorative and will probably be donated to schools or smaller museums.

The museum board told the San Francisco Chronicle it was shocked by the results of the $80,000 study conducted as a Smithsonia­n Institutio­n requiremen­t.

The Mexican Museum was founded in 1975 and operated as a community museum until it was accepted as a Smithsonia­n affiliate in 2012, which raised the bar on the quality of artifacts that can be displayed.

By going through the collection and determinin­g which items should be kept, the Mexican Museum is signaling to donors that it is serious about being a national museum, officials said.

In the early years, the museum built its collection on donations, and basically anything was accepted, said Andrew Kluger, chairman of the museum’s board of trustees.

All of the items included in the study — fake and real — were donated, and no tax deductions were given to donors without independen­t authentica­tion, Kluger said.

“It happens all the time that museums accept things that are not real,” he said. “People donate pieces because their children don’t want them.”

That practice, however, is not acceptable for museums that accept artifact loans from the Smithsonia­n.

An independen­t team of museum curators from Mexico City conducted the study and submitted its findings in late June.

It was the first in a series of authentica­tion studies to be done on the museum’s more than 16,000 artifacts.

While almost 96% of the museum’s pre-Columbian artifacts cannot be authentica­ted, Kluger does not expect that to be the case with later periods in the collection.

“Most of it is good,” he said, “and everything in the Latino art and Chicano art collection appears to be authentic.”

He said a recent gift of 86 or so authentica­ted pre-Columbian sculptures from a Berkeley collector will join the 83 authentica­ted male and female figures, jars, bowls, vases and necklace ornaments going back 2,500 years.

 ?? Eric Risberg Associated Press ?? A WOMAN walks past a mural outside the Mexican Museum under constructi­on in San Francisco in July 2016. The museum became a Smithsonia­n affiliate in 2012.
Eric Risberg Associated Press A WOMAN walks past a mural outside the Mexican Museum under constructi­on in San Francisco in July 2016. The museum became a Smithsonia­n affiliate in 2012.

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