Art historian Mark Stocker has been helping to solve an
international mystery surrounding the sale of artefacts
from a British museum. Photo by Peter McIntosh.
A University of Otago art historian says he is shocked
and feels "a sense of fascinated horror" after four New Zealand
artefacts entrusted to a British museum turned up for sale on
the open market.
"Our heritage is being trampled on ... I think it is rather
extraordinary. I would hope it is extraordinary and
exceptional," Associate Prof Mark Stocker said yesterday.
He is one of a small team of New Zealand museum curators and
academics who have played detective for more than a year to
piece together a global artefacts puzzle.
The artefacts - a small bronze statue of the founder of
Canterbury, John Robert Godley, a carved Maori pare or lintel
dating from about 1880, a carved Maori panel and a small
model of a carved Maori dwelling or pataka - were all donated
to a British museum which closed in 2002. That institution
passed on its collection of more than 11,000 items to the
British Empire and Commonwealth Museum (BECM) in Bristol.
An academic with 30 years' experience and an authority on
Victorian statues, Prof Stocker became involved in late 2009,
when he was asked by the Christchurch Art Gallery for advice
on the whether the gallery should buy a Godley statuette on
sale in a London antique shop for 35,000.
After consulting books and talking to other specialists, he
confirmed the statuette had been part of the BECM collection.
The panel, pare and pataka, also in the shop, were also
traced to the museum collection and were returned.
However, more detective work uncovered the pare and the
pataka about to be auctioned at Auckland art dealership
Dunbar Sloane in September last year.
Prof Stocker sought legal advice and informed the New Zealand
Police.
The pataka was withdrawn from sale, but the lintel was
auctioned and sold to a private buyer.
He said the items reaching the open market raised serious
questions about how safe historical treasures entrusted to
museum collections could ever be.
There were three possibilities about how the items came to be
for sale, he said. Someone may have stolen them to make
money, they may have been sold by accident, or they may have
been sold with permission.
The London antique dealer said he bought about 150 items for
115,000 and received receipts signed by BECM director Gareth
Griffiths. British newspapers have reported trustees of the
museum as saying Dr Griffiths has been dismissed, although he
disputed that.
The BECM trust board, headed by Sir Neil Cossons,
internationally respected heritage adviser and a frequent
visitor to Dunedin, is auditing the collection to see what
items are missing. Sir Neil said the board had authorised the
sale of some low value items.
The British police are also investigating. There was no way
of knowing how many items had already been sold or were on
the market, Prof Stocker said.
"Is this the tip of the iceberg? I really, really can't
answer that. There has been talk of a carved rhinoceros horn
worth tens of thousands of dollars, and an important North
American landscape painting from the 19th century."
Publicity about the four New Zealand items would probably
result in curators and art historians keeping a closer eye on
sales and antique shops, he said.
While there was little a museum could do if someone sold
items without permission, Prof Stocker said he believed all
museums should take care when selling items and follow "due
process".
It was important to consider the original donors and ensure
"maximum transparency and publicity" about which items might
be sold and why.
"Institutions should lean over backwards to be honest,
genuine and ethical about it."
He was particularly offended about the intended sale of Maori
artefacts, which he said did not respect the technical and
spiritual qualities Maori artists brought to their works.
allison.rudd@odt.co.nz
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