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Article:
Museums Begin Returning Artifacts to India in Response to Investigation
By Tom Mashberg
New York Times - 7 April 2015
Several American museums have begun returning possibly stolen artifacts to India in response to a major federal investigation into the activities of Subhash Kapoor, a dealer identified by authorities as having once run the largest antiquities smuggling operation on American soil.
Last week, museums in Hawaii and Massachusetts handed federal officials a total of eight items bought from Mr. Kapoor’s defunct business, Art of the Past, which was on Madison Avenue in Manhattan.
In October, the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio returned a $245,000 statue that was bought from Mr. Kapoor in 2006. The museum’s director, Brian Kennedy, said the institution was in talks with federal investigators about giving up another 63 objects.
“He certainly conned a lot of people,” Mr. Kennedy said of Mr. Kapoor, who is awaiting trial in India on charges of trafficking in $100 million worth of stolen artifacts. Mr. Kapoor, 65, has pleaded not guilty.
Another 15 American museums have been identified as holding items obtained from Mr. Kapoor, but many said in the interviews this week that they had researched their Kapoor holdings and were satisfied that their items were not stolen or that they wanted to see proof of illegality before returning the 500 or so objects in question. Among those museums are the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.
“The ones that could be suspect were looked into and at the moment we are convinced that they are O.K.,” said Miranda Carroll, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles museum, which has 62 objects connected to Mr. Kapoor.
Tim Hallman, spokesman for the San Francisco museum, which has four Kapoor items, said, “We don’t believe any of the objects are a particular problem and no official claims have been made on any of them.”
The federal investigation, Operation Hidden Idol, began in 2012 with raids on Mr. Kapoor’s gallery and on several warehouses and other locations where he stored Indian antiquities. Officials with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Homeland Security Investigations, which are jointly directing the investigation, said they had seized tens of millions of dollars worth of objects that they believed were looted from ancient temples in India.
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Image:
Maharaja Serfoji II of Tanjavur and his son Shivaji II.
Tanjavur, Tamil Nadu, India.
Mid-19th century.
Wood, lime plaster, water-base paint, gold leaf, glass.
Source: Peabody Essex Museumhttps://dailydigesthub.com">CLICK NOW!
Peabody Essex Museum returns artwork in cooperation with Department of Homeland Security case. - The Institute of Museum Ethics SALEM, MASS.- The Peabody Essex Museum announces it will expedite the transfer of an artwork from its collection to the Department of Homeland Security’s – Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) to cooperate with an ongoing international art fraud investigation. PEM is one of several major art institutions around the world that purchased items from art dealer Subhash Kapoor, who was arrested in 2011 on charges of trafficking in stolen antiques from India. Through HSI’s investigation, PEM learned that a mid-19th century Tanjore portrait in its collection, which was acquired from Subhash Kapoor’s New York gallery in 2006, has falsified provenance. The artwork will be turned over to HSI. “PEM’s legacy of cultural and artistic exchange with India extends over 200 years,” says Dan L. Monroe, PEM’s Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Director and CEO. “The allegations of Subhash Kapoor’s art trafficking bring to light a nefarious ring of fraud, the discovery of which has sent shock waves through the art community. PEM has undertaken a rigorous internal assessment of its collection and is working in full cooperation with the Department of Homeland Security. PEM remains deeply committed to collecting, stewarding and presenting exceptional works of art and culture from around the world.” “I applaud the Peabody Essex Museum’s decision to assist HSI with our investigation by returning this precious artwork,” said Raymond R. Parmer Jr., special agent in charge of HSI New York. “I hope their example sets the standard for other institutions that may have inadvertently purchased or received stolen artifacts.” PEM is home to the most important collection of modern-era Indian art, from colonial times to the present, outside India. In 2001, the acquisition of the Chester and Davida Herwitz Collection of post-Independence art from India established PEM as the first museum outside of India to focus on the achievements of its modern artists. The Herwitz Collection of post-1947 Indian paintings — some 1,600 works by approximately 70 artists — remains unparalleled in any American or European museum. Painting dominates the overall collection, in large measure because of the Herwitz Collection, but also because of its deep holdings in the vernacular Kalighat painting tradition: PEM’s Kalighat paintings constitute one of the top three collections in the world. PEM is preeminent internationally for representing the art of the modern era, from the period of British colonial rule to the present, in what is modern-day India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Additionally, the extensive Bhutanese textile collection is the most important in an American museum, and the museum has diverse works from various Southeast Asian cultures, principally from the Philippines, Thailand, Burma, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, as well as from Tibet and Nepal. Source: http://bit.ly/1cen6gU
Thanks to Tisha Srivastav's page - Lifeisthan, for this article.
I remember this shop!!!! I always thought he was odd, very argumentative about Raja Ravi Varma. And had a damaged ear.
Deepak Mehta
Tata Group owned Art magazine, MARG Publications regularly published images courtesy Subhash Kapoor, in its magazines. Wonder how their editorial board had access to Kapoor's loot . Did Kapoor also retail in India to private collectors ?
Very very nice your callection
Bahut achcha laga ।like this.
Vah2
British museum will be empty if we ask them to return our artifacts.
We used to blame British now look who is looting us..
new look British
Attakasamana art
Of these artifacts come to India will they be kept in good and safe condition? I doubt after seeing many museums here
mind blowing !!