Here are the four nominees for ARCA's 2013 Lifetime Achievement in Defense of
Art, which usually goes to
an individual or institution in recognition of many decades of excellence in
the field). Past winners:
Carabinieri TPC collectively (2009), Howard Spiegler (2010), John Merryman
(2011), and George H. O. Abungu (2012).
Ton Cremers, Museum
Security and Safety Consultant, founded the MSN. Mr. Cremers is active in security and safety in museums, archives, libraries,
churches with valuable collections, monuments, and old Dutch windmills for the
past 30 years. He is the former director of security and safety of the
Rijksmuseum Amsterdam and the founding director of the Museum Security Network.
The MSN mailing list, presently a Google Group, was the first WWW list-serv
dedicated to the subject of museum security and has been active for over 15
years. In those years over 45,000 messages have been send to some 1,000
subscribers (average) in more than 50 countries. Ton
Cremers was one of the founding members of the Leiden network on trade in
illegal antiquities, dedicated to the struggle against the illicit trade in art
and antiquities. Other founding members: Neil Brody, Colin Renfrew a.o.'s. Ton
Cremers has been active in over 450 museums etc., in several European, and
African countries, such as Zimbabwe where he audited the security and safety of
all national museums, national archives, and national galleries.
Cremers
has published numerous articles in
international magazines, and was the codeveloper of a self-audit software tool
with which museums are able to investigate their security and safety. Thus far
Cremers is the first non-American to have received the prestigious Burke Award
for the protection of cultural property.
His publication about emergency management in museums is a standard in
the Dutch language world. At
the moment Cremers is working on a new initiative to build a museum in Athens,
Greece and is active in 17 museums on six islands in the Dutch Caribbean,
teaching and training museum workers.
Dr. David Gill is Professor of Archaeological Heritage and Head of the Division of
Humanities at University Campus Suffolk, England. He is a former Rome Scholar
at the British School at Rome, and Sir James Knott Fellow at Newcastle
University. He was a curator in the Department of Antiquities at the
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, before moving to Swansea
University where he was Reader in Mediterranean Archaeology.
He
has published widely on archaeological ethics, often with Dr Christopher Chippindale (University of Cambridge). Their research has promoted the material and
intellectual consequences of looting. Gill has provided a commentary on the
impact of such activity through his research blog, “Looting Matters”. This
research has formed part of the effort to restore antiquities to Italy and
Greece in the wake of the “Medici Conspiracy”.
Maurizio Seracini is a pioneer in the use of multispectral imaging and other diagnostic
as well as analytical technologies as applied to works of art and structures.
He joined UC San Diego in 2006, more than thirty years after graduating from
UCSD with a B.S. in bioengineering in 1973 and a Laurea in “Ingegneria Elettronica” from the University of
Padua in 1976.
He
has studied more than 2,500 works of art and historic buildings, ranging from
Leonardo Da Vinci's "Last Supper” and Botticelli's "Allegory of
Spring", to Caravaggio’s “Medusa”. Founder and Scientific Director of
EDITECH (Electronics, Diagnostics and Technology) in 1977, the first center for
authenticating works of art in Italy.
Blanca Niño Norton is an architect and an artist, starting her career with an interest
in Vernacular Architecture and completing her architectural thesis on this
subject while working on collection inventory projects as a student in Guatemala
and other countries of the region. In
addition to her architectural degree, Blanca Niño Norton holds a masters degree
in diplomacy and completed her thesis on “The action of consular and diplomatic
affairs in relation to illicit traffic” which received recognition as the best thesis
on diplomatic studies. In
her later years she created the office of World Heritage in the Guatemalan Ministry
of Culture and directed it for 4 years, during which she worked on the
presentation of the tentative list of World Heritage sites of Guatemala and worked
on the theme of Intangible Heritage.
As such she was elected and continues to serve as council member of ICCROM
for the next 3 years. (3 times elected in General Assembly) and has participated
in the meetings regarding international law in UNESCO Paris on the anniversary
of the convention on World Heritage.
Blanca
Niño Nortonhas participated in workshops in Italy with the Carabinieri, and lectured
in Argentina, Roma, Paraguay, El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Costa Rica, Cuba,
Dominican Republic, and Colombia. With
the Carabinieri TPC especially with Dr Pastore, Blanca Niño Norton was able to
do important training in Guatemala. Through this collaboration with the
Carabineri TPC they conducted 4 courses for more than 80 people, each with the
support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Italy and Ministero per i Bieni Culturale.