“Imagine
how effective this massive guardian figure must have been when it
originally protected a major temple in Cambodia,” the Norton Simon
Museum’s audio guide intones. “There’s a look of menace on the
guardian’s square face with its rolling eyes and arched eyebrows,
curling mustache and stylized beard. Add the figure’s thick neck, broad
shoulders, and solid body, and it’s clear that he’s someone to be
reckoned with.”
It is indeed. The five-foot-tall statue
the guide is describing was carved during a burst of creativity in the
10th century, in what is today Cambodia—at the time it was part of the
Khmer empire. A new king had come to power, moved the capital to a place
called Koh Ker, and launched a temple-building spree. The statues that
adorned the temples pushed already advanced Khmer artistry to new
heights.
“They weren’t just creating large, monumental figures, they were
creating figures that have extremely refined carving details,” Helen
Ibbitson Jessup says of the Koh Ker craftsmen. Jessup is an expert on
Khmer art and founder of the non-profit Friends of Khmer Culture. “The muscular tension—the power–is so vividly expressed by the sculptor. It’s extraordinarily dynamic statuary.”
Now, the Norton Simon statue, a companion piece at Sotheby’s auction
house in New York, and two other related ones at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art in New York, are caught up in an international tug-of-war.
The skirmish heated up in April, when the US government, at
Cambodia’s request, moved to seize the Sotheby’s statue, saying it was
likely looted. Cambodia then made similar claims about the other
statues.
One difficulty that’s playing out right now in the Sotheby’s case is that it’s just not clear what laws apply here.
“The cultural property law field is really a patchwork of different
kinds of law,” says Rick St. Hilaire, a cultural heritage lawyer who’s
been watching the Sotheby’s case closely. “It’s not a body of law that a law student would easily find in a case book.”
St. Hilaire thinks the case could have big implications. “How is this
going to unfold? How is the law going to be impacted? How is policy
going to be impacted? The outcome might very well dictate whatever
policy might be embarked on in the future.”
Sotheby’s, Norton Simon, and the Met declined to comment for this story. In June, a Met spokesperson told The New York Times that, in the 80s when these statues were given to the museum, there weren’t clear rules on accepting such antiquities.
Helen Ibbitson Jessup says others argue that when major museums
preserve and display such statues, it serves a greater public good.
“That preservation of antiquities from other countries is a great
service that the museums of the West offer, that it shares the
civilizations of other nations to a very wide audience and on a very
meticulously well-preserved basis,” Jessup says, summarizing this
argument.
In court hearings, Sotheby’s lawyers have wondered why the Cambodian
government is only now expressing interest in these statues, some of
which have been on display for over 30 years.
Jessup says one reason is that, for much of that time, Cambodia has
been fighting–or recovering from–a devastating civil war. They’ve just
recently started to take stock of their cultural heritage.
Chen Chanratana publishes a magazine and website devoted to Khmer culture,
and recently finished his doctoral dissertation on Koh Ker. He says
that recovering works like these statues, and incorporating their
stories into the broader Cambodian story, is part of his country’s
rebuilding process.
“We can create the new story, or the history, about Cambodia. And we
can see our ancestors have a lot of culture, have a lot of treasure in
the past. And we have to learn about that, we have to know about that,”
he said over Skype from Phnom Penh.
In the next few weeks, the judge will rule on a Sotheby’s motion to dismiss the case.
1 comment:
Don't return it to Cambodia because Cambodia is still under the Vietnamese/Yuon CPP Government led by the Vietnamese/Yuon dog Hun Sen. Never trust this Communist CPP government regime under the secret supervision and provision as tools to destroy Cambodia and her Cambodian/Khmer people. This Yuon/Vietnamese government puppet in Cambodia has never done to help Cambodia/Khmer people, but they (Yuon/Vietnamese CPP officials/leaders and Vietnamese dog Hun Sen) allegedly and illegally evicted Cambodian land owners, farmers and victims of Beong Kak Lake, Borei Keilar, and others districts of Phnom Penh, stole and destroyed Natural Resources, gave and rented the Cambodian farming and lands to illegal Yuon/Vietnamese settlers, illegal and corrupted Yuon/Vietnamese business folks, and beyond.
Cambodia country is still at risk under the Communist Yuon/Vietnamese CPP regime led by
Vietnamese dog Hun Sen and their evil Vietnamese/Yuon masters in Hanoi, criminal Vietnam country - thief nation.
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