Saturday, October 12, 2013 -
Christos Tsirogiannis,Noah Charney,Richard Ellis,vernon rapley
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October 12, 2013
October 11, 2013
Friday, October 11, 2013 -
Jason Felch,lawyer's committee for cultural heritage preservation,Leila Amineddoleh,Lynn Nicholas,Monuments Men
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The Lawyers’ Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation Presents The Monuments Men, Social Media, the Law and Cultural Heritage
The Lawyers’ Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation Presents "The Monuments Men, Social Media, the Law and Cultural Heritage" on Friday, November 1, 2013 at Fordham Law School in New York City. Map and directions: http://law.fordham.edu/about-fordham/25926.htm.
The program will begin with Diane
Penneys Edelman, Villanova University School of Law; President, Lawyers’
Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation; Leila
Amineddoleh, Adjunct Professor of Law, Fordham Law School; Executive Director,
Lawyers’ Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation; and Irina
Tarsis, Chair, American Society of International Law Cultural Heritage &
the Arts Interest Group.
The first panel, Monuments Officers, the Roberts
Commission, Rose Valland, Ardelia Hall, the protection of monuments in Europe and
Asia during WWII, law governing the “Spoils of War Doctrine,” legacy issues for
museums and the art market, will be chaired by Thomas R. Kline, Of Counsel, Andrews Kurth, LLP; Assistant Professorial
Lecturer, George Washington University, Museum Studies. Speakers: Elizabeth
Hudson, Chief Researcher, Monuments Men Foundation; Marc
Masurovsky, Independent Historian and Author and formerly with U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum; Anne
Rothfeld, Independent Historian, Ph.D. Candidate, American University; and Victoria
Reed, Curator for Provenance, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
The second panel, Prevention efforts in problem areas
since WWII: Evolution of U.S. law, policy and practice concerning looting
prevention and restitution efforts in post-WWII conflicts, will be chaired by Lucille Roussin, Founder and Director, Holocaust Restitution and Claims Practicum, and Adjunct Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. Speakers: Richard
B. Jackson, Special Assistant to the Army Judge Advocate General for Law of War
Matters; Salam
al-Kuntar, Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania Department
of Anthropology; James
McAndrew, Forensic Specialist, Grunfeld, Desiderio, Lebowitz, Silverman &
Klestadt.
Lunchtime Conversation with Lynn H. Nicholas, Independent Researcher and Author, The Rape of Europa: 12:15-1:30p.m. Interview by Thomas Kline.
The third panel, Present-day initiatives taken by the US
armed forces, law enforcement, the art market and others to prevent and remedy
looting and the trade of works looted during times of conflict, as well as law
governing trade in looted objects, will be chaired by Chair:
Elizabeth Varner, Executive Director, National Art Museum of Sport. Speakers: Corine Wegener, Preservation Specialist for Cultural
Heritage, Smithsonian Institution; Laurie W. Rush, Anthropologist and Cultural Resources
Manager, United States Army; Thomas
Mulhall, Supervisory Special Agent, Department of Homeland Security (ICE); Monica
Dugot, Senior Vice President, International Director of Restitution, Christie’s.
The fourth panel, The use of the Internet, social media, television, news
industry and film to raise awareness of looting, theft, and cultural heritage
issues. A discussion about alternative channels used to reduce cultural
heritage loss and increase restitution, will be chaired by Ms. Amineddoleh. Speakers: Darius
Arya, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, American Institute for Culture; Jason
Felch, Reporter, Los Angeles Times; Co-Author, Chasing Aphrodite; David
D’Arcy, Correspondent, The Art Newspaper; Screenwriter/Producer, Portrait of Wally.
Afterword
by Robert Edsel, Author and President, Monuments Men Foundation, WWII Monuments Men to the Present: What
have we learned? What do we need to relearn? Introduction
by Thomas R. Kline.
October 10, 2013
Thursday, October 10, 2013 -
Art Law and Policy,HARP
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The Holocaust Art Restitution Project (HARP) and the Ciric Law Firm, PLLC Sponsor Art Law CLE Program: Due Diligence in Cultural Heritage Litigation: Is There a Minimum Threshold?
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October 3, 2013
Thursday, October 03, 2013 -
Cyprus,recovered icons,stolen icons
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After decade-long fight, Cyprus recovers icons of apostles from the Antiphonitis church in Kalograia
by Christiana O'Connell-Schizas
Last week, on September 24th, four icons stolen almost four decades ago returned to the small yet culturally rich island of Cyprus. In March 1975, these 16th century icons of the Apostles Peter, Paul, John and Mark were removed from the wooden iconostasis of the Antiphonitis church in Kalograia, Cyprus. They were illicitly exported, found their way into an Armenian art dealer's hands, and were purchased by the Lans, an elderly Dutch couple. In 1995, the Lans decided to sell the icons through Christie's auction house, who became alarmed at the icon's suspicious origin and provenance and suggested that the couple refer the icons to the Cypriot Authorities.
Aside from their estimated value of €200,000[1], the repatriation of these icons is significant for a number of reasons. Firstly, frescoes from the same church were returned to Cyprus in 1997 with the help of Michel van Rijn, an art dealer turned informant. He had purchased them off Aydin Dikman, the most renowned looter of Cypriot artifacts. Michel's continuing cooperation with Cypriot authorities led to what is estimated to be the largest haul of stolen art since World War II - the raid on Aydin Dikman's three Munich apartments. Police estimated all the antiquities found were worth more than $60 million.[2] Cypriot frescoes, mosaics, and icons, ancient coins, pre-Columbian pottery, stolen paintings, and an unauthenticated Picasso were found. Four thousand more pieces were discovered hidden in walls and floorboards.
Cyprus filed a civil suit against Dikman in 1997, but it was not until 2010 that the German courts ruled in favor of Cyprus. Dikman appealed, but the Higher Regional court of Munich upheld the decision for the repatriation of the items. The 173 artifacts were formally returned to the Republic of Cyprus in a special ceremony held in Munich in July this year (while many more are still being held by Bavarian police due to lack of evidence that they come from Northern Cyprus). Their arrival at the Byzantine Museum in Nicosia is eagerly anticipated later this month. Ironically, amongst these 173 artifacts are more frescoes from the church of Antiphonitis. This illustrates how the cultural property that was once looted from this single church is slowly getting pieced back together.
The return of these four icons is also important because the Church of Cyprus took the Lans to court, and lost! Autocefale Grieks-Orthodoxe Kerk te Cyprus v. W.O.A. Lans was the first ever case to invoke the Protocol to the Hague Convention 1954 (Section I-3 of the Protocol). The Dutch Government and district court refused restitution as this convention had not yet been implemented into Dutch law. They also found the Lans to be bona fide purchasers and therefore the rightful owners. The Church and the Republic continued fighting for the icons, but in 2002, the Court of Appeal found that the claim was time-barred under statutes of limitations. In 2007, the Netherlands passed the Cultural Property Originating From Occupied Territory Act which prohibits the import and ownership of cultural property originating from a territory that was occupied in an armed conflict after 1959. This reopened the door for Cyprus' claim as the North of Cyprus has been occupied by Turkish forces since 1974. (Although the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) is in so called ‘power’ in the North, it is not a recognized entity and the area is de jure part of the Republic of Cyprus and its jurisdiction.) So in 2011, the Cypriot Minister of Foreign Affairs sent a letter to the Dutch formally requesting the return of the four icons. Some may argue that it is ridiculous for a country to be denied their cultural property for so long due to the bureaucracy of a country's national laws.
The rest as they say is history but it is noteworthy to mention that none of the above might have been possible without Tassoula Hadjitofi's ongoing efforts. She was the Honorary Council to the Netherlands when Christie's alerted the Lans in 1995 and the person van Rijn approached in 1997 which led to the Munich case. The icons will remain in the Byzantine Museum until the Republic of Cyprus regains access and administration of the occupied territories when the icons will be taken back to their rightful home, the church of Antiphonitis.
Bibliography
Autocefale Grieks-Orthodoxe Kerk te Cyprus v. W.O.A. Lans
"Επαναπατρίστηκαν 4 εικόνες από τη Μονή του Χριστού Αντιφωνητή."Επαναπατρίστηκαν 4 εικόνες από τη Μονή του Χριστού Αντιφωνητή. O Φιλελεύθερος, 24 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013. <http://www.philenews.com/el-gr/politismos-kypros/162/163434/epanapatristikan-4-eikones-apo-ti-moni-tou-christou-antifoniti>.
"Επαναπατρίζονται στην Κύπρο σημαντικά εκκλησιαστικά έργα τέχνης." H KAΘHMEPINH. N.p., 24 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013. <http://www.kathimerini.gr/4dcgi/_w_articles_kathremote_1_24/09/2013_519959>.
Hickley, Catherine. "Looted Icons Seized by Dutch Government Return to Cyprus."Bloomberg.com. Bloomberg, 17 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013. <http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-17/looted-icons-seized-by-dutch-government-return-to-cyprus.html>.
Matyk, Stephen, ‘The Restitution of Cultural Objects and the Question of Giving Direct Effect to the Protocol to the Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict 1954’ (2000) 9(2)
Rose, Mark. "Special Report: Church Treasures of Cyprus - Archaeology Magazine Archive." Archaeology. Archaeological Institute of America, 51(4). July-Aug. 1998. Web. <http://archive.archaeology.org/9807/etc/special.html>. (last accessed 29 Sept 2013)
Stevenson, Peter. "Returned Icons given a New Home." Cyprus Mail. N.p., 24 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013. <http://cyprus-mail.com/2013/09/24/returned-icons-given-a-new-home/>.
"Stolen Icons Being Returned to Cyprus." Cyprus Mail. N.p., 18 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013. <http://cyprus-mail.com/2013/09/18/stolen-icons-returned-to-cyprus/>.
[1] Hickley, Catherine. "Looted Icons Seized by Dutch Government Return to Cyprus."Bloomberg.com. Bloomberg, 17 Sept. 2013. Web. 29 Sept. 2013.
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-17/looted-icons-seized-by-dutch-government-return-to-cyprus.html>
September 26, 2013
Thursday, September 26, 2013 -
british museum,in the media,Pompeii
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Review of theater screening of "Pompeii from the British Museum": expert guides provide insight to exhibit
by Eleanor Edwards, Special Contributor
Last night, September 25, theaters all around the United States screened "Pompeii from the British Museum", an 'exclusive private view of a major exhibition'.
The show was excellent and in many ways better than the “in person” experience.
This special screening did not include the shoulder to shoulder crowd experience of visiting the British Museum in person. Instead the audience was shown around the empty exhibit space by leading experts in various fields related to the study of the Roman Empire.
The exhibit emphasizes the people of Pompeii and Herculaneum. The objects exhibited are meant to evoke an appreciation of both the ordinary working people and the more privileged. What did these people think about, how did they get ready for the day, what did they eat, how did they pass their leisure hours, how did they live in their houses? The exhibit itself is laid out like a typical home of a more privileged Pompeiian.
The introduction to the exhibit was made by Neil MacGregor, the Director of the British Museum, who pointed out the interesting motif of the dog that runs throughout the exhibit and serves as a common reference between the viewer and the residents of this ill-fated household.
Mary Beard, Classicist from Cambridge, took us around the the cubiculum (bedroom) and discussed the more intimate thoughts, dreams and desires of the residents. This provided a brief look into the possible ways of looking at particular objects of art displayed in the home (much made of the propensity for “willy waving” among the men of the time). But what Professor Beard brought to this experience was her unbridled enthusiasm and excitement for the subject. It was great fun to look at the exhibit with her.
At the British Museum in August, I found it was almost impossible to see and take in the relevance of each object so one tact was to choose a few favorites to swoop in on when there was a break in the crowd. For me those were the kitchen items. This behind the scenes presentation certainly added to my previous enjoyment of those objects when taken around by the Italian chef Giorgio Locatelli. We could really appreciate the beauty of everyday objects like a colander and the ferocity of the dormouse, a favorite delicacy.
One area that I completely missed was the display of items found in the drains of Herculaneum. Being show these items by the resident drains expert, Professor Andrew Wallace-Hadrill, brought real immediacy to what had been an overlooked display. He also brought up the controversial question regarding the continued excavation of the site versus the view that, for now, the focus should be the conservation of what has been already uncovered.
In 90 minutes, through both reenactments and expert analysis, Pompeii from the British Museum provided an engaging look at this exhibit. While not every item is examined, and a few favorites are notably missing, this event is well worth attending whether of not you have been to the British Museum exhibit.
The British Museum also has an application for iPhones and iPads, Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum. Here's a link to the museum's exhibit which closes on September 29.
Fathom Events will show "Vermeer and Music" at theaters on October 10, 2013.
September 25, 2013
Wednesday, September 25, 2013 -
british museum,exhibit,in the media,Pompeii
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Fathom Events Presents "Pompeii from the British Museum" in US Theaters Tonight Only
"Pompeii from the British Museum" will be screened in dozens of theaters throughout the United States tonight. Here's a link to Fathom Events to purchase tickets. The British Museum produced this film about their exhibit, "Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum" (closing September 29). Here's a link to the worldwide listings of this event.
September 24, 2013
Tuesday, September 24, 2013 -
documentary,Joe Medeiros,Mona Lisa,Vincenzo Peruggia
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Showtimes for Joe Medeiros' documentary about the life and motivations of Vincenzo Peruggia's theft of the Mona Lisa
In July 2012, Tanya Levrik reviewed Joe Medeiros' documentary The Missing Piece: Mona Lisa, Her Thief, The True Story about the life and motivations of Vincenzo Peruggia who stole Leonardo da Vinci's "La Joconde" from the Louvre in 1911. This film is still being seen in festivals across the country:
thru Thursday, Sept. 26
4:10 pm
thru Thursday, Sept. 26
4:10 pm
The Screen, Santa Fe, NM
Thursday, Sept. 26 - 7:30 pm
Thursday, Sept. 26 - 7:30 pm
Atlas Cinema Eastgate, Cleveland, OH
Tuesday, Oct 1 thru Saturday, Oct. 5 - 6:15 pm
The Guild Cinema, Albuquerque, NM
Thursday, Oct. 3 thru Saturday, Oct. 5
Corpus Christi, TX
Friday, Oct. 4 1:00 pm & 8:00 pm
Saturday, Oct. 5 - 8:00 pm
Auburn Public Theater, Auburn, NY
Friday, October 11 - 3:30 pm
ArcLight Documentary Film Festival, Hollywood, CA
Friday, Oct. 11 - 7:00 pm
Sunday, Oct. 13 - 1:30 pm
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
Sunday, Oct. 13 - 3:00 pm & 5:00 pm
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX
Thursday, Oct. 15
Friday, Oct. 16
The Media Arts Center, San Diego, CA
Sunday, Oct. 20 - 2:00 pm
Sacramento, CA
Wednesday, Nov. 20 - 7:00 pm
Hiway Theater, Jenkintown, PA
Live Q&A with filmmakers
Sunday, November 24 - 4:30 pm
The Colonial Theater, Phoenixville, PA
Live Q&A with filmmakers
Thursday, Dec. 5 - 7:30 pm
Ambler Theater, Ambler, PA
Skype Q & A withfilmmakers
Skype Q & A withfilmmakers
Tuesday, Dec. 20 - 8:00 pm
Batelle Film Club, Richland, WA
September 17, 2013
Tuesday, September 17, 2013 -
cultural property,DePaul,repatriation,Symposium
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DePaul University College of Law in Chicago to host "Restitution and Repatriation: The Return of Cultural Objects Symposium" on November 13, 2013
Restitution and Repatriation: The Return of Cultural Objects Symposium will be held at DePaul University College of Law in Chicago on Thursday, November 14, 2013. The program will address the underlying legal, ethical and moral reasons and policies behind the return of cultural objects. Panels will discuss provenance research, museum acquisitions, historical appropriations, and the ethical issues that come into play when requests for repatriation are made.
Our Featured Lecturer will be Jack Trope, Executive Director of the Association on American Indian Affairs. Other speakers include: Lori Breslauer, Acting General Counsel of the Field Museum of Natural History; Steve Nash, Chair of the Department of Anthropology and Curator of Archaeology at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science; Rebecca Tsosie, a Willard H. Pedrick Distinguished Research Scholar and Professor of Law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University; Richard M. Leventhal, the Director of the Penn Cultural Heritage Center; Charles Brian Rose, a James B. Pritchard Professor of Mediterranean Archaeology in the Department of Classical Studies and Curator-in-Charge of the Mediterranean Section of the Penn Museum; Marc-André Renold, Director of the Art-Law Centre at the University of Geneva; Frank Lord, an associate at Herrick Feinstein LLP; Thomas R. Kline, Of Counsel in the Washington, D.C. office of Andrews Kurth LLP; and Simon Frankel, a partner at Covington & Burling LLP, as well as several other leaders in the art, museum, and cultural heritage fields.
The symposium has been approved for 7.75 CLE credits, including 1.5 Ethics credits (pending Ethics Board approval). To register for the symposium, or for additional information, please visit: http://law.depaul.edu/centers_institutes/art_museum/archaeological/default.asp.”
September 15, 2013
Sunday, September 15, 2013 -
Boston MFA,Carabinieri Tutela Patrimonio Culturale,Virginia Curry
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Italy loans Renaissance masterpiece to MFA, Boston as part of exhibit on recovery work by the Carabinieri Department for the Protection of Cultural Heritage
Piero della Francesca's "Senigallia Madonna" |
In the Boston Globe, Geoff Edgers reports in "A museum, a heist, a rescued 'Madonna'":
The 24-by-21-inch work is a prime example of how a seemingly grim acknowledgment -- that the MFA had acquired works most likely looted from Italian soil -- has been turned into a bountiful cultural exchange. Back in 2006, under pressure and scrutiny from Italian investigators with photographic evidence that showed works looted sometime before they arrived in US museums, the MFA and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York struck deals to send objects back.Here's a link to the MFA's website and a video about the work of the Carabinieri Department for the Protection of Cultural Heritage.
Edgers writes:
The loan of the Piero is part of a campaign by the Carabinieri, Italy's military police, to publicize their effort to recovery stolen artworks. So the MFA's Lee gallery will feature extensive wall labels detailing both the significance of the work as well as the tale of the theft.Virginia Curry, who spoke at ARCA's first international art crime conference in 2009, was interviewed for the article:
Virginia Curry, a retired special agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, who has worked closely with the Carabinieri and also on the 1990 Gardner theft, said the MFA loan truly helps both parties. The MFA gets to show a priceless masterpiece. The Italians, sometimes criticized for reclaiming artworks on prime display in the United States and putting them in storage or in little-seen galleries, are able to share the country's culture.
“That’s really the purpose of it,” said Curry, who is based in Texas. “They’re showing that they’re willing to bring something back. That they’re not just going to demand the return of this material to be placed in a storehouse in Italy because they can’t display it as well as at the MFA or at the Metropolitan. They’re trying to show some responsibility and willingness to share their culture.”
September 12, 2013
Thursday, September 12, 2013 -
Egon Schiele,Elizabeth Royer,Holocaust Art Restitution Project,Marc Masurovsky,Nazi-era looted art,Ori Z. Soltes,Portrait of Wally
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HARP (The Holocaust Art Restitution Project) and HARP-Europe Sign A Collaboration Agreement Involving Research in Artworks Looted by the Nazis
Press
Contacts:
Paris, France -
Washington, DC, USA - September 12, 2013 - The Holocaust Art Restitution Project
( HARP), based in Washington, DC, chaired by Ori Z. Soltes, and HARP-Europe,
founded by Elizabeth Royer, both nonprofit organizations, announced today the
signature of an exclusive collaboration agreement involving research in artworks looted by the Nazi
Regime.
For twelve
years, Hitler’s Third Reich orchestrated a campaign of persecution, plunder and
annihilation of millions of people, resulting in the seizure and expropriation
of countless assets, including works of art. Due to the inertia from
governments and the art market since 1945, and as Holocaust victims or their
heirs continue to seek their stolen property, these artworks move freely around
the world with impunity, and continue to be exhibited, exchanged or sold.
This is why HARP,
based in Washington, DC, and chaired by Ori Z. Soltes, announced the signature
of an exclusive collaboration agreement involving historical research of looted
artworks, with HARP-Europe, a French association incorporated under French
no-for-profit laws, and founded by Elizabeth Royer. In fact, the identification and restitution of looted
artworks require detailed research and analysis of public and private archives,
either in Europe or North America.
HARP-Europe is a
not-for-profit entity created and led by Elizabeth Royer, and headquartered in
Paris. HARP is a US not-for-profit entity founded in 1997, which has worked for
16 years on the restitution of artworks looted by the Nazi regime. HARP was
notably involved in the "Portrait of Wally" case, where a Schiele
painting was seized by the U.S. Government, as well as in the restitution of an
“Odalisque”, a painting by Henri Matisse, to the Rosenberg family. The purpose
of both entities is to conduct archival research on artworks looted by the Nazi
regime, to assist claimants in obtaining their restitution, to seek improvement
of the legislative and political framework in favor of restitution of looted
artworks, to develop and promote educational programs designed to facilitate historical
research in property losses resulting from the Nazi regime.
HARP is advised and
represented by the Ciric Law Firm Firm, PLLC in New York, USA, and Europe
HARP
is advised and represented by law firms Dauzier & Associés and Antoine
Comte in Paris, France.
Elizabeth Royer, President
HARP-Europe, Paris, France
Ori Z. Soltes, President
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