By BARBARA LEONARD
Courthouse News Service
MANHATTAN (CN) - Federal prosecutors have filed suit to force forfeiture of a 10th century sandstone statue from the Sotheby's auction house so that it can return to Cambodia.
The Duryodhana was stolen from the Prasat Chen temple at Koh Ker in Cambodia as war raged in the neighboring Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge took power in 1975, according to the complaint.
"The Koh Ker site is of great significance from a religious, historical, and artistic perspective," according to the complaint, which explains that the city was an ancient capital that was once home to "a vast complex of sacred monuments."
Prasat Chen, a sandstone temple at Koh Ker dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu, was looted in the 1960s or 1970s, prosecutors say.
Among the temple's lost artifacts are two large sandstone statues, the Duryopdhana and the Bhima.
"These two statues once stood face to face, depicted at the moment of preparation for their epic battle, as chronicled in 'The Bhagavad Gita,'" the complaint states. "The site of this sculptural group is now surrounded by rubble from the building and only the pedestals on which they stood remain."
Looters severed the statues by their ankles, and the feet remain on the pedestals.
"The Duryodhana is of extraordinary value as a piece of the cultural heritage of the Cambodian people," the complaint also states. "A spectacular piece and unique in so many ways, it is a triumph of creativity and innovation. It representes a unique moment in the religious and artistic history of ancient Cambodia, when the great themes of the Indian epic texts, such as the 'The Bhagavad Gita,' became integrated into the temple space, and were represented no simply in bas-relief, but rather in full round. Shown precisely at the moment where he leaps into the air, the Duryodhana is a testament to the skill of the ancient sculptors, who took an extraordinary risk in giving the illusion of a being in movement and suspension.
Prosecutors say they traced the statute to Sotheby's, which was consigned to auction the piece for a Flemish collector in 2010. The collector allegedly bought the statute from a British auction house in 1975.
After Sotheby's imported the Duryodhana into the United States, it pulled the statue from the auction on request by the Cambodian government but never released possession of it.
The forfeiture complaint was filed Wednesday by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and the New York Office of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations. It names several reasons for Sotheby's to forfeit the Duryodhana, including the allegation that the statue constitutes stolen property introduced into the United States in violation of U.S. law.
1 comment:
Duryodhana statue must be returned to the rightful owner Cambodia. Proof at Cambodia's Kor Ker Temple: Servered ankles were cut where he once magestically stood. If the Sotheby insists on auctioning the stolen property, I have no respect for this institution at all. What a shame!
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