Sunday, August 25, 2013 -
ARCA 2013 Conference,Biltmore House,book theft,Caravaggio,James Alex Bond,James Moore,judith harris,looted antiquities,The Palermo Nativity
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ARCA 2013 Conference: James Moore on the stolen Palermo Nativity by Caravaggio; James Bond on the book theft from the Biltmore House; and Judith Harris on the private collecting appetite for looted antiquities
James "Alex" Bond (left), Rene Du Terroil (rear), Judith Harris (center), and James Moore (right) |
by Laura Fandino, ARCA Intern
In the second panel of ARCA’s
5th conference, presenters James Moore and James "Alex" Bond walked us
through two events that made their way into the art crime world: The mysterious
theft of Caravaggio’s masterpiece, The Nativity with Saint Francis and
Saint Lawrence, and the successful recovery of 90
books from the Biltmore’s House in Ashville, North Carolina. Following their
presentations and discussions, journalist Judith Harris spoke on the
continuing of private collecting of illicit art and archaeology, despite -
and in part consequent to - today's more rigorous
policies of provenance in acquisitions at auctions and by museums. The panel was moderated by Rene M. du Terroil who currently directs the internationalization initiative for the Italian and Spanish campuses of the Instituto Europeo di Design (IED).
James Moore
opened up the panel with an illustrated discussion in which he narrated the
events which led to the second most famous theft in the history of art crime,
the theft of The Nativity with Saint Francis and Saint Lawrence in
1969 in Palermo, Sicily. He began his presentation speaking about Caravaggio,
the artist who gave life to the stunning painting of the Nativity. Caravaggio
is a well-known Italian artist who at very early age managed to achieve
artistic success and fame. At the age of twenty Caravaggio began a career
as an artist and then went on to produce many now-famous masterpieces.
Caravaggio’s successful
artistic career, emphasized Moore, was the product of his refusal to follow the
conventional artistic styles of the time, focusing rather on realistic,
naturalistic and symbolist detail condensed into the most vivid biblical
scenes. His artistic fame, regrettably, was always accompanied by his
“irascibility and an unpredictable and violent temper,” which eventually led to
a homicide in Rome for which he was found guilty. Caravaggio escaped gaol, however, and
fled to Naples, Malta and Sicily.
In 1609, while he was in Sicily he painted the Saint Lawrence
Nativity for the Oratory of San Lorenzo in Palermo.
The theft of the Nativity took place in October 1969. On
the day of the heist, the thieves entered the oratory through what Moore called
a “poorly locked side door” and then cut the painting out of its
frame. After 44 years of waiting for the return of one of Caravaggio’s
greatest masterpieces, Moore wondered, “Is there any hope that the painting
will be found?” Sadly, none of explanations for the crime have produced any significant
information on the whereabouts of the painting that today is valued at more
than $20 million, yet Moore remains
hopeful as he invites us to recall the recovery of The Taking of
Christ, another of Caravaggio’s master works, after 100 years of
absence.
In the presentation,
"Heritage Collecting: Image, Passion and the Law," Journalist Judith Harris
described the act of collecting as an “innately human passion” initially
performed as a “sport of kings,” whose prestige later placed it on the
agenda of merchants and bankers, among others. Such activity, say sociologists
who have analyzed the passion for collecting, is shaped by the surrounding
cultural processes, which increase the collectors' desire for the halo prestige
which ownership brings.
The theft oft
Bellini's 15th C. Madonna with Child in 1993, the
purchase of important Italian antiquities by an unknown New York collector, and
the recent mysterious discovery near Rome of an ancient Egyptian sphinx in an
abandoned greenhouse, ready for shipment, exemplify the essential but
problematic question of “Who is buying it?” According to Harris, the dark side
of collecting is that the passion of the private collector continues to foster
looting despite the security measures of museums and auction houses.
According to
experts in the field, stated Harris, this continuing illegal traffic in antiquities
for private collections reflects in part the lack of a census of minor pieces
of art, including in many public collections. In addition, the mediocre and
rather incomplete inventories of many libraries and public museum storage areas
in Italy have contributed to the disappearance of valuable works. The Bibliotecadei Girolamini, an important library in Naples, was looted of some 4,000 books;
its director is blamed for the theft. Altogether, circa 1,500 books - some
dating from the Middle Ages - were sold or given to private collectors. Among
them was an Italian politician, Marcello Dell’Utri.
Finally,
Harris directed us towards the Art Collecting Legal Handbook, a
compendium of comparative legislation on collecting in twenty-eight
different countries. Particularly interesting are the Handbook's
comparisons of legal norms for “due diligence.” Authors Bruno Boesch and
Massimo Sterpi underscore the importance of this today: “Collectors, private
and public, need to know where they stand in law... Private collectors need to
grapple with the complexity of the eventual transfer of collections of far
greater financial value than ever before.”