Posted 26 March 2005 - 08:08 PM
http://www.icaa.org....es/success.html
One success story is the recovery of the head of the empress Livia in 2000 (Butrint Archaeological Museum, Inv. 9). The head is one of the original sculptures excavated by the Italian Archaeological Mission from the theatre at Butrint and formed part of an imperial portrait group which, besides Livia, included the Emperor Augustus, Agrippa (his general in the battle against Mark Antony and Cleopatra) and a fine head of Apollo (the patron deity of Augustus). The latter is also traditionally known by the name of the ‘Goddess of Butrint’.
The portrait head of Livia was stolen in 1991 and was exported abroad for sale. By 1995 it had been purchased by a New York art dealer, and was offered for resale in a catalogue of antiquities entitled From a North American Collection of Ancient Art. All the items offered for sale were unprovenanced, though they were noted as belonging ‘to a collection formed over the last forty years’. It is not clear whether the head actually crossed the Atlantic; its eventual return was via Switzerland and it may have been secreted there.
Dr Elizabeth Bartman, an independent scholar based in New York, who has made a study of portraits of Livia, recognized the head in the catalogue and wrote immediately to the Albanian Embassy in Washington. At about the same time the head was offered to the Glyptothek Museum in Munich. The Director of Antiquities, Raimond Wünsche, recognized the piece as being from Butrint and contacted the German police. On being informed that this was a stolen piece the art dealer withdrew it from the market.
With the authorities in two countries alerted, some action to facilitate the head’s recovery and return it to Albania might have been expected. In fact, very little occurred - the head was entered on Interpol’s list of stolen objects but the object itself remained in the dealer’s collection.
Matters might have stayed unchanged but for a series of chance encounters between Dr Elizabeth Bartman, Professor C. Brian Rose and Professor Jack Davis, which ensured that news of the location of the statue made its way to the Butrint Foundation’s Scientific Director Professor Richard Hodges. Under Professor Hodges’ direction action to recover the piece was championed by Dr Iris Pojani, Director of the International Centre for Albanian Archaeology and Auron Tare, head of the newly established local office for Butrint in Saranda.
Following some negotiation a generous offer to return the head was made by the art dealer and on 3 November 2000 Livia was returned to Tirana.
One success story is the recovery of the head of the empress Livia in 2000 (Butrint Archaeological Museum, Inv. 9). The head is one of the original sculptures excavated by the Italian Archaeological Mission from the theatre at Butrint and formed part of an imperial portrait group which, besides Livia, included the Emperor Augustus, Agrippa (his general in the battle against Mark Antony and Cleopatra) and a fine head of Apollo (the patron deity of Augustus). The latter is also traditionally known by the name of the ‘Goddess of Butrint’.
The portrait head of Livia was stolen in 1991 and was exported abroad for sale. By 1995 it had been purchased by a New York art dealer, and was offered for resale in a catalogue of antiquities entitled From a North American Collection of Ancient Art. All the items offered for sale were unprovenanced, though they were noted as belonging ‘to a collection formed over the last forty years’. It is not clear whether the head actually crossed the Atlantic; its eventual return was via Switzerland and it may have been secreted there.
Dr Elizabeth Bartman, an independent scholar based in New York, who has made a study of portraits of Livia, recognized the head in the catalogue and wrote immediately to the Albanian Embassy in Washington. At about the same time the head was offered to the Glyptothek Museum in Munich. The Director of Antiquities, Raimond Wünsche, recognized the piece as being from Butrint and contacted the German police. On being informed that this was a stolen piece the art dealer withdrew it from the market.
With the authorities in two countries alerted, some action to facilitate the head’s recovery and return it to Albania might have been expected. In fact, very little occurred - the head was entered on Interpol’s list of stolen objects but the object itself remained in the dealer’s collection.
Matters might have stayed unchanged but for a series of chance encounters between Dr Elizabeth Bartman, Professor C. Brian Rose and Professor Jack Davis, which ensured that news of the location of the statue made its way to the Butrint Foundation’s Scientific Director Professor Richard Hodges. Under Professor Hodges’ direction action to recover the piece was championed by Dr Iris Pojani, Director of the International Centre for Albanian Archaeology and Auron Tare, head of the newly established local office for Butrint in Saranda.
Following some negotiation a generous offer to return the head was made by the art dealer and on 3 November 2000 Livia was returned to Tirana.