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May 1, 2026

Chinese Porcelain Theft at Princessehof: A Suspect Arrested After Three Years


More than three years after a dramatic break-in at the Keramiekmuseum Princessehof, Dutch authorities have brought a suspect before the courts, marking a significant development in a case that initially seemed unlikely to reach resolution. The suspect, a 22-year-old man from Almere, is alleged to have been part of a small group responsible for the February 2023 burglary, in which a number of rare Chinese ceramic objects were targeted in a highly specific and unusually destructive theft.

The arrest comes as something of a surprise, as many had largely assumed the investigation had stalled, given the passage of time and the lack of earlier breakthroughs. The renewed movement in the case reflects the often slow and complex nature of art crime investigations, where forensic evidence, witness testimony, and investigative leads can take years to coalesce into prosecutable cases.

The original theft occurred in the early hours of 13 February 2023 and followed on an earlier unsuccessful attempt on Wednesday, the first of February.  Back then, intruders gained access to the museum by climbing a drainpipe and entering through the museum's roof, demonstrating both planning and familiarity with the building. Once inside, they moved quickly to the first floor featuring Chinese ceramics and removed eleven objects from display.  Of note, though valuable, these were not the highest valued objects on display in the museum's collection.

What distinguishes this burglary from many others is what happened next. As the alarm sounded and the perpetrators fled, seven of the stolen objects were either horrifically dropped while the culprit(s) made their getaway or deliberately smashed in the street just outside the museum. Witnesses later described the surrounding area as covered in shards. Some of the ceramics were so badly damaged that restoration proved impossible, effectively transforming theft into irreversible destruction.

At the time, investigators and museum officials were struck by its apparent selectivity of the operation. The objects had been taken quickly from a specific installation within an exhibition, suggesting that the perpetrators had prior knowledge of the display and location within the museum. There had also been a failed break-in attempt 12 days earlier. 

Four of the stolen ceramics remain missing to this day and are pictured here.  Unlike paintings or widely recognisable antiquities, high-end ceramics occupy a narrower market, particularly when they are well documented and publicly exhibited. Early speculation suggested that the theft may not have been motivated by resale in the conventional art market. Instead, the possibility of a targeted commission or non-commercial motive was raised, reflecting the limited avenues through which such objects can be discreetly circulated.

The recent court appearance of the suspect sheds further light on how the burglary was carried out. Prosecutors allege that the accused was part of a group of three individuals involved in the operation. The method of entry, the rapid removal of objects, and the chaotic exit all align with what might be described as a short-duration, high-risk intrusion, a pattern seen in a number of museum thefts where perpetrators seek to minimise time on site.

Yet, the aftermath complicates any straightforward reading of the crime. The destruction of the majority of the stolen objects raises questions about intent. Whether the breakage was accidental, the result of haste, or indicative of a lack of familiarity with handling fragile objects or in highly timed burglaries. Even in cases where stolen objects are later recovered, their evidentiary and cultural value can be significantly diminished if their physical integrity has been compromised.

The Princessehof itself occupies a distinctive place within the Dutch museum landscape. Housed in an eighteenth-century palace and known for its extensive collection of Asian and European ceramics, it is the only national museum of ceramics in the northern Netherlands. The objects targeted in 2023 were part of a temporary exhibition exploring themes of celebration, making their removal not only a loss of individual artefacts but also a disruption to a curated narrative.

The case also highlights the broader challenges faced by museums exhibiting portable and fragile works. Asian Ceramics, while culturally significant, are becoming a known target and are physically vulnerable and often easier to transport than larger or more structurally robust objects. At the same time, their niche market can limit opportunities for resale, creating a paradox in which objects are both attractive targets and difficult to monetize.

As the legal proceedings begin, their focus will likely shift toward establishing the extent of the suspect’s involvement and the role of the two accomplices. For investigators, the case represents both a resolution and a reminder. While the arrest demonstrates persistence in pursuing leads over time, the fate of the remaining missing objects underscores the limits of recovery once objects have been removed and dispersed.

April 29, 2026

From Temple to Market and Back: Provenance Lessons from the 2026 India Restitutions

Late yesterday, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office issued a press release announcing that as a result of their investigations, the Antiquities Trafficking Unit has recently returned more than 650 antiquities to India

  • 612 of these went home in November of 2024, 
  • 26 in July of 2025,
  • and 19 yesterday.

Seventeen of these are traceable to Subhash Kapoor, whom the D.A.’s Office obtained an arrest warrant for in 2012 and whose extradition remains pending following his conviction for trafficking in India in 2022. 

The scale of these repatriations is striking, but it is not the number alone that warrants attention. What stands out is the consistency with which these objects, having been removed from their original contexts, have been traced back through overlapping networks of dealers, intermediaries, and institutions. As with many large restitutions in recent years, this is less a story of isolated thefts than of systems that enabled their movement.

Among the returned works are objects that illustrate both the cultural weight of what was lost and the mechanisms by which they were displaced. This bronze Avalokiteshvara was stolen from a museum, the Mahant Ghasidas Memorial Museum, in Raipur India before being smuggled into the United States.  Seized by the DA in 2025, the $2 million bronze has ended up with a private collector in New York by 2014. 

 A red sandstone Buddha, similarly significant, was tied directly to Kapoor's trafficking chain and had been smuggled into the United States through established commercial channels before ultimately being seized from a storage unit leased by Kapoor in New York.

A sandstone figure of dancing Ganeshaa, taken from a temple in Madhya Pradesh, passed through multiple hands before appearing at Christies with a constructed ownership history that only stated:

Doris Wiener Gallery, New York, 1984. 

That object sold for $37,500 to an unsuspecting buyer. 

In each case, the object’s movement was accompanied by documentation that, at least on its face, appeared sufficient to sustain its sale and circulation.

These patterns are not unfamiliar. They align closely with material that has emerged over the past decade in connection with Subhash Kapoor and the networks associated with his gallery, Art of the Past, in Manhattan. Kapoor’s role in the antiquities trade has been well documented as well as discussed with some frequency on ARCA's blog.  

Operating for years under the guise of a legitimate dealer, he facilitated the movement of objects from temple and archaeological contexts into the international market through his New York gallert Art of the Past.  The process was neither improvised nor opaque to those within it. Objects were removed at source, transferred through intermediaries, assigned provenance narratives designed to withstand cursory scrutiny, and ultimately placed with collectors and art institutions.

What distinguishes the Kapoor material is not only the scale, although that is considerable, but the degree to which it illustrates how provenance can be constructed. Records associated with his transactions often reference collections or ownership histories that include suspect actors, are difficult to verify or that collapse under closer-that-cursury scrutiny.  In some instances, photographs recovered during investigations show objects in situ, or in  the hands of looters, shortly before their appearance on the market, providing a direct link between looting and sale. In others, invoices, shipping records, and correspondence establish the movement of objects through a sequence of actors, each contributing to the gradual normalization of the piece within the market.

The restitution announced this week reflects heavily on the body of evidence gathered this grouping of plunderers who robbed India of some of its most  significant pieces.  Many of the objects returned through these investigative efforts have been identified through the continued analysis of materials seized in connection with Kapoor’s operations. That analysis has not been linear. It has required the comparison of archival photographs, the cross-referencing of dealer records, and the reconstruction of ownership histories that were deliberately obscured. In this sense, the return of these objects is the visible outcome of a much longer process of documentation and verification.

It is also a reminder that the removal of Kapoor from the market did not, in itself, resolve the problem. His arrest in 2011 and subsequent conviction in India marked a significant moment, but the objects he handled up until his arrest had already been dispersed. They entered collections, were exhibited, and in some cases were sold onward.  Their identification now depends on the ability to connect present holdings with past documentation, often across jurisdictions and decades.

The role of the market in this process is difficult to separate from the question of responsibility. Many of the objects returned in this case were not hidden. They were displayed, published, and, in some instances, celebrated. Their legitimacy rested on the prestige of the once-celebrated dealers who sold them as much as the documentation that accompanied them, documentation that, as subsequent investigations have shown, was often fabricated or misleading. 

This is not unique to Kapoor’s material, but his case provides a particularly clear illustration of how provenance documentation can be falsified. Provenance, when treated as a narrative rather than as a verifiable record, becomes a mechanism through which objects are distanced from their origins.

What has changed in recent years is the degree to which these narratives can be tested. The work of specialised investigative units, including the Manhattan District Attorney’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit, has introduced a level of scrutiny that was largely absent in the United States in earlier decades before the formation of this specialised unit. The recovery of thousands of objects and the public presentation of the evidence underlying those recoveries has reshaped expectations around due diligence and disclosure. At the same time, the volume of material still unaccounted for suggests that these efforts, while significant, address only a portion of the illicit trafficking equation..

The return of more than 650 antiquities to India is therefore best understood not as a conclusion, but as part of an ongoing process. Each object carries with it a record that is, in varying degrees, recoverable. The work lies in assembling those records, in identifying points of continuity and contradiction, and in determining whether the histories presented by the market can withstand closer examination.

For those engaged in provenance research, cases such as this reinforce a familiar point. The absence of documentation is rarely neutral. Gaps, inconsistencies, and bland dealer claims are not simply inconveniences; they are indicators that require researchers' attention. The material associated with Kapoor has shown how much can be reconstructed when those indicators are pursued systematically. It also shows how much remains to be done.

By Lynda Albertson

April 2, 2026

From Explosion to Recovery: Authorities Set Press Conference on Recovered Dacian Gold Stolen from the Drents Museum

  

After fourteen months, Drents Museum and the Public Prosecution Service (OM)  held a press conference this afternoon at 2:00 pm to formally announce the recovery of part of the Romanian treasures stolen from the Drents Museum in Assen overnight on 25 January 2025. 
The golden helmet of Coțofenești, from the 5th century BCE. 
This masterpiece of Geto-Dacian craftsmanship was discovered
by children after a heavy rainstorm in 1927. 
Image Credit: Vibeke Berens

Three gold spirals dating from the 1st century BCE - 1st century CE.
They were originally found at Sarmizegetusa Regia,
one of the six Dacian fortification systems 
on the UNESCO Heritage List.
Image Credit: Vibeke Berens

The theft, which shocked both the Netherlands and Romania, targeted objects on loan from the National History Museum of Romania in Bucharest. These works held profound national and symbolic significance, most notably the famed 2,500-year-old golden Helmet of Coțofenești, widely regarded as one of Romania’s most important cultural treasure. Their disappearance triggered widespread concern about museum security, international lending practices, and the vulnerability and commodification of gold and jewellery objects housed in museum collections which have increasingly become the target of thieves.

Although arrests were made early in the multinational Eurojust-coordinated investigation, the artefacts remained missing for months, ultimately resulting in the Netherlands paying out approximately €5.7 million in insurance compensation for the loss of the Dacian artefacts last September. 

Corien Fahner, the head public prosecutor at the OM Noord-Nederland, announced that the recovery of the Helmet of Coțofenești and two of the three stolen gold bangles.  Their return, on April 1st, follows months of investigation into the violent heist that shattered windows and caused damage to the museum buildings and which resulted in the arrest of three alleged accomplices from Heerhugowaard: Douglas Chesley Wendersteyt, Bernhard Zeeman and an individual only identified as "Jan B., all of whom have been charged for their alleged roles in having used explosives to breach the museum in order to execute the gold theft.

Notably, news of this recovery came just twelve days before substantive hearings in the defendants' criminal case were scheduled to begin on 14 April in Assen, with a fourth suspect scheduled to appear before a police judge in early May.  David van Weel, Minister of Justice and Security in the Netherlands, has stated that the Romanian helmet and two of the gold spirals were recovered through plea deals made with the suspects, apparently in advance of their upcoming court appearance.  Fahner, did not elaborate on what deals the OM made with the three suspects, indicating only that the OM will explain that during their trial.

Further details regarding the condition of the recovered objects, reveal that the helmet has some damages to areas restored previously but which are repairable.  The circumstances of their recovery and the motivations for the theft are expected to be clarified at a later date.  For both Dutch and Romanian authorities, as well as the director of the Drents Museum, Robert van Langh, these recoveries represent not only a significant investigative success, but also an important act of cultural restitution, restoring objects that carry deep historical and national meaning.

It's worth noting that the insurance amount paid out by the Netherlands last year represents the gold objects' insurance allocation amount and not the actual value of the historic items.  Now that the gold has apparently been recovered, and assuming the objects are in good condition, the insurance paid out by the Netherlands should be reimbursed as part of a negotiated transfer of ownership agreement.

By Lynda Albertson

March 31, 2026

The Long Game: Why Organised Crime Holds, Not Sells, What It Steals

When the news of the €11 million museum theft at the Fondazione Magnani Rocca in Traversetolo broke last Sunday, the incident was already six days old.  Shortly after 2:00 am, on Monday, March 23, 2026, at least four masked accomplices entered the museum grounds having tampered with barrier rods which were part of a metal gate located along the periphery of the museum's manicured 12-hectare English-style garden to the North and East of the car park.  From there it was a straight walk up the museum's pebbled path to reach the rear of Villa Magnani, also known as Villa dei Capolavori or "Villa of Masterpieces" where they broke in through an entrance door.

Modern museums design security around deterrence, delay, and response, layered measures which include access control, alarms, CCTV, and rapid police coordination.  All of which are intended to shorten the time between intrusion and intervention.  These thieves seemed to know this and set to work quickly.

Once inside, they quickly climbed the villa's sumptuous staircase, turned left down the hall and made their way into the small gallery on the left, the Sala Cézanne, which housed one oil and five watercolours, completed by the artist.  Selecting one, the thieves removed it from its hook on the wall.

Paul Cézanne's Tasse et plat de cerises c. 1890 
is one of the painter's rare workds in Italy
Medium: Watercolour paint, and pencil on paper 
38cm x 49 cm

On that same floor, their second target was the Sala Impressionisti, which contains works by French masters who are quite rare in permanent Italian museum collections.  

There the thieves selected two small, high-value paintings:


and Henri Matisse's Odalisque sur la terrasse 1922


Pierre-Auguste Renoir's Les Poissons, 1917
Medium:  Oil on Canvas
40 x 51.5 cm
Worth an estimated at €9 million.

Some news report say that the thieves left behind a second painting by Renoir, the artist's Paysage de Cagnes as the team made their getaway in a 3 minute dash.  Other document that it was left in place within arm’s reach of the two other wors taken from the Impressionist gallery, along with a canvas from the Pourville Cliffs series by Claude Monet and post-war paintings by Hans Hartung, Jean Fautrier, Wols and Nicolas de Staël.

Perhaps the other artworks were too big?  Too many to carry, or time was running out.  One thing is certain, the strike team walked through one gallery to get to the other, making their choice of artworks seem intentional: an operational calculus versus indiscriminate removal.  Pre-selected, portable, and high-value targets, each apparently chosen over other works in the collection. 

One possible motive behind high-value art thefts is their utility within organised crime as instruments of negotiation rather than objects of aesthetic or commercial interest.  Works of art can function as portable leverage, stolen not for their sale's value, they are too recognisable, but for strategic use at some later date as a bargaining tool with judicial authorities. 

In this context, highly recognisable paintings stolen from a museum become a form of currency within the criminal justice system, where cooperation, restitution, or intelligence can be perceived as potentially useful bartering tools, relinquished in exchange for reduced sentences or more favourable detention conditions. The cases of cocaine traffickers Flor Bressers and Raffaele Imperiale illustrate how artworks may be retained by organised crime actors for years before resurfacing (or not resurfacing) as part of broader negotiations, underscoring their strategic value which goes beyond their multi-million dollar price tags.

In Imperiale’s case, his possession of two paintings, View of the Sea at Scheveningen, 1882 and Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen 1884 - 1885,  became a bargaining asset during the fugitive's cooperation with Italian authorities.  When speaking in relation to the stolen paintings, Imperiale indicated that he had purchased (without explaining from whom) "some goods", not simply the two Van Goghs, paying five instalments of one million euros each for a total of €10 million for both paintings.   

Similarly, Belgian drug dealer Bressers, is believed to have used the chat handle Bongoking to discuss the recently filched 17th-century painting, bragging about negotiating a lower purchase price.  

In selected texts released to the public Bongoking writes:

“I recently bought a Frans Hals, 2 laughing boys,” “Paid dearly, brother… Asked for 750, settled for 550.”

 Authorities believe this figure represents €550,000,

Both cases illustrate how the theft, concealment, and circulation of the high-profile stolen painting can be of interest to and circulate within criminal networks before resurfacing in judicial contexts. 

These examples suggest that, for organised crime actors, the true value of stolen art may lie not in its liquidity, but in its capacity to be converted into legal advantage.  In this sense, the thefts of paintings can serve a dual function: both as a criminal enterprise and as a long-term hedge when justice comes knocking. 

By:  Lynda Albertson

March 24, 2026

When “Financial Advice” Isn’t About Finance: Art Market Ambiguity and the Epstein–Black Relationship


Knowing that ARCA has been exploring the thousands of documents in the Epstein files, provenance researcher Saida Hasanagic pointed us to a recent investigative article by The New York Times that has shed an interesting spotlight on the financial relationship between Jeffrey Epstein and Leon Black, revealing a complex and nuanced system the was symbiotically useful to both men.  According to the analysis of released documents, Black is said to have paid Epstein roughly $170 million over several years for what was described as tax and estate planning advice, a figure exorbitantly higher than even a high net worth individual should have paid.  

Yet, Epstein’s role as we now know extended well beyond conventional financial consultancy.  He acted as an intermediary, structuring and routing payments to multiple women who were part of Black's constellation, in some cases using trusts or classifying transfers as “gifts,” mechanisms that could reduce transparency and alter tax exposure both to Black and the individuals the funds were routed to.  What emerged was not simply a story of wealth management, but of systems designed to obscure.  The use of intermediaries, layered financial vehicles, and vague professional designations created distance between payer, recipient, purpose and the receiver.  In this architecture, language becomes a tool of concealment as much as the money itself.  

Without identifying any of the individuals referenced in the New York Times reporting, or others appearing in the Epstein files, it is notable that several of the occupations attributed to females on the Epstein–Black payroll align with roles commonly found in the art market.  Like many of the attributes of the art world, such designations offer a convenient layer of ambiguity, allowing both the nature of the services provided and the origin of the funds to remain obscure.  

Describing oneself as “an independent professional in the arts” or an “art advisor” can function as a broad and opaque cover.  In this respect, it echoes Epstein’s own characterization of himself as a conventional wealth and tax advisor, particularly for ultra-high-net-worth clients.  All are titles which suggest conventional consultancies while masking having been involved in activities with far wider implications.

For those working in art crime and cultural property protection, this should feel uncomfortably familiar.  The art market has long operated with a tolerance for opacity.  Titles are fluid, transactions are often private, and documentation can be minimal or selectively constructed.  Provenance gaps, vague ownership histories, and intermediated sales structures are not anomalies, but features embedded in the system.

The Epstein–Black case does not implicate the art market directly in the underlying conduct, but it does highlight how it could be harnessed.  It demonstrates how easily loosely defined professional roles and opaque financial pathways can be used to blur transactional accountability.  In both finance and the art world, legitimacy is often conveyed through language rather than evidence.

This is precisely why calls for greater transparency in the art market are not merely academic.  When professional identities and transaction structures are sufficiently elastic, they can be repurposed to shield activities that would not withstand scrutiny in more regulated environments.  The risk is not only financial misconduct, but the normalization of ambiguity itself.

This is precisely why calls for greater transparency in the art market are not merely academic.  When professional identities and transaction structures are sufficiently elastic, they can be repurposed to shield activities that would not withstand scrutiny in more regulated environments.  Titles of "expert" alone, whether on paper, in catalogues, or on platforms like LinkedIn, are too often accepted at face value, yet they may reveal very little about the individual's actual expertise, responsibilities, or accountability.  In a field where language so often substitutes for verification, the distinction between description and substantiation can be difficult to discern. The risk, therefore, is not only financial misconduct, but the quiet normalization of ambiguity itself.

If there is a lesson to be drawn, it is this: opacity is not neutral.  It is an enabling condition.  And when it comes to vague claims of expertise in the art market and little or no traceable footprint of experience in this discipline, in might be wise to consider hiring your art market expert the old-fashioned way, through serious vetting and not merely vague assumptions. 

By Lynda Albertson

March 12, 2026

Never underestimate the power of reading new books to determine the outcomes of antiquities trafficking mysteries


To bring attention to looting and plunder, the US nonprofit The Antiquities Coalition released a  PDF "Top Ten Most Wanted" series highlighting a group of some "of the most significant looted, stolen, and missing artifacts from around the world." Their initiative aimed to spotlight the global crisis of cultural racketeering and to enlist the public’s help in locating and recovering objects that represent irreplaceable elements of humanity’s shared heritage.


One of the artefacts highlighted by the AC was this 3rd century CE alabaster statue base, found during an excavation conducted by an archaeological mission carried out by the American Foundation for the Study of Humans (AFSM) and the national team of the General Authority for Antiquities and Museums (GOAM).  Logged as MB 2005 I-50, and later known as FB-Maḥram Bilqīs 2, this artefact was stolen sometime after from the Temple of Awwam, known locally as al-Mahram Bilqîs (Temple of Bilqls), on the outskirts of the ancient city of Ma'rib in Yemen.  According to legend, Marib was the capital of the Sabaean kingdom, ruled by the biblical Queen of Sheba.

Fortunately for us, at some point after its discovery, the statue base it was measured and photographed by scholars and it was this photo which was used for the "Wanted" poster, emphasising the cultural losses to Yemen which have occurred before and turning its present conflict and stating the object's last known location was "at auction in Paris France".  

I then began scrolling through pages and pages of South Arabian artefacts sold in the French capital by problematic individuals working the Paris market, during and after that date range listed on the "Wanted" poster.  With time, I was able to find a matching photo of the alabaster base, as Lot 297 in the 1 December 2011 auction catalogue of Pierre Bergé & Associés, where the auction house when to great lengths to transcribe the twenty-six lines of the artefact's Sabaean inscription,  a dedicatory text giving thanks and offering a bronze statue to the god Almaqah for the success of a punitive expedition against Abyssinian incursions during the reign of Lahay'athat Yarkham, King of Saba and Dhû Raydân, dated to around 230 to 240 CE. Unfortunately, the auction catalogue offered zero in the way of confirmable provenance information. 

Knowing the sale had long past, I was left me with little more than what I knew from the original "Wanted" poster, but at least I had the Paris sales point. At a semi-dead end, I filed the information on the object away among my many where-has-it-gone-now files, hoping that one day a subsequent consignment might surface before the piece could be sold again.

Then, while reading a newly released book published in January by French art journalist Vincent Noce, titled  L'or pillé des pharaons, I encountered an intriguing passage. Noce describes a network of indicted and unindicted individuals involved in circulating illicit antiquities through France and beyond. In the course of that discussion, he referenced a statue base that matched the object from the Antiquities Coalition’s poster.


Le plus notable est un socle de statue, catalogué comme provenant d’une « collection particulière », adjugé 44 000 € le 1er décembre 2011 à une galerie parisienne portant le nom de la déesse mère Cybèle. Comportant des inscriptions du royaume légendaire de Saba, il aurait été volé en 2005 dans les découvertes d’un chantier de fouilles mené par une mission américaine au temple d’Awam, dans la province yéménite de Marib. Apprenant que cet ouvrage était objet de l’enquête, le galeriste, Jean-Pierre Montesino, l’a remis à la police en remboursant son client. Il n’a jamais pu se faire dédommager par la maison Pierre Bergé, plus de dix ans étant passés depuis l’adjudication. Quand il voulut se retourner contre le vendeur, il s’aperçut que le nom figurant au bordereau de vente était en fait celui du transporteur.

Ce galeriste n’avait décidément pas de chance avec la société de ventes PBA...

According to Noce, this missing South Arabian artefact from Yemen had been purchased for €44,000 by the Parisian Galerie Cybèle.  Upon learning that the piece was the subject of a criminal investigation, the gallery's owner, Jean-Pierre Montesino, handed the piece over to the French police and reimbursed his client.  

Montesino, however, was unable to recover his losses.  More than ten years had passed since the original auction, placing the transaction beyond the period in which he could seek compensation from Pierre Bergé & Associés.  When he attempted to pursue the seller listed on the sales documentation, he discovered that the name recorded on the invoice belonged not to the consignor but to the transport company that had handled the shipment.

It is a detail that speaks volumes.  The statue base had been plucked from its archaeological find spot in Yemen, a site where in 2007 a suicide bomber drove into a convoy of Spanish tourists killing seven Spaniards and two Yemenis less than two weeks after the United States issued a terrorism warning about the area.  It was then smuggled out of Yemen making its first public appearance at the Paris auction house, through the hands of at least one anonymous intermediary whose identity was deliberately obscured, and into the collection of a dealer assumably unaware of the object's origins and no legal recourse once he did. 

Montesino lost his money and at least publicly, the original vendor has never identified.  And this fragment of Yemen's ancient civilisation, wrenched from its archaeological context more than a decade ago, now sits in a French police evidence room, waiting for a repatriation that cannot undo the knowledge lost the moment a thief first touched the piece in Awwam.  

In December 2025, the General Authority for Antiquities and Museums condemned the systematic destruction of the Bilqis Temple (Awam Temple) in Marib Governorate by the public and antiquities thieves.   One of many pieces stolen from that location, this episode highlights what is being lost forever due to the civil war and the subsequent humanitarian crisis in the region.  It also serves as a reminder that the global antiquities trade remains far from clean, and continues to provide pathways through which vulnerable conflict antiquities can be removed, circulated, and legitimized long after the damage has been done.

By: Lynda Albertson

March 10, 2026

Meet Our Alumni: ARCA PG Cert Spotlight Series: Saida Hasanagic, art historian and provenance researcher

Welcome to ARCA’s PG Cert Alumni Spotlight Series, a collection of in-depth Q&A interviews conducted by Edgar Tijhuis*, highlighting the professional journeys, achievements, and ongoing contributions of graduates from ARCA’s Postgraduate Certificate Programs in Art Crime and Cultural Heritage Protection. Through these conversations, we aim to showcase the diverse paths our alumni have taken—across academia, law enforcement, museums, research, policy, and the cultural heritage sector—and to share the insights, motivations, and experiences that continue to shape their work in safeguarding the world’s shared artistic legacy.

What motivated you to enroll in ARCA’s Postgraduate Program?

My undergraduate degrees are in History of Art and International Relations while my graduate degree is in Art Business. However, my life took a slightly different turn and I did not pursue a career in my chosen fields of study. After 11 years in high-end sales and logistics, I decided that my life would not be complete if I do not pursue my initial passion of combining History of Art, International Relations and Art Market Studies. I just had to figure out how to do it.

I got in touch with the late Charley Hill, the former Scotland Yard Art and Antiques Unit undercover officer, then an art detective as well as specialist advisor and mentor on my graduate degree, MA Art Business at Sotheby’s Institute of Art in London. Charley was delighted to help, offering his inimitable advice and support. He urged me to get in touch with all the contacts I made during my MA studies and reassured me that not all is lost despite the long hiatus but that it would be hard work.

It was a chance encounter at the 2014 Cultural Heritage Conference at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London where I noticed that a person sitting next to me was Richard “Dick” Ellis, the founder of the Scotland Yard Art and Antiques Unit, then a private art investigator and a UK government advisor as well as an instructor on the ARCA Postgraduate Program. Dick was one of the “primary sources” I contacted on Charley’s recommendation while investigating the fate of stolen masterpieces from public collections in the United Kingdom for my MA dissertation. We chatted and commented on the conference presentations, and I reminded Dick how helpful and insightful the interview he gave me was in 2001. Dick suggested that we meet for lunch in the following few weeks. He told me about the ARCA Postgraduate Program urging me to consider it as it was, and still is, the unique program that could help me “refresh” my expertise and professional network in order to get back into the fray. As they say, the rest is history.

Can you describe a moment in the program that had a lasting impact on you—personally or professionally?

The visit to the necropolis of Banditaccia at Cerveteri at the beginning of the program had a lasting impact on me because I realised that I had made a good decision in terms of my future career. The study trip was led by Stefano Alessandrini, an ARCA instructor as well as head of Italy's Archaeological Group and an adviser to the Ministry of Culture and the Advocate General of Italy on the recovery of looted antiquities. Stefano’s passion for the Etruscan civilisation and unequalled encyclopaedic knowledge of archaeology was generously shared with us. I realised that this niche field is not just a potential career option, it is a calling which embodies passion and purpose.

Equally, the course Provenance Research Methodology – Theory and Practice taught by Marc Masurovsky, an economic plunder historian and co-founder of Holocaust Art Restitution Project, was instrumental in shaping my current career path where I realised that my academic background would be a perfect fit to the multidisciplinary approach in provenance research that Marc is adamant about. This is where I honed my interest in the intersection of my chosen fields of study, that is the ethical and legal treatment of cultural objects across borders (“space and time!”) as a reflection of social, economic and political changes under the motto “give me an object and I will tell you its story.” Most importantly, I was finally aligned with my personal experiences of war, loss, plunder, cultural destruction, and this was a chance to channel it positively.

What was your favourite course or topic, and why did it stand out?

It would be difficult to isolate one favourite course or topic! The courses that had the most impact on me professionally and personally are Provenance Research Theory and Practice taught by Marc Masurovsky; Criminology taught by Edgar Tijhuis (and Marc Balcells);  Museum Security taught by the late Dick Drent (now taught by Ibrahim Bulut), and last but not least Fine Art Policing taught by Dick Ellis. Each course was instrumental in encouraging us to think analytically and outside the box as well as including details of case studies that have not yet been published.

The Provenance Research course was formative because it has geared my career path to what it is now while reiterating the importance of history in order to understand the present issues –  history indeed is our greatest teacher! The Criminology course shed light to why certain individuals commit recidivist cultural crimes, what drives them and builds networks around them. The Museum Security course deepened my comprehension of the efforts and challenges that cultural institutions face as custodians of our heritage. The Art Policing course illuminated the challenges of the intersection of public and private policing as well as their respective recovery efforts. Having these courses taught by both practitioners and academics enabled me to learn first-hand from instructors involved in the discussed cases while being encouraged to ask questions deepened my understanding of each topic and case study.

How did the international nature of the program influence your learning experience?

I have been based in London since 1995 and I am enamoured of the cultural melting pot that this great city represents. The international nature of the ARCA program was a deal breaker for me especially considering that after fleeing Bosnia and Herzegovina during the 1990s war, I lived in Tunisia, Libya, and Malta, As an undergraduate student, I attended study abroad programs that took me to Cuba, China and Hong Kong as well as Russia. In the context of ARCA, the ability to learn directly from our American, Italian, Iraqi, Syrian and Spanish peers, as well as our, American, British, Dutch and Italian instructors, to name but a few, and get their own perspectives on some of the pertinent cultural issues and jurisdictional variations is priceless and unparalleled. Not to mention the fun get-togethers where we shared our regional culinary delicacies and humour while learning about our national and personal histories even more.

Did the program change or shape your career path? If so, how? 

Absolutely! The program has changed my career path, and my life, significantly and goes down as one of the most formative experiences. I am convinced that I would not have been able to make a career change without it. On the suggestion of Lynda Albertson, ARCA’s CEO, I attended the 2017 Art Crime Conference before committing to the full program. I met numerous professionals and started collaborating with some of them. It was obvious that the faculty, the student body as well as the annual conference attendees I met at ARCA represent a close-knit professional community where I made useful contacts and felt welcome even as a novice.

After the completion of the program in 2018, my professional connections expanded and resulted in fantastic international projects, both pro-bono and paid work. I strongly believe that I would not be where I am now, working alongside some of the greatest and most passionate professionals in the world who have also become lifelong friends.

My ARCA dissertation, under the insistence as well as unrivalled support and patience of Dick Ellis to “produce something original”, allowed me to rediscover my own personal and national history by researching the art plunder and restitution during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. This effort was not in vain because I gained invaluable knowledge and developed important professional networks in the region. The edited and updated version of this topic was published under the encouragement of Professor Saskia Hufnagel as “Recovery and Restitution of Plundered Cultural Property in Bosnia and Herzegovina”  In M.D.Fabiani, K. Burmon, & S. Hufnagel (Eds), Cultural Property Crime and the Law: Legal Approaches to Protection, Repatriation, and Countering Illicit Trade, by Routledge in May 2024. 

It is thanks to the ARCA program that I was hired by Marc Masurovsky to work on the Pilot Project – The Fate of the AdolpheSchloss Collection in 2020 and 2021. Together with Marc and our colleague Claudia Hofstee, I have continued to work on the Schloss Collection as a labour of love after the end of the project. These endeavours have led to becoming a Board Director at Holocaust Art Restitution Project and working with The Ciric LawFirm, PLLC in New York City. When I think of ARCA’s long-term impact on my life, Hegel’s famous quote comes to mind: “Nothing great in the world has ever been accomplished without passion.”

What was it like to live and study in Amelia, Italy?

I have been visiting Italy for a very long time and it has always felt like home because I  spent my childhood on the other side of the Adriatic coast and my early adulthood on the other side of the Mediterranean in countries with strong Italian influence. Culturally, I have always felt a close affinity to the Italian way of life so La Dolce Vita was much welcome. Amelia has many charms – you become local in no time due to its size; it is rural and picturesque; you can enjoy some of best fresh produce;  it is quaint and steeped in history, and the locals are friendly and welcoming. The food is just superb! 

One has to appreciate Amelia’s size and its proximity to other cities, such as Orvieto or the metropolis of Rome. In Amelia, one can just roll down or up Via della Repubblica and get to class in 5-20 minutes, depending where one’s lodgings are situated. It wins on every level especially if one considers battling the ever-infuriating summer traffic and transport strikes in Rome or London! Having said that, there is plenty of time to complete all the reading, assignments and presentations due to the lack of unnecessary distractions. The transport links are excellent for any exploration and breaks.

Can you share a memorable interaction you had with faculty, guest speakers, or fellow students?

Memorable interactions with students and faculty are manyfold. We had many a heated discussion in the classroom that would spill into a local bar or the Pasticceria Russo about the criminogenic nature of art crime, the colonial legacy of cultural property and what it means to be a “universal museum” today.

In the Museum Security course, our instructor asked us to share a profound personal experience in utmost confidence in order to build trust between us. This was a formidable exercise because our perception of each other changed and it made us appreciate each other’s experiences beyond the program curriculum.

One cannot forget the countless aperitivos and dinners shared amongst the fellow students and faculty after each milestone, whether it is a presentation or completion of a course – all are still deeply ingrained in my memory.

What advice would you give to someone considering applying for the 2026 session?

My advice would be to have a clear idea of what you want to take away from the program and target your professional and personal interests and ambitions. It is important to talk to your instructors and connect with them – they are there to help you every step of the way. The ARCA connections and networks can become a professional lifeline. If opting to do the full Postgraduate Program, you will have ten weeks to do the reading, coursework and research including presentations, essays and making an impression –  it is up to you to get it done. This is a professional development program and you are in charge of what you wish to accomplish.

On the lighter note, the local bread could be used as a weapon or a door stop due to its hard texture. And, of course, bring plenty of insect repellent, the Umbrian pappataci are relentless!

How has your understanding of art crime evolved since completing the program?

My understanding of art crime since the program has evolved significantly especially in terms of understanding the international jurisprudence and jurisdictional differences, complex networks in international antiquities trafficking as well as the laborious and painstaking efforts required to recover stolen cultural property. It is impossible to visit any cultural institution and look at its displays without considering the security conditions such as security cameras, motion sensors, smoke alarms or quality of the protective cases. Equally, it is difficult to attend an exhibition or look at a museum display without paying attention to its signage and wording ­– is the story of plunder told or swept under the carpet, was the object “appropriated” or was it a part of the partage agreement, and what do they mean by “acquired”? The program has equipped me with analytical tools and has fed my inquisitive intellectual curiosity. Needless to say, my professional and social interactions are never a dead-end.

In one sentence: why should someone join ARCA's program?

One should join ARCA’s program if one wants to broaden their understanding of the importance of cultural heritage protection and to make a difference in art crime prevention ensuring the long-lasting impact on humankind in the form of justice being served regardless of the passage of time for the generations to come.

About Saida Hasanagic 

Saida Hasanagic, MA, is an art historian based in London, England. She is an independent scholar specialising in provenance research, art crime and its prevention from perspectives of art history, art market studies and international relations. Saida worked as a provenance researcher and data analyst for the Jewish Digital Cultural Recovery Project Foundation, Berlin on The Pilot Project – The Fate of the Adolphe Schloss Collection. She is affiliated with Holocaust Art Restitution Project and The Ciric Law Firm, PLLC in the USA. Her main areas of research are European Modernism, the Second World War art plunder and restitution, and cultural crimes committed in conflicts since 1945, notably in the former Yugoslavia with focus on spoliation, recovery and restitution of cultural property in Bosnia and Herzegovina.


* Dr Edgar Tijhuis is Academic Director at ARCA and is responsible for coordinating ARCA’s postgraduate certificate programs. Since 2009, he has also taught criminology modules within ARCA's PG Certification programming. In 2026, Edgar Tijhuis will teach on criminological theories and art crime in the Post Lauream I programme.

📌 ARCA Postgraduate Certificate Programmes (Italy | Summer 2026)

• Post Lauream I (22 May – 23 June 2026): PG Cert in Art & Antiquities Crime

• Post Lauream II (26 June – 26 July 2026): PG Cert in Provenance, Acquisition & Interpretation of Cultural Property

 Take one track—or combine both in a single summer.

March 8, 2026

The man at the centre of one of Italy's biggest antiquities trafficking scandals, Gianfranco Becchina, has had his fortune restored. Should it have been?

Today in Italu, it was announced that the Preventive Measures Section of the Palermo Court of Appeal has overturned a sweeping asset confiscation order issued against Gianfranco Becchina, 85, the Sicilian-born antiquities dealer whose name has been at the centre of international art trafficking investigations for more than three decades. The preventive measures panel of the Court of Second Instance, (Italy's court of appeals), revoked entirely the order issued on 22 October 2021 and made public on 26 May 2022 by the Tribunal of Trapani.  

That ruling ordered the confiscation of a significant portion of movable, real estate and corporate assets "attributable to a well-known international trader of works of art and artefacts of historical-archaeological value" long suspected to have links with the Sicilian mafia, in and around the port town of Trapani,   This we know was Gianfranco Becchina and by extension his family.  Those assets were ordered seized on the premise that, according to the prosecution, the antiquities dealer had laundered illicit archaeological finds for the Matteo Messina Denaro clan of Cosa Nostra.

In delivering their 2026 reversal, the Court of Second Instance accepted the defence's appeals, concluding that no disproportion existed between the family's accumulated wealth and their declared legitimate sources of income, effectively ruling that Becchina's assets had been lawfully acquired.  But having said that one must remember that the Italian Judge Rosalba Liso dismissed all antiquities trafficking-related charges against Gianfranco Becchina due to the running of the statute of limitations in 2011.  

Judge Liso is also the judge who ordered the seizure of 5,919 of Becchina’s antiquities (seized in 2002 and 2009), holding that “from the evidence…it emerges that Becchina bought antiquities from tombaroli.” Addressing the antiquities themselves (both those seized and those depicted in the seized photographs), Judge Liso found that “all come from clandestine excavations conducted in Italy…[and that]…the copious documentation seized from Becchina definitely certifies that those objects come from clandestine excavations and excludes any legitimate provenance.”


Defence attorneys in the current case, Francesco Bertorotta, Marco Lo Giudice, and Giovanni Miceli, issued a statement asserting that the Court of Appeal’s decision restored justice to their client and his family, who, they said, had endured nearly eight years of asset seizures affecting their businesses and property. According to the defence, the ruling confirms what Becchina’s lawyers had long argued: that the family’s wealth derived from lawful professional activity. 

While Judge Liso noted that a substantial portion of Becchina's wealth was generated through the sale of illicitly excavated antiquities, it should be underscored that it was the passage of time, rather than the absence of underlying misconduct, that limited the possibility of the Sicilian dealer's criminal prosecution, due to statutes of limitation.

Among the most symbolically significant assets returned under the ruling is the Palazzo dei Principi Aragona Pignatelli Cortes in Castelvetrano, an iconic landmark of the city's historic centre originally rebuilt in the sixteenth century and incorporating the Castello Bellumvider, a fortification commissioned by Frederick II in the twelfth century. Considered a monument of considerable architectural and cultural significance, this and other property has now been ordered returned to the family, eight years after their seizure in November 2017 by Italy's Anti-Mafia Investigative Directorate, through the Criminal and Preventive Measures Section of the Court of Trapani. 

Prosecutors had alleged, but according to the appellate court failed to prove, that Becchina laundered illegally excavated archaeological artefacts on behalf of the Messina Denaro crime family, whose patriarch, before his arrest and subsequent death, had been Italy's most wanted Mafia boss. The courts at both levels found the allegations of a relationship between Becchina and the Messina Denaro clan difficult to sustain. 

Even at the court of first instance, the Tribunal of Trapani had already rejected the Mafia association claim after reviewing the testimony of multiple informants, noting the generic nature of their statements and finding a "lack of certainty not only regarding affiliation, but also regarding specific unlawful conduct attributable to Becchina in support of Cosa Nostra."  That same tribunal had also established that the vast majority of artefacts stored in Becchina's Basel warehouses originated from Campania, Lucania and Puglia on the Italian mainland.

These findings are also borne out by examination of the Becchina Archive, which revealed that over 80% of the antiquities derived from Apulia and of the Apulian vases, over 90% were traceable to a single source within Becchina's network: convicted tombarolo and later intermediary trafficker Raffaele Monticelli, and were therefore unconnected to the Messina Denaro clan in Sicily.

It is worth noting, however, that the court's rejection of a formal Cosa Nostra connection does not discount the question of organised criminality in the antiquities trade, nor Becchina's alleged role within it.  Art crime investigators and cultural heritage scholars have long distinguished between two distinct, though sometimes overlapping, criminal ecosystems.

The first comprises Italy's primary poly-crime-oriented syndicates, the hierarchical organisations most commonly associated with the structured Mafia model. These groups maintain formal leadership, internal codes of conduct, long-term territorial control, and well-established codes of silence. They are, in the broadest terms, powerful transnational clans that extort, tax, or directly control criminal operations across territories with distinct geographic origins and international reach. 

The most prominent of Italy's Organised Crime Groups (OCG) is the Cosa Nostra, which despite sustained pressure from law enforcement continues to maintain its territorial grip on Sicily, adapting constantly to evade scrutiny and remaining the most historically recognisable and publicly emblematic of the Italian mafias. 

The 'Ndrangheta, rooted in Calabria and built upon blood ties and tightly-knit family clans known as 'ndrine, has grown into arguably the most formidable of the four, having expanded into the most countries and dominating Italy's cocaine trade through networks stretching across South America and West Africa. 

The Camorra, operating primarily out of Naples and Caserta, functions through a volatile mixture of large cartels and smaller, more fractious clans engaged in drug trafficking, extortion, and illicit financial schemes, with profitable operations extending across Spain, France, the Netherlands, Germany, and Dubai. 

The Apulian crime groups, namely the Sacra Corona Unita, the Società Foggiana, the Camorra Barese, and the Gargano Mafia, evolved from their origins in cigarette smuggling into a broader criminal portfolio encompassing human trafficking, drug and weapons running, as well as illegal waste disposal, with networks present in the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, and Albania.

Heritage-crime criminal ecosystems, by contrast, are more loosely structured. Often, they consist of temporary collaborations among tombaroli (clandestine diggers), middlemen, couriers, restorers, and dealers who cooperate in specific territories in relation to specific transactions.Taken together, however, these actors form a sophisticated supply chain fully capable of functioning as a form of organised crime in its own right. 

Unlike traditional Mafia-styled OCGs, most antiquities trafficking OCG networks lack formal leadership structures, initiation rituals, or territorial monopolies enforced through violence. Instead, they rely on highly specialised divisions of labour, shared financial incentives, and the complicity, or at the very least the indifference, of segments of the international art market that have historically looked the other way regarding the illicit origins of the objects they traded.

The consequences of that indifference is severe. Over several decades, well-developed supply chains have enabled the large-scale, systematic removal of archaeological material from some of Italy's most significant cultural landscapes. Looted objects flowed steadily from easily exploited heritage-rich sites to storage facilities, freeports, and private galleries, where they were laundered using  fabricated collecting histories and sold onward to major Western museums and private collectors. 

It is within this framework that law enforcement and art crime researchers have directed sustained attention toward the activities of Gianfranco Becchina.  Rather than viewing him solely through the lens of his Mafia contacts, many analysts position him as a central and well-connected node within a commercially motivated antiquities trafficking network. In this role, the Sicilian dealer functioned as a high-level intermediary whose gallery connections and market relationships enabled large numbers of illicitly excavated antiquities to enter the legitimate international art market, contributing significantly to the long-term exploitation of Italy's archaeological heritage.

Originally from Castelvetrano and for many years resident in Switzerland, Becchina operated for decades within the international art and antiquities market, and his name appears repeatedly across multiple investigations into the illicit trafficking of antiquities sourced from Italian territories. Investigators allege that over roughly thirty years he accumulated his wealth through the proceeds of international trafficking in archaeological artefacts, many of which had been clandestinely looted from sites throughout southern Italy where his cordata operated.

The scale of the damage is reflected in the volume of significant objects that have since been repatriated. Through what investigators describe as a lucrative criminal enterprise, Becchina supplied several important antiquities to the J. Paul Getty Museum and other American artistic institutions, works that have since been restituted to Italy. 

Among the more notable returns, some of which have been discussed on this blog, are the Paestan red-figure calyx krater painted and signed by Asteas, the Sarcofago della Bella Addormentata, a grouping of helmets later gifted to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and an important  black-figure kalpis depicting the myth of Dionysus being kidnapped by pirates whom he transforms into dolphins. These objects are just a few of the numerous works circulated by Becchina and traced through documentation seized by the Italian heritage crime authorities, which helped art crime analysts reconstruct the full extent of the network and actors involved in funnelling artefacts from Italian soil onto the international antiquities market.

This month's appeals ruling in Becchina's favour does not erase any of that contested history. 

As recently as February 2025, the United States returned 107 archaeological artefacts, collectively valued at $1.2 million to Italy, items identified through ongoing investigations as having been looted and illicitly exported by traffickers including Becchina. Among the recovered objects was a fourth-century BC bronze patera that had passed through Becchina's hands before reaching a New York antiquities dealer and eventually being seized by Manhattan's Antiquities Trafficking Unit. 

The appellate ruling likewise does not address the broader international record of illicit artefacts connected to Becchina's operations that have been recovered by law enforcement agencies over the past two decades, nor does it resolve the wider question of how a sophisticated, decentralised criminal network trading in looted antiquities, operated quite apart from any single organised crime family, and was able to function effectively for decades.

The consequences for Italy's archaeological heritage has been devastating and, in numerous instances, permanent. Sites cannot be unlooted. Context, once destroyed, cannot be restored. The historical knowledge embedded in the ground alongside these objects fenced to Becchina is gone forever.

What makes this court ruling especially difficult to reconcile is the striking disparity in how the law treats different categories of organised crime. Those convicted of Mafia association in Italy routinely face lengthy custodial sentences, with the full weight of anti-racketeering legislation brought to bear against them. 

Those caught participating in the trade in looted antiquities, by contrast, have historically faced far more lenient consequences, despite the fact that the harm they inflict on the collective cultural memory of a nation is, by any meaningful measure, quite serious. Until the legal frameworks governing cultural property crime begins to reflect the true scale of that harm, the gap between the severity of the offence and the severity of the punishment will continue to undermine the protection of the world's shared archaeological inheritance.

By:  Lynda Albertson

February 23, 2026

From Skanda Trust to Singapore: Tracing One Spunky Hanuman to Douglas Latchford

If you read our recent article about the Dong Son bell identified at a museum in Assen and the troubling questions surrounding its provenance, you will recognise a pattern that extends far beyond that single suspect artefact.  That case, resting on little more than a hypothetical pre-1970 export date, forms part of a larger story that has been unfolding for years.  It is a story that continues to cast a long shadow over the global market in Southeast Asian antiquities, museum institutions, and private collections worldwide.  Time and again, it is a story in which the fingerprints of Douglas Latchford can be found on objects that passed through his hands, sometimes decades before his alleged crimes were brought to light.

Recently, I was working to identify the Cambodian, Thai and Vietnamese artefacts purchased by Leon Black which were mentioned in some of the three million documents released by the U.S. Justice Department on 30 January 2026 as part of the Jeffrey Epstein data dump.  During my wanderings my searches brought me back to Latchford's and Emma Bunker's artistic publications. 

Cultivating the image of a passionate scholar-collector prior to his indictment, the Bangkok-based dealer worked closely with Bunker to publish a series of lavishly illustrated books on Southeast Asian and Khmer art that featured many of the objects he circulated through the antiquities market.  Far from being neutral scholarly exercises, these publications functioned as instruments of laundering. 

Sculptures and bronzes with little or no documented provenance were presented alongside established museum holdings and described as significant works from private collections.  They were framed within authoritative art historical narratives that obscured both their true ownership history and the circumstances of their removal from Cambodia.  By embedding freshly surfaced objects in academic-style volumes, Latchford and Bunker effectively manufactured a sort of cosmetic legitimacy, transforming recently trafficked antiquities into catalogue-worthy published masterpieces, thereby smoothing their path into major collections.

Thumbing through the pages of their 2011 book Khmer Bronzes: New Interpretations of the Past my eyes paused briefly on a piece I recognised.  It was a bronze statue of Hanuman, the monkey general of the Indic epic poem Ramayana, who helped Rama rescue Sita from the demon Ravana.  

In the book Latchford and Bunker went on to describe the unusual piece as coming from Angkor Borei, adding:  

This fierce little Hanuman once surmounted a battle standard to which he was attached by a short tang under the foot. Hanuman waves his arms vigorously as he balances on one foot, a pose very similar to that of a gilded-bronze male figure from Vietnam in the Musee Guimet that has also been identified as a standard emblem. Hanuman is often represented in later Khmer art.

In their 544-page tome, and including this bronze, there is an outstanding number of pieces, which appear courtesy of "Skanda Trust."  Formed just three months before the book’s publication, Skanda Trust is now understood to have been one of Latchford’s offshore vehicles, registered in Jersey in the Channel Islands, and estimated by experts to have held art-related assets valued at approximately $10 million.  An email from Latchford dated 23 April 2007 to a New York dealer left little to no doubt about the dealer's level of direct involvement and knowledge in transnational criminal activity against Cambodian artefacts. In it Latchford offered his colleague (and sometimes cohort in crime) a looted standing Buddha from the same pre-Khmer site of Angkor Borei.  That artefact was depicted in a photo that showed signs of recent excavation.

So where did this Hanuman wander off to?

In a 2017 Facebook post, the Asian Civilisations Museum shared a photograph of an eighth-century bronze monkey figure identified as probably depicting Hanuman and coming from Angkor Borei.  The figure was described as unusual because it was unclothed.  I had saved a screenshot of that image for use in my course on open-source intelligence research in object tracing. It served as an excellent example of how museums use social media and how such posts can reveal information about objects in their collections, even when full catalogues are not accessible online or researchers cannot physically visit a specific institution in another country.

That is why the image clicked in my memory when reviewing Latchford’s publication.  They were one and the same.  The museum appears to have acquired the bronze in 2014 and assigned it Accession number: 2014-00439.

The presence of this Hanuman in a Latchford publication, attributed to Skanda Trust and later accessioned into an important museum collection, is not a trivial detail.  It places the object squarely within a museum collection that has already led to previous restitutions to India

In recent years, the museum has begun to confront the uncomfortable reality that publication history and aesthetic importance cannot substitute for clear, documented provenance.  If they are serious about transparency and ethical stewardship, then works linked to Latchford’s orbit warrant their careful review. 

The question is no longer whether these objects are beautiful or significant. It is whether they left Cambodia lawfully.  One hopes that this bronze will receive that scrutiny it needs, and that if the evidence points where other cases have led, that his path home will be quick. 

By:   Lynda Albertson