Toronto Star

Met museum returns statues

THAILAND

- JERRY HARMER

Thailand’s National Museum hosted a welcome-home ceremony Tuesday for two ancient statues that were illegally trafficked from Thailand by a British collector of antiquitie­s and were returned from the collection of New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

The objects — a tall bronze figure called the “Standing Shiva” or the “Golden Boy” and a smaller sculpture called “Kneeling Female” — are thought to be around 1,000 years old.

This most recent repatriati­on of artwork comes as many museums in the U.S. and Europe reckon with collection­s that contain objects looted from Asia, Africa and other places during centuries of colonialis­m or in times of upheaval.

The Metropolit­an Museum had announced last December that it would return more than a dozen artifacts to Thailand and Cambodia after they were linked to the late Douglas Latchford, an art dealer and collector accused of running a huge antiquitie­s traffickin­g network out of Southeast Asia.

He was indicted in the United States in 2019 for allegedly orchestrat­ing a long-running scheme to sell looted Cambodian antiquitie­s on the internatio­nal art market. Latchford, who died the following year, had denied any involvemen­t in smuggling.

Speaking at Tuesday’s ceremony, the Metropolit­an’s curator of Asian and Southeast Asian art, John Guy, called the returned works “unrivalled masterpiec­es” of their period and said the handover was “a very meaningful moment to recognize the importance of the art of Thailand in world culture.”

“The Met initiated the return of these two objects after reviewing informatio­n and establishe­d that the works rightly belonged to the Kingdom of Thailand.”

“This return followed the launch of the Metropolit­an’s Cultural Property Initiative last year, an initiative driven by the Met’s commitment to the responsibl­e collecting of antiquitie­s and to the shared stewardshi­p of the world’s cultural heritage,” Guy told his audience in the capital Bangkok.

Thai Culture Minister Sudawan Wangsuphak­ijkosol expressed her country’s gratitude for the return of the items. “These artifacts that Thailand has received from the Met are the national assets of all Thais,” she said.

Last month, the Metropolit­an Museum signed a memorandum of understand­ing in New York with Thailand “formalizin­g a shared commitment to collaborat­e on exchanges of art, expertise, and the display and study of Thai art.”

 ?? SAKCHAI LALIT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The “Standing Shiva” is one of two stolen bronze sculptures returned to Thailand last Tuesday.
SAKCHAI LALIT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The “Standing Shiva” is one of two stolen bronze sculptures returned to Thailand last Tuesday.

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