Sunday 17 October 2010

True A Scapegoat for the Sins of a Generation of Collectors

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There have been many recent texts covering the end of the Marion True trial in recent days. Cristina del Rivero in the "Art meets Law" blog has a post ('Marion True, the scapegoat...', Sunday, October 17, 2010) which takes a step back from the news itself and reflects on the wider context.
We will never know whether Marion True knowingly "acquired" or conspired to "traffic in" looted antiquities now that a court in Rome has ruled that the statute of limitations on the two criminal charges brought against the longtime curator had expired. The trial had continued on-and-off for five years during which time the prosecution presented its arguments to the court and called witnesses "who, according to Italian court procedure, were rarely subject to cross-examination." This, together with the fact that the defense never made its case nor did the court ever reach a verdict, means it's virtually impossible to draw any solid, substantiated conclusions with respect to the defendant and the specific allegations made against her.
The whole affair became highly politicised in connection with the continued efforts of the Italian authorities to reclaim illicitly obtained antiquities which had subsequently been bought by major American museums. To a large degree this was connected with the "hugely incriminating evidence found at the Geneva warehouse of Giacomo de Medici (convicted antiquities smuggler and alleged associate of Robert Hecht, Marion True's co-defendant and the dealer she transacted with)". The trial undoubtedly had a great effect on museum practices in the US, and probably gave museum curators elsewhere much else to think about too. It was under the shadow of this trial that museums such as the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Metropolitan and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts came to "arrangements" with the Italians concerning recently acquired material in their collections. In 2008 the Association of Art Museum Directors adopted stricter guidelines for acquisitions of antiquities.

In an interview with The New Yorker. Marion True said of the Getty:
I have nothing but the greatest contempt for them in the world. They acted like I ran the place. Above me I had a chief curator who was deputy director, a director, an in-house counsel, a president, a board of trustees to whom the president reported, and a chairman of the board. What about the lawyers who drafted the acquisition policy, who were supposed to be vetting all documents? They were perfectly happy to assure all that [the alleged acquisition of illegal art] was my work. Never once have [former Getty director] John Walsh or [his successor] Deborah Gribbon stepped forward to say one word about their responsibility.
Cristina del Rivero comments that this case:
marks the culmination of decades of (unethical, if not illegal) acquisitions by museums (dealers and collectors too) of antiquities of unknown or dubious provenance. It has long been the case that market participants have simultaneously acknowledged the prevalence of looted antiquities in the market while routinely dealing in ancient artifacts that lack adequate provenance and denying the causal link between market demand and the growing profit-making business of looting (evidence of the causal link is practically conclusive). The True trial illustrates this intolerable reality perfectly - the pervasiveness of appallingly low standards in acquisitions of antiquities has been such in the last 20 years that either Marion True thought she could get away with it or even a curator of her knowledge and experience (she served as curator of antiquities at the Getty from 1986 to 2005) could not distinguish between an insufficiently documented antiquity and an illicit one. As the director of the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Maxwell L. Anderson, said, Marion True was being indicted "for what was a practice of American museums."

That a single curator has had to "carry the burden" for the practices of a board of trustees that was fully aware of the risks the acquisitions entailed and approved them nonetheless only to condone them later is undoubtedly unfair, not to mention the fact that the charges were anomalous from the outset since as a curator, True was never the recipient of the objects in dispute- the objects were acquired by the board of trustees on behalf of the Getty museum.

The blog's author ends by concluding that "the trial has served as a deafeningly loud "wake-up call" to museums in the US (and, ehem, around the world) that BUYING UNDOCUMENTED OR INSUFFICIENTLY DOCUMENTED ANTIQUITIES HAS GOT TO STOP".

Photo: Marion True outside the Rome court (from the New Yorker)

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