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{"id":12997,"date":"2023-07-11T14:30:04","date_gmt":"2023-07-11T21:30:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/illicitculturalproperty.com\/?p=12997"},"modified":"2023-07-12T04:31:42","modified_gmt":"2023-07-12T11:31:42","slug":"marlow-on-the-real-issue-with-the-glyptotek-head","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/illicitculturalproperty.com\/marlow-on-the-real-issue-with-the-glyptotek-head\/","title":{"rendered":"Marlowe on the Real Issue with the Glyptotek Head"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

This is a guest post by Elizabeth Marlowe<\/a>, Associate Professor of Art; Chair, Department of Art & Art History; Director, Museum Studies Program. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/a><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Some Key Facts on the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek Portrait of Septimius Severus and the Corpus of Bubon Bronzes<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The over-life-sized bronze head of Septimius Severus at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen has<\/a> been much<\/a> in the news lately<\/a>. Turkish officials are calling<\/a> for its return because for the last 50 years<\/a> (up to and including the museum\u2019s own website<\/a>), the museum has asserted that the head originally belonged to an over-lifesized bronze body [2] that, until recently, had been on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The body was seized<\/a> by the Manhattan District Attorney\u2019s<\/a> office in March, and has now been returned to T\u00fcrkiye<\/a>.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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photo by Steven Zucker<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

I have been researching these artworks for several years and am in the process of preparing a large publication (on an open-access, updateable, bilingual website) of all that I have learned. I offer here a brief summary of the main evidence concerning the Glyptotek head with the goal of ensuring that all parties involved in the discussions, including journalists, have the relevant facts at their disposal (something that has not been the case in all of the recent reporting). My main concern is that the discussions seem to be focusing on the wrong issue. The question of whether the museum\u2019s bronze head can be proven to go with that particular body is a secondary matter. The key issue is whether it comes from a particular Roman site in T\u00fcrkiye whose looting in the 1960s is a matter of well-established fact. I\u2019m grateful to Derek Fincham for sharing his Illicit Cultural Property <\/em>platform with me for the purpose of presenting the evidence on this question.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In May, 1967, Turkish authorities, acting on a tip about a large-scale act of archaeological looting, arrived at the village of Ibecik, where they discovered a large, ancient bronze statue hidden in a local house. Eventually, the police persuaded the homeowner, together with a number of other villagers, to reveal where the statue came from. In the following days, <\/strong>archaeologists from the nearby museum at Burdur conducted an emergency excavation at the site, known in antiquity as Bubon<\/a>, and found a large three-sided platform and several free-standing statue bases [3].<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\"\"<\/a>
The pedestals of the looted bronze imperial statues at Bubon, after Jale Inan, 1993.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

These were inscribed with the names of fourteen Roman emperors and empresses, suggesting that this room had once been filled with statues, and that it may have been a shrine for the worship of the emperor and his family, a practice we call the \u201cimperial cult.\u201d But the statues had all disappeared, with the exception of the one the authorities had recovered (this statue is today in the Burdur museum) [4].<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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The one Bubon statue that remained in Turkey, at the Burdur Archaeological Museum. Photo by Izabela Miszczak<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

The Turkish archaeologist Jale Inan investigated, and was told by  the villagers that they\u2019d been selling the statues as they found them to a dealer, netting as much as 90,000 Turkish lira for the largest and best-preserved figures. Their accounts are vague and contradictory, but they admitted to selling at least nine or ten statues as well as many additional fragments, including heads, arms and legs. Most were nude male figures, they reported, but one was clothed, and at least one was female. One of the male nudes, the largest of the group, was nearly 9 feet tall, and was the only figure in the group that was completely intact. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Meanwhile, starting in the mid-1960s, a number of bronze figures, portrait heads, and body parts began showing up on the art market. We now know that at least two of these were trafficked by the same person: both a bronze female head<\/a> at the Worcester Art Museum (whose bust may not belong to the original work) and the head at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek were first sold by the notorious Robert Hecht<\/a>. (The latter piece of information had been a tightly-kept secret in Copenhagen, and only became public knowledge earlier this month thanks to reporting by Camilla Strockmann<\/a>.) It is very possible that Hecht \u2013 who had been barred from T\u00fcrkiye in 1962 for trafficking in looted antiquities \u2013 was behind the entire group.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

There are today approximately ten bronze heads and a dozen bronze bodies currently residing in public and private collections around the world (mostly in the U.S.) that almost certainly<\/em> came from Bubon. I say \u201calmost certainly\u201d because of course the networks that move illegally plundered antiquities from the ground, smuggle them across borders, and deliver them to the high-end galleries of Europe and the U.S. are designed to cover their tracks. These are laundering operations \u2013 the original stain is supposed to be invisible by the end. But fortunately in the case of Bubon, enough facts are known about the looting and the pieces themselves that we can identify some clear criteria for determining whether a particular bronze was almost certainly<\/em> looted from the site: <\/p>\n\n\n\n