The Denver Post

The DAM’S “Looted” scandal

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The Denver Post’s Sam Tabachnik exposed the dark underside of America’s vast internatio­nal art collection housed in museums, universiti­es, and private homes across the nation in the three- part series, “Looted: Stolen relics, laundered art and a Colorado scholar’s role in the illicit antiquitie­s trade.”

As the headline suggests, Tabachnik uncovered a network of plunder that, over decades, robbed Southeast Asians of a significan­t part of their art, heritage, and culture.

And at the center of the work was a Denver woman known as “The Scholar,” who is accused of having worked hand- in- hand with an art dealer to hide the means of ill- gotten statutes presenting auction houses, private buyers and museums with the needed sheen of legitimacy.

We are dismayed that Christoph Heinrich, the director of the Denver Art Museum, has not publicly responded to the scandal. We worry the institutio­n is hoping the storm will blow over without having to address the fact that not only is the museum housing artwork that was likely smuggled into the U. S. by art dealer Douglas Latchford and then legitimize­d by The Scholar Emma C. Bunker, but the Denver Art Museum’s complicity also helped give these two people legitimacy in the eyes of other buyers.

“The Denver Art Museum became one of Latchford’s primary landing spots as he sought to burnish his reputation,” The Post’s investigat­ion found. All told, the Denver museum spent more than a half- million dollars on Latchford pieces, and he loaned, gifted or sold the museum more than a dozen ancient artifacts — deals made possible and shepherded along by Bunker, court records and previously unreported emails show.”

This is not a scandal that Heinrich can ignore.

He should immediatel­y commit to removing Bunker’s name from exhibits and pledge to review the acquisitio­n process of art tied to Latchford and Bunker. The Denver Art Museum received much praise in recent years for returning four looted statues to Cambodia.

But the action rings hollow now that we know Cambodian officials have requested Denver Art Museum records for any pieces that came from Latchford and Bunker and that the museum has not responded to the request after 18 months.

Only after the investigat­ion was complete has the museum taken steps to distance itself from Bunker, whose name appears on The Bunker Gallery section of the Denver Art Museum’s Southeast Asian gallery.

Museum officials responded via e- mail to questions from The Denver Post and indicated that they have not cooperated with officials in Cambodia directly on other objects outside of the four already returned because the museum has provided “all records to the DOJ regarding the returned pieces.” But that is not the informatio­n that is needed — other pieces are in question.

If all of this seems insignific­ant amid larger travesties in a world with billions of people, consider the great difficulty and barriers preventing Cambodians from visiting the United States to see these exquisite relics from their own culture and history.

We were struck hard by a quote from Hab Touch, the deputy director of Cambodia’s National Museum, that was included in a 495- page book written by Latchford and Bunker documentin­g some of the art that had passed through their hands.

“The first time I saw the photograph­s of Khmer sculptures collected by Emma and Douglas for this book, I realized that while I work with Khmer art every day, I had only been familiar with a small proportion of what exists,” wrote Touch.

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