Archive for ‘Miscellaneous’

01/08/2022

attitudes to personal and public health precautions among artefact-hunters amid the Covid-19 pandemic

The Covid-19 pandemic offers a novel lens through which to analyse the attitudes of artefact-hunters towards personal and public health precautions in particular and science, society and the state in general.

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21/12/2020

“This is all published information and anyone who googles it can find it.” Christos Tsirogiannis, monitoring the trade in illicit antiquities.

Christos Tsirogiannis is now an associate professor at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, where he is monitoring the trade in illicit antiquities; publishing his research and collaborating in market analysis, as in his paper with an archaeologist at the University of Genoa who also researches the illicit trade, Marianne Mödlinger; and teaching his new research method around the world, as well as writing and being interviewed for the public.

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28/02/2017

crowdfunding for families of murdered excavation workers Anas Ibrahim and Adamu Abdulrahim

As I heard through Alison Atkin and Jacq Matthews, Zacharys Anger Gundu, Akinwumi Ogundiran and Willeke Wendrich have opened a crowdfunding account for donations to Support the Families of Two Murdered Janjela Heroes, Anas Ibrahim and Adamu Abdulrahim, the excavation workers who were killed when they tried to prevent the kidnap of archaeologists Peter Breunig and Johannes Behringer.

01/03/2016

A painting of Arhat Angaja – earliest listed source, 2015

This painting of Arhat Angaja was “acquired from Ferri-Drouot” in Paris on the 26th of June 2015, but Ferri Drouot is “une société de ventes aux enchères” (an auction house for fine art and antiques). Who sold it to or through Ferri Drouot? When and where did the anonymous previous owner acquire it?

According to Christie’s, this painting ‘belonged to a set of 23 paintings depicting the Sixteen Great Arhats’. So, presumably, they know more than they are saying. ‘Three other compositions from this particular paintings set have been identified: Arhat Nagasena (HAR item no.36291), Arhat Kanakavatsa (HAR item no.36292), and Arhat Bakula (HAR item no.36293).’

How do they know that there was a set of 23 paintings of 16 aspects of this legendary figure? Since they can apparently account for 4 of the paintings, what has happened to the other 19? When such information is withheld, is it because people in its chain of ownership do not want to be identified? Is it because the information is actually insecure? Is it because its release would highlight how little information is known about other objects?

Diligent sellers should not play hide and seek with their diligent buyers.

Its price had already jumped from an estimate of €20,000-€30,000 to a sale price of €65,000. Why, in less than a year, has its estimate jumped again? Is it because, since the auction in Paris, it has any known collecting history?

Its auction estimate is $120,000-$180,000.

A painting of Arhat Angaja. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 215, Sale 12168, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A painting of Arhat Angaja. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 215, Sale 12168, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A gilt bronze figure of Shakyamuni – earliest listed source, 2012

This fifteenth-century gilt bronze figure of Shakyamuni surfaced at Koller Auktionen in Switzerland on the 8th of May 2012 – how did it get there from Nepal?

Its auction estimate is $100,000-$150,000.

A gilt bronze figure of Shakyamuni. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 268, Sale 12168, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A gilt bronze figure of Shakyamuni. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 268, Sale 12168, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A painting of Kurukulla – earliest listed source, 2012

This seventeenth or eighteenth-century painting of Kurukulla, from “central Tibet”, is only traced back to a sale through Bonhams’ New York auction house on the 19th of March 2012.

Its auction estimate is $150,000-$200,000.

A painting of Kurukulla. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 213, Sale 12168, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A painting of Kurukulla. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 213, Sale 12168, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A gilt bronze figure of an eleven-headed Avalokiteshvara – earliest listed source, 2010

This gilt bronze figure of an eleven-headed Avalokiteshvara has been in an anonymous “private West Coast collection” since 2010, but it is from Tibet and has existed since the fifteenth or sixteenth century.

Its auction estimate is $300,000-$500,000.

A gilt bronze figure of an eleven-headed Avalokiteshvara. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 250, Sale 12168, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A gilt bronze figure of an eleven-headed Avalokiteshvara. Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Works of Art, Lot 250, Sale 12168, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A rare bronze figure of Avalokiteshvara – earliest listed source, 2000

This “rare” bronze figure of (Bodhisattva) Avalokiteshvara was made in the “Swat Valley” (Pakistan) in the eighth century and had surfaced on the London market “by 2000“.

Its auction estimate is $100,000-$120,000.

A rare bronze figure of Avalokiteshvara. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 50, Sale 12255, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A rare bronze figure of Avalokiteshvara. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 50, Sale 12255, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A bronze figure of Buddha – earliest listed source, 1999

This eleventh or twelfth-century bronze figure of Buddha, apparently from Kashmir, was “acquired in London” in 1999. I don’t doubt the expert attribution of this statue to Kashmir, seemingly due to its style (as no other evidence has been presented).

As an aside, it is notable that like “Mesopotamian” and other such transborder historical identifiers, if there were no documentation of legal acquisition, this attribution would make it very difficult for any state to question whether the statue had been looted or stolen or illegally exported from its territory.

Its auction estimate is $150,000-$250,000.

A bronze figure of Buddha. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 52, Sale 12255, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A bronze figure of Buddha. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 52, Sale 12255, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

01/03/2016

A sandstone panel depicting Revanta – earliest listed source, 1999

This “large and highly important” sandstone panel of Revanta and his entourage, “unique to sculptures of the [eighth-century] Pratihara period in north-central India”, was “acquired from Spink [and] Son, Ltd.” in London “by 1999”.

Its auction estimate is $200,000-$300,000.

A large and highly important buff sandstone panel depicting Revanta and his entourage. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 62, Sale 12255, Christie's, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

A large and highly important buff sandstone panel depicting Revanta and his entourage. The Lahiri Collection: Indian and Himalayan Art, Ancient and Modern, Lot 62, Sale 12255, Christie’s, New York, USA, 15th March 2016.

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