Steal, and you go to prison. But what if you loot cultural artifacts? Museums have thrived off the practice for centuries. Take a stroll through some of the world’s major museums — the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the British Museum, the Pergamon Museum in Berlin — and ask yourself what they have in common. Answer: Halls full of artifacts with disputed ownership. In this more enlightened age we live in, this clearly has to change. And how that change takes place will have major ramifications for collections of antiquities in legacy museums like those in London, Berlin and Paris. Meanwhile, new ethical protocols are being established by new museums, such as the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
Perhaps I’m too scathing in my judgment of previous international museum acquisition practices, since most of the material that museums hold in their collections are donated or purchased from private collectors. Yet it is also true that many collectors — particularly those from the period of European colonialism — purchased artwork and historical artifacts in less than completely ethical circumstances. I’m not looking to incriminate museums for how they acquired art in the past, though I do think there should be more care taken in future acquisitions.
Many, if not all, of the world’s major museums have items in their collections with contested ownership. Those complicated pasts now are haunting the present. Just this month, Tarita Alarcon Rapu, the governor of Easter Island, met with British Museum executives to request the return of Hoa Hakananai’a, a stone monolith said to be among the most important of those on the Chilean Pacific Ocean island.
The four-ton object, called a “moai,” is said to represent tribal leaders or deified ancestors. Hoa Hakananai’a was taken in the 19th century by sailors from the British Navy and “given” to Queen Victoria. It has been in the hands of the British Museum for more than 150 years. Again, I’m not here to judge Britain’s colonial past — at least in the matter of museums — but what I find troubling is that, when it was asked to return the artifact, the museum offered to “loan” it. It is offensive, in bad taste and bad faith for the British Museum to offer to loan the monolith to Easter Island, when that is from where the monolith was wrongfully taken.
Of course, returning an artifact that has been in a museum for more than a century is a complex matter, but this is not an isolated incident. The British Museum has form. Greece has asked for the return of what the British call the Elgin Marbles (the Greeks call them the Parthenon Marbles), and Nigeria for what are called the Benin Bronzes (the museum has, again, offered to “loan” these to a museum being built in Nigeria; I sense a pattern). Clearly, the moment has come to deal with the complicated nature of the ownership of historical artifacts.
Many of the world’s major museums have halls full of artifacts with disputed ownership. In this more enlightened age we live in, this clearly has to change.Alexa Mena
- Alexa Mena is a writer for the online health and fitness magazine, livehealthy.ae. Copyright: Syndication Bureau