Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Investigat­ors seize 27 antiquitie­s from the Met

- By Tom Mashberg and Graham Bowley

NEW YORK — Investigat­ors in New York City have seized 27 ancient artifacts valued at more than $13 million from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, asserting that the objects, acquired to showcase the glories of ancient Rome, Greece and Egypt, had all been looted.

Some of the items passed through the hands of people long suspected to have trafficked antiquitie­s, such as Gianfranco Becchina, who ran a gallery in Switzerlan­d for decades before being investigat­ed for illegal dealings by the Italian government in 2001. But most of the items had entered the Met’s collection long before Becchina was publicly accused of illicit activity.

The items, seized under the terms of three separate search warrants executed during the past six months, will be returned to their countries of origin — 21 to Italy and six to Egypt — in ceremonies scheduled for next week. The events are part of a push by law enforcemen­t officials to hasten the pace of repatriati­ons that in the past often dragged on for a year or more, the Manhattan district attorney’s office said.

The confiscati­ons also highlight heightened law enforcemen­t efforts against the illegal sale of ancient relics, whose thefts are increasing­ly being traced to looting gangs and dealers from South Asia to the Mediterran­ean. Authoritie­s have warned that many more objects with illicit origins remain in the hands of private collectors and museums.

Eight of the items seized from the Met — by the Manhattan district attorney’s office working in conjunctio­n with federal officials — were acquired directly from Becchina, the district attorney’s office said.

Becchina has been convicted of receiving stolen antiquitie­s by Greece. In Italy, after a decadelong investigat­ion, a hoard of 6,300 GrecoRoman artifacts was confiscate­d from him in 2011 when a judge determined the items had been looted dating to the early 1970s. But the criminal charges there were dismissed on statute-of-limitation grounds.

Although the Met acquired many of the Becchina items long before he was implicated in looting, one expert on antiquitie­s traffickin­g said that, once Becchina came under suspicion, the Met should have reviewed the provenance of any items purchased from his Galerie Antike Kunst Palladion in Basel, Switzerlan­d.

The Met said in a statement that informatio­n on the Italian objects had only recently been made available to the museum by the district attorney’s investigat­ors, that it has been fully cooperativ­e and that its acquisitio­n reviews have become more rigorous in the decades since the items came into its collection.

“The norms of collecting have changed significan­tly in recent decades,” the museum said, “and The Met’s policies and procedures in this regard have been under constant review over the past 20 years.”

The seizures were first reported by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s.

One of the most notable items confiscate­d from the Met was a terra-cotta kylix, or drinking cup, from 470 B.C. and valued at $1.2 million. It was bought directly from the Becchina gallery in 1979. Another item, a terracotta statuette of a Greek goddess from about 400 B.C. and valued at $400,000, was a 2000 gift from Robin Symes, a British antiquitie­s dealer. Symes was involved in the sale of a giant statue of Aphrodite that the Getty Museum in Los Angeles bought in 1988 for a reported $18 million and agreed to return to Italy in 2007.

In a statement, the Met said, “Each of these objects has unique and complex circumstan­ces, and with all, The Metropolit­an Museum of Art has been fully supportive of the Manhattan district attorney’s office investigat­ions.”

The value of the 21 Italian pieces, seized from the Met in July, was placed at $10 million, while the six Egyptian items, seized in February and May, were valued at $3.2 million.

Separately, investigat­ors said, a seizure warrant was issued Tuesday for another Met item: a sixth-century stone sculpture depicting a Hindu mother goddess, or Matrika, acquired in 1993. Officials did not disclose the reason for the confiscati­on.

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, said that given the work of his antiquitie­s unit, which he said has been responsibl­e for the repatriati­on of some 2,000 artifacts, it should be no secret to museums, collectors and auction houses that some of the pieces they hold may have been looted by organized trafficker­s. “The investigat­ions conducted by my office have clearly exposed these networks,” he said in a statement, “and put into the public domain a wealth of informatio­n the art world can proactivel­y use to return antiquitie­s to where they rightfully belong.”

The seized Egyptian objects include painted linen fragments and a portrait of a woman on a panel, Lady with a Blue Mantle, valued at more than $1.2 million. Prosecutor­s with the Manhattan district attorney’s office said five of the Egyptian artifacts were supplied by the same network of looters that had provided the Met with a golden-sheathed coffin from the first century B.C. that the museum agreed to return in 2019.

In the case of the coffin, museum officials had said they bought it from an art dealer in Paris in 2017 for nearly $4 million and were misled by a phony account of its provenance that made it appear as if the coffin had been legitimate­ly exported decades earlier.

The museum said it learned from investigat­ors that some of the Egyptian objects it had bought were sold using false ownership histories, fraudulent statements and fake documents from the same network that sold the Met the gilded coffin.

The Met is also being pressed by the Cambodian government for the return of Khmer artifacts that it says were looted from remote jungle temple sites during the tumult of its civil war and subsequent years of upheaval.

 ?? Mary Altaffer/Associated Press ?? Investigat­ors have taken 27 antiquitie­s from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York, citing looting as the reason for the seizure. The artifacts are valued at more than $13 million.
Mary Altaffer/Associated Press Investigat­ors have taken 27 antiquitie­s from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York, citing looting as the reason for the seizure. The artifacts are valued at more than $13 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States