Monday, April 09, 2012

Sotheby’s: “Orgy of the Rich”


Ref: Sotheby's sued for return of 10th century Cambodian statue [see below]
The Duryodhana statue
School of Vice’s note:
It is Sotheby’s role as dealer and broker in the selling and buying of artworks and antiquities that help promote ‘legalised thefts’ of these artefacts worldwide, often from countries embroiled in political and social turmoil like Cambodia who are ill-equipped to protect its antiquities and heritage from well-organised art syndicates with auction houses like Sotheby’s at its heart. In the late 1980s/early 1990s the government - in - exile led by Mr Son San had also complained over Sotheby’s auction of priceless Khmer artefacts in London, however, since that government was not based in Phnom Penh Sotheby’s argued it had no case to pursue. In this on-going case Sotheby’s maintains that all the facts and evidence point to the sandstone’s legally imported status, yet one cannot help but wonders that at some point in time the object in dispute must have been illegally seized off its rightful owner: Cambodia, regardless of whether the country was being embroiled in political instability at the time. Unless, of course, one chooses to interpret the physically violent removal of this object from its pedestal at a temple ruins in a remote jungle in Cambodia [i.e. head and torso in New York, and feet still standing in northern Cambodia] as “legal”!

On the other hand, the private nature of Sotheby’s business dealings would often mean that, unlike the numerous Khmer antiquities owned by trusts and museums around the world which are at least disposed to public viewing and thereby serve to inform and educate the world about Khmer culture and history, the concerned object would likely vanish into the inaccessible world of private collections somewhere, or perhaps, in time may resurface at another lucrative auction like Sotheby’s! 
......................................
Orgy of the Rich:

....................


Sotheby's sued for return of 10th century Cambodian statue

By Rosa Prince in New York – the Telegraph 5 April 2012

The Duryodhana statue is alleged to have been stolen from the Prasat Chen temple in Koh Ker, a remote jungle site 200 miles north of Phnom Penh which was the capital of the Khmer Empire until around 950 BC.

It is claimed that it was taken at some point during the 1960s or 1970s, when Cambodia was going through a time of violent political turmoil.
US Attorney Preet Bharara, for the Southern District of New York, accused Sotheby's of importing the statute for auction in its Manhattan office in March 2010 despite knowing it had been stolen.


The auctioneer obtained the Duryodhana from the heirs of a Belgian antiquities dealer, who bought it from an auction house in the United Kingdom in 1975.
If the statue is recovered, it will be returned to Cambodia, Mr Bharara said. He added: "With today's action, we are taking an important step toward reuniting this ancient artefact with its rightful owners."

The Duryodhana once stood on a pedestal near the entry to the western pavilion of Prasat Chen, a temple dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu.
The feet of the statue remain there today.

At the request of the Cambodian government, Sotheby's agreed to remove the statue from sale last year, but it remains in the auctioneer's possession.
In a statement, Sotheby's said: "This sculpture was legally imported into the United States and all relevant facts were openly declared.

“We have researched this sculpture extensively and have never seen nor been presented with any evidence that specifies when the sculpture left Cambodia over the last one thousand years nor is there any such evidence in this complaint.”

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

sounds like sotheby's an enabler, taking advantage of country like cambodia during turmoil to loot its treasures then auctioning them for millions of dollars! shame on sotheby. i hope some will use the law to sue it! so it will stop doing encouraging looting and selling of cambodia's ancient artefacts, etc!

exactly, if there's no market for them, there's no looting!

Anonymous said...

think about it, sotheby is creating something out of nothing by looting from cambodia to sell in their auction house. shame on them!

Anonymous said...

“We have researched this sculpture extensively and have never seen nor been presented with any evidence that specifies when the sculpture left Cambodia over the last one thousand years nor is there any such evidence in this complaint.”

I am not a lawyer and have never been in my life gone to a law school, but the statement quoted sounds ridiculous, absurd and finally stupid beyond one's imagination.

How can you find an evidence of a statue leaving the country when it was stolen during the war in Cambodia? A counter-argument to you, Sotheby's is why don't you prove that Cambodia sold this statue to a private collector? If that were the case, wouldn't you think that the Cambodian government had been smart enough to sell it in its full form for more money?

Even for an uneducated person living in the jungle without setting his foot in a school for one single day, he or she can still comprehend without any assistance that The Duryodhana statue was not built by a white race and to conclude that because they could not find any evidence that specifies when the sculpture left Cambodia over the last one thousand years, the statue should not be returned to its rightful owner and be allowed to be auctioned demonstrates clearly that Sotheby's is playing with the law knowing full well to take advantage of it without accepting the reality that the object was stolen and how or when it got out of its house is not important.

Return it to Cambodia and see if it matches its feet and if any country wants to claim that it is theirs and can prove it beyond reasonable doubt, Cambodia will return it to that country.

This statue belongs to a nation and in this case, Cambodia; it, by no means, belongs to Sotheby's or any antique collector.

Sotheby's shamelessly uses the law to delay the artefact from being returned to its rightful owner.

Stop taking advantage of poor countries by encouraging the theft of their ancient artefacts, the money you make from them is so dirty, volatile, and quite flammable that it will burn you in hell!

Pissed off

Anonymous said...

Dear: Pissed off

you're pissing off at the wrong people. You should be pissing off at Hun Sen and his CPP gang who sold the ancient artifact to the foreigners in the first place. Since 1979, Hun Sen and his CPP gang have sold thousands of pieces of priceless ancient artifacts to Siam and Youn Art dealers. Go to Thailand and see for yourself. There are dozens of art dealers who sell Khmer ancient artifacts. Ask yourself how they manage to get it out of Srok Khmer? For sure not in a suitcase!!!

Khmer Guardian

Anonymous said...

sotheby thrives on cambodia's losses!