This year five people have been nominated for ARCA's 2013 Eleanor
and Anthony Vallombroso Award for Art Crime Scholarship, which usually goes to a professor or author. Past winners: Norman Palmer
(2009), Larry Rothfield (2010), Neil Brodie (2011), and Jason Felch and Ralph
Frammolino, jointly (2012).
The Five (5) Nominees for 2013 are:
Duncan Chappell, an Australian lawyer and criminologist now based at the Faculty of
Law at the University of Sydney, has had a long-standing interest in art crime
which dates from the period during which he was the Director of the Australian
Institute of Criminology (1987-1994). Since that time he has been engaged in
research and publishing on a range of art crime topics but with a particular
focus on patterns of illegal trafficking of objects of cultural heritage in the
South East Asian region. Much of this research and publishing has been
undertaken in collaboration with a friend and colleague at the University of
Melbourne, Professor Kenneth Polk.
Duncan
Chappell’s publications include two coedited texts: Crime in the Art and
Antiquities World. Illegal Trafficking in Cultural Property (2011) Springer:
New York (With Stefano Manacorda) and Contemporary Perspectives on the
Detection, Investigation and Prosecution of Art Crime (In Press) Ashgate:
London (With Saskia Hufnagel). He has also had published a number of journal
articles and book chapters on various aspects of art crime including fraud and
fakery in the Australian Indigenous art market; the impact of corruption in the
illicit trade in cultural property; and the linkages between art crime and
organized crime.
In
addition to his research and writing on art crime Duncan Chappell has acted as
an expert in regard to court proceedings involving art crime and also been a
strong supporter of measures to
enhance public awareness of the evils of looting behaviour and to strengthen
the engagement of law enforcement agencies in investigation and prosecuting
those responsible. In his present capacity as Chair of the International
Advisory Board of the Australian Research Council Center of Excellence in
Policing and Security, he has sought to foster a far more proactive approach to
the prevention and detection of art crime both in Australia and its
neighbouring countries within the South East Asian region.
Milton Esterow, author of The Art Stealers and editor of ArtNews, which has won 44 major awards for reporting, analysis, criticism, and
design—the first and only art magazine to win these awards. Since Esterow bought ARTnews from
Newsweek Magazine in 1972, he has guided its growth into the most widely
circulated art magazine in the world. Since 1975, ARTnews has won most of the
major journalism awards presented to magazines. Its editors and reporters have been honored forty-four times
for excellence in reporting, criticism, and design.
Under
Mr. Esterow's direction, ARTnews became the first magazine to consistently
apply rigorous standards of investigative reporting to the art world. Mr. Esterow received a special award
for lifetime achievement from the College Art Association, the national
organization of educators, artists, art historians, curators, critics, and
institutions in 2003. He was cited for “his exceptional contributions to art
journalism and investigative art reporting” and for having “overseen the magazine’s
financial success while enhancing its reputation and influence in the
visual-arts community and beyond.”
Fabio Isman is a highly esteemed investigative journalist who has worked for Il
Messaggero for 40 years . He is a major contributor to the Giornale dell’Arte, The Art Newspaper, Art e
Dossier, Bell’Italia. Through Skira, and has published I Predatori dell’Arte
Perduta, il Saccheggio dell’Archeologia in Italia (Predators of Lost Art, the
Archeological Plunder of Italy, 2009), and the study of the “Grande Razzia” (The
Great Plunder) and illegal excavations since 1970 of a million archeological
finds in Italy, many of which are found in noteworthy museums abroad. His list of publications include 32
books and hundreds of articles.
In Italy and abroad, he has covered the “Six Day War”
(1967) and the war in Lebanon (1982); the death of Mitterrand and the election
of Chirac; the murder of Rabin; the voyages of Pertini, Cossiga and Scalfaro,
the ascension of eight italian governments and two Popes; the trials of Piazza
Fontana, the Lockheed scandal, the Ardeatine massacre and the “Mani Pulite”
political corruption scandal of the 1990s in Italy. Since 1980, he has been dedicated to writing about cultural
heritage protection, with an emphasis on historic preservation not only in
Italy, but worldwide.
Dr.
Kenneth Polk, University of Melbourne, Australia, has written extensively in the topic
of antiquities trafficking. While
his previous work in criminology was in such areas as youth crime and crimes of
violence, for the past 15 years Prof. Polk has concentrated on issues of art
crime, including art theft, art fraud, and the problem of the illicit traffic
in cultural heritage material. He
has recent or forthcoming publications in all of these areas. Much of the work over the past ten
years has dealt with the illicit traffic in antiquities, including articles
(with Duncan Chappell) on the question of how this traffic fits into the large
volume of work done on organized crime.
Because of emerging interest in recent months around the problem of art
theft (in part provoked by the 100th anniversary of the well known events
around the theft and recovery of the Mona Lisa), he has re-visited this topic
in forthcoming works. In
Australia, Prof. Polk currently serves as a member of the National Cultural
Heritage Committee (appointed by the Australian Government).
Lyndel V Prott is an Honorary Professor, University of Queensland and
Honorary Member of The Australian Academy of the Humanities. She
is the former Head of International Standards Section, UNESCO and then Director
of the Cultural Heritage Division where she was instrumental in strengthening
existing international instruments and the realisation of the 1995 UNIDROIT
Convention. Her terrific scholarly output has brought attention to the plague
of antiquities looting and she has been a wonderful advocate for concerted
international action to combat the theft of heritage and destruction of our
collective past.
Lyndel
Prott AO (1991), Öst. EKWuK(i) (2000), Hon FAHA; LL.D. (honoris causa) B.A.
LL.B. (University of Sydney), Licence Spéciale en Droit international (ULB
Brussels), Dr. Juris (Tübingen)
and member of Gray’s Inn, London, is former Director of UNESCO’s Division of cultural Heritage and former Professor of Cultural Heritage Law at the
University of Sydney. She has had a distinguished career in teaching, research
and practice, including co-operation with COM and INTERPOL to improve
co-ordination between civil and criminal law to deal with illicit traffic.
At
UNESCO 1990-2002 she was responsible for the administration of UNESCO’s
Conventions and standard-setting Recommendations on the protection of cultural
heritage and also for the negotiations on the 1999 Protocol to the Hague
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict
1954 and the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
2001. She contributed as Observer
for UNESCO to the negotiations for the UNIDROIT Convention on Stolen or
Illegally Exported Cultural Objects 1995. She has authored, co-authored or
edited over 280 books, reports or articles, written in English, French or
German and translated into 9 other languages.