Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-pkt8n Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-31T22:47:13.326Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Learning and Knowledge Loss: Returning Antiquities from Fordham University to Italy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2024

David W. J. Gill*
Affiliation:
Centre for Heritage, Kent Law School, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7NS, United Kingdom
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In May 2021 a group of 96 classical antiquities was seized from Fordham University where they had formed part of their museum collection. The seizure was directly linked to the investigation by US authorities of objects that had been handled by the dealer Edoardo Almagià. The Fordham material was dominated by objects derived from Italy: Apulian, Campanian, and Paestan figure-decorated pottery; red-on-white ware associated with Crustumerium in Lazio; and Etruscan pottery, architectural terracottas, and terracotta votives. The objects were all donated to Fordham by William D. Walsh and had largely been acquired at auctions or through a narrow group of Manhattan galleries.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of International Cultural Property Society

Introduction

The batch of 96 objects seized from Fordham University provides an opportunity to understand how material largely derived from a single dealer entered the market. The pieces were acquired by Fordham from a private collection at a time when there was a heightened awareness of the problems relating to antiquities that had surfaced on the antiquities market post the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property. This raises questions about how museum curators should conduct a thorough due diligence process when they are considering making such acquisitions. The Fordham case highlights concerns about the ways that several university collections in North America acquired recently-surfaced antiquities: there is clearly a need for such museums to set the highest ethical standards. The seizure provides yet another reminder of the serious loss of knowledge when archaeological contexts such as funerary assemblages are destroyed to provide objects for the market.

Investigations into Objects Handled by Edoardo Almagià

In December 2021, two major seizures of antiquities were announced by the office of the Manhattan DA: 96 objects worth $1.8 million from Fordham University and 180 items valued at $70 million from the collection of Michael Steinhardt.Footnote 1 In addition, there were seven antiquities from the J. Paul Getty Museum, three from the Cleveland Museum of Art, and two Athenian pots and 192 fragments of Athenian red-figured, black-figured, and black-glossed cups from the San Antonio Museum of Art.Footnote 2 In the same month, a group of impasto pottery from Latium, Italy – perhaps even from the site of Crustumerium – was deaccessioned by the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.Footnote 3 It was made clear that these seizures were part of a wider investigation into antiquities that had been handled by Edoardo Almagià.Footnote 4 The Steinhardt seizure included a number of pieces associated with Almagià, including four Etruscan terracotta panels, an Etruscan terracotta antefix showing a maenad, an Etrusco-Corinthian aryballos in the shape of a helmet, two archaic faience aryballoi, a faience baboon, and an Athenian black-figured amphora.Footnote 5 Apart from the detail relating to the price paid, there is no further publicly available information about the named sources for the Steinhardt objects.

Research into the movement of illicit antiquities from Italy has so far been concentrated on the key dealers: Robin Symes, Giacomo Medici, and Gianfranco Becchina.Footnote 6 The Fordham returns provide an opportunity to explore how a further dealer, Almagià, arranged for material to enter the market. The press release from the Manhattan DA made it clear that “All but two of the pieces seized from Fordham were trafficked by ALMAGIÀ.”Footnote 7 Although the two items were not specified, it seems likely that one of them was the Apulian patera attributed to the Baltimore painter (A11) that had surfaced through Sotheby’s in London in December 1983 at a time when the auction house was closely linked to material that had been removed illegally from Italy.Footnote 8 Almagià had been associated with earlier returns to Italy, notably the 157 fragments of Etruscan architectural terracottas and an Etruscan white on red pithos from Princeton University Art Museum, a pair of Etruscan silver bracelets from the Cleveland Museum of Art, and a pair of Etruscan bronze shields and an Apulian volute-krater attributed to the Underworld painter from the Dallas Museum of Art.Footnote 9 In 2010, against the background of the investigation into Princeton, Almagià – a Princeton alumnus – gave an interview in which he called the seizures “ridiculous,” and added:

Every American museum should fight for its right to acquire objects in the market. The museum has a right to collect; the dealers have a right to deal.Footnote 10

Such a position highlights the gulf between those who seek to protect the archaeological record and those who offer for sale or acquire material extracted from such archaeological sites and contexts by illicit means. The present identifications from Fordham appear to have been made after the seizure of Almagià’s “Green Book,” which listed some 1,700 objects that had been reported to have been derived from tombaroli in Italy.Footnote 11

Learning from Past Seizures

Should those responsible for the acquisitions have been sensitive to the ethical issues relating to antiquities? The Fordham material was donated to the university in 2006 by William D. and Jane Walsh.Footnote 12 The collection had been formed from at least 1978, though the earliest returned item (A8) was acquired in 1984, the year after the passing of the 1983 Convention on the Cultural Property Implementation Act (CPIA).Footnote 13 Moreover, it should be emphasized that the collection was formed in the wake of the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property and the 1973 Resolution on the Acquisition of Antiquities by Museums by the Archaeological Institute of America.Footnote 14 This was a period when North American collectors knew that there were concerns about the acquisition of archaeological material that had surfaced on the market in recent years. The decades after 1970 had seen prominent public debate over the ownership of classical cultural property: items include the Sarpedon krater (the Attic red-figured Euphronios krater), the Sevso Late Roman silver Treasure, the Mycenaean Aidonia Treasure, and the silver Dekadrachm Hoard.Footnote 15 For university museums operating in an academic setting, curators should have been aware of the focused studies on topics such as the material and intellectual consequences of collecting Cycladic figures, the emergence of Apulian figure-decorated pottery on the market, and an analysis of the scale of looting that was needed to supply the demand for antiquities.Footnote 16

Yet in 2006, it is unclear why the university authorities at Fordham did not take proper and appropriate account of material that had largely surfaced on the market since the passing of CPIA.Footnote 17 By this point, there had been a major quantification study of private collections, including two located in Manhattan, that had raised serious concerns about how they had been formed.Footnote 18 This research on cultural property had then been presented through the media ensuring that those outside academia were aware of the ethical and legal issues.Footnote 19 Subsequent events have shown these concerns relating to recently surfaced material to be well-founded with returns made from collections formed by private individuals, including Christos Bastis, William and Lynda Beierwaltes, Dietrich von Bothmer, Gilbert M. Denman Jr., Barbara and Lawrence Fleischman, the Hunt brothers, John Kluge, Michael Steinhardt, Maurice Tempelsman, and Shelby White and Leon Levy.Footnote 20 Yet some of these same collectors were quite outspoken in their defense of forming their private collections.Footnote 21 There was also a series of landmark cultural property cases in the US including the one involving the gold phiale in the Steinhardt collection and the Egyptian antiquities, including the head of Amenhotep III, associated with the Frederick Schultz case.Footnote 22 Moreover, there had been the scandal raised by the antiquities department of Sotheby’s in London as well as the issues defined by the so-called Medici Conspiracy.Footnote 23 Concerns had also started to be raised about specific dealers, galleries, and auction houses that were associated with this controversial type of cultural property.Footnote 24 2006, the year of the Walsh donation, saw the return of antiquities from Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts to Italy, the first in a sequence of returns from major North American museums.Footnote 25 These issues relating to the collecting of antiquities that had been derived from the contemporary market may have prompted Fordham to make a statement in the printed catalog a short time after the acquisition:

Accepting the objects and creating a museum of Greek, Etruscan, and Roman art has not been without controversy for the University. It is an unfortunate reality about the state of the antiquities trade that many ancient works in public and private hands today lack a secure provenance, and such is the case with some of the objects at Fordham.Footnote 26

The “lack [of] a secure provenance” is important because it can be a strong indicator, at least for archaeologists, that the objects had been removed from their archaeological context by illegal and destructive means. The Fordham catalog even revealed that during the research into items in the Walsh collection, an impasto Villanovan hut “was illegally excavated, exported and sold at auction”; its ownership was transferred to Italy and the object was placed on loan.Footnote 27 It is unclear why this identification did not prompt further due diligence research for other items in the collection. Among the other controversial pieces that resided in the Walsh collection was the bronze head of Caracalla, which seems to have been removed illegally from the Sebasteion at Bubon and was subsequently repatriated to Türkiye in 2023.Footnote 28 As such, the portrait joins a group of monumental bronzes in public and private collections that were derived from the same location.

The Role of University Museums

The acquisition of such a controversial collection of recently surfaced antiquities by a university museum raises several issues.Footnote 29 Universities and their public galleries should be expected to maintain the highest professional and ethical standards, not least because they hold the responsibility for training the next generation of academics and heritage professionals who will have to deal with cultural property as part of their responsibilities. Yet the recent returns of antiquities to Italy and other countries have seen university collections among the actors. For example, did the acquisition of 157 Etruscan architectural terracottas, apparently from a single building, not raise ethical questions with the curatorial team at Princeton? The handing-over of some 10,000 cuneiform tablets from Cornell University to Iraq is a reminder that there has been a serious problem over recognizing questionable acquisitions by some parts of the sector.Footnote 30 There were longstanding claims by the Greek Government against the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University, in which Christos Tsirogiannis had identified material from images that formed part of the Becchina archive.Footnote 31 It is ironic that the same museum, during the late 1980s, had made a strong ethical statement by encouraging the loan of antiquities instead of making acquisitions from what was recognized as a corrupted market.Footnote 32 The acquisition by Harvard of a potsherd collection that had been owned by J. Robert Guy, a former Princeton University museum curator, is questionable in the light that fragments owned by the same collector (and curator) had already been returned to Italy as part of a separate but related investigation.Footnote 33 While it has been suggested that such collections of fragments merely serve to teach students in a university setting, compelling evidence is now suggesting that Athenian pots were deliberately broken up and the pieces distributed to various dealers and collectors so that they could be reunited at some future point in a museum collection.Footnote 34 If this is the case, then members of the wider museum curatorial profession have deliberately participated in a destructive scheme.

In the United Kingdom, university museums, along with other registered museums, follow the ethical guidance of the Museums Association.Footnote 35 This has meant that UK museums have largely avoided the controversies of their North American counterparts. Yet this did not stop one major university collection, the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, from acquiring architectural terracottas from Cisterna di Latina.Footnote 36 Even a deliberate and systematic disclosure of the former owners in a report on acquisitions by the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge managed to overlook material that had been handled by the dealer Robin Symes.Footnote 37 A further UK university museum, the Great North Museum in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, acquired a fragmentary terracotta antefix that clearly had been obtained from a sanctuary in southern Italy.Footnote 38 Other university museums in the United Kingdom have been formed from objects derived as a share of finds from sponsored excavations or from objects purchased on the market prior to the Second World War.Footnote 39

What should happen to the objects when private collections are dispersed? Marlowe has made the case that university museums should be the appropriate place for antiquities that lack a secure history to reside, but only when the source countries do not wish to have them returned.Footnote 40 She also expects a university commitment that will allow such material to be used for teaching, research, and the display of the “provenance history.” Such items would certainly provide students with the opportunity to explore the ownership and histories of individual objects and to understand the material and intellectual issues relating to looting. But imagine that this putative material contained groups of, say, Apulian pottery or Etruscan terracottas: would it not be better to return the items to Italy and thereby acknowledge the likely wrong-doing that had been committed by removing the pieces from their country of origin?

Identifying the Sources of the Walsh Collection

Given the scale of the return from Fordham, it is legitimate to ask where Walsh obtained his objects. When the museum opened in 2007, the acquisition process was disclosed in broad terms.Footnote 41

For some four decades, William D. Walsh browsed auction catalogs in search of the ancient artifacts that would gratify his passion for classical antiquity.

This information, suggesting that the collecting had continued from the 1970s, received clarification:

Mr. Walsh said he acquired every piece at public auctions – not through a private dealer – and therefore hopes that the provenance of his artifacts is clean and accounted for. “I’ve always focused on keeping the auction house between myself and the seller,” he said.

It is important to remember that dealers can consign lots to public auction exactly to put distance between themselves and the buyer. The use of anonymous terms in sales – such as “Property of a Belgian collector” or “Property of a lady” – can disguise the identity and role of the vendor. For example, the Attic red-figured krater returned to Italy from the Minneapolis Institute of Arts was reported to have been “in private collections in Switzerland and Great Britain for ca. 15 years before 1983.”Footnote 42 The identification of the krater in both the Medici dossier seized in the Geneva Freeport and the Schinousa archive suggests that these “private collections” can be identified as the antiquities handlers Giacomo Medici and Robin Symes.

The assertion made by Walsh was that the purchasing of antiquities through public auctions provided accountability and demonstrated that the objects were “clean”: the implication was that they had not been derived from any illicit activity. The fallacy of this claim by Walsh had been unmasked by the scandal surrounding the department of antiquities at Sotheby’s in London.Footnote 43 The information about the sources for the Walsh objects was provided by Fordham’s online object register rather than in the formal printed collection catalog ( Table 1 ). The stated sources suggest that the returning objects were acquired from 1984 (A8) to 1999 (A3, A5, A13, A23, A41, C1, C3–27), though it is possible that some of the objects were acquired outside this range but the information has not been either retained or disclosed.

Table 1. Recorded Sources of the Material Returned to Italy from the Walsh Collection.

Although all but two of the returning Fordham objects are linked to Almagià, there is a very limited range of stated direct sources for the items in the collection. Apart from the Apulian patera attributed to the Baltimore painter that surfaced through Sotheby’s in London, one of the returning objects was an Athenian black-figured neck-amphora attributed to the circle of the Antimenes painter showing Herakles and the abduction of Deianeira by the centaur Nessos (A3). It surfaced through Charles Ede in London (around 1992) before passing into the collection of William and Linda Houston in London: it was sold at Christie’s New York on June 4, 1999.Footnote 44 An Apulian hydria, probably to be attributed to the Baltimore painter, was reported to have been acquired from Christie’s New York at the same June 1999 sale (A13).Footnote 45

Thirty-seven of the seized Fordham pieces are reported to have been obtained from Harmer Rooke Numismatics and two from Harmer Rooke Galleries in New York between 1984 and 1996.Footnote 46 The earliest recorded piece (from all of the returning pieces) to have been acquired in this way was an Apulian patera attributed to the workshop of the Darius painter and the Perrone-Phrixos group (A8). It is perhaps significant that Trendall and Cambitoglou record it as being “once New York market, Almagià” (rather than as stated in the notes as “Arte Primitivo—Harmer Rooke Numismatics”). This patera is said to have been “one of a group of three bought in the 1990s”; the other two pieces are an Apulian patera (A10), and another attributed to the Maplewood painter (A12). The patera attributed to the Maplewood painter was linked to Almagià, as is a further Apulian patera attributed to the circle of the Darius painter and the Perrone-Phrixos group (A9).

Other material acquired from Harmer Rooke appears in clusters. For example, in 1991 four Faliscan pieces were purchased from the gallery: a cup attributed to the Sokra group with a winged hippocamp (A50), two stamnoi (A48–49), and an askos in the form of a duck (A51). Again in 1992, three Etrusco-Corinthian olpai were acquired (A42, 44–45). A fourth olpe, attributed like one of the others to the Vitelleschi painter, was acquired in 1994 (A43). In the catalog it was noted that such olpai attributed to this pot decorator are rare, perhaps implying that they came from the same unrecorded archaeological source.

Three pieces were acquired from the Howard Rose Gallery.Footnote 47 They include a pair of Volsinian stamnoi with handles in the form of sea monsters (A52–53), and both are said to have been in the collection of Emilio Ambron; both were acquired on September 24, 1996. The third item was a Paestan lekythos attributed to the Aphrodite painter (A24) and is reported to have been in a private collection in Torino.

A third source for the seized Fordham material was named Arte Primitivo in New York.Footnote 48 Some pieces are reported to have been acquired in 1994, such as the Apulian volute-krater attributed to the Baltimore painter (A14) and another attributed to the Virginia Exhibition painter (A15) (Figure 1).Footnote 49 Both are reported to have been “once New York market, Almagià.” Other vessels acquired at the same time include a Canosan vessel in the shape of a sphinx (A21), a Faliscan column-krater (A46), a bell-krater decorated with Dionysos and satyrs (A47), and an Etruscan terracotta votive head of a youth with tousled hair (C2). An Athenian amphora attributed to the Swing painter (A2) (Figure 2) was acquired from Arte Primitivo on the same day as the two Volsinian stamnoi (A52–53) from the Howard Rose Gallery; like them, it was said to have resided in the Emilio Ambron collection. This also coincided with the acquisition of four Etruscan antefixes (B2–5), also from the “Emilio Ambrun” [sic.] collection. A large group of Etruscan (or Latium) terracotta votive female and male heads and feet were acquired (for the most part) in September 1999, though a few had been purchased in June 1999 (C1–27). The apparent confusion in the Fordham records between the Howard Rose Gallery and Arte Primitivo may be explained by the fact that Howard Rose, who had been director of Harmer Rooke Galleries from 1971 to 1993, then a director at Greg Manning Auctions from 1993 to 1996, acquired Arte Primitivo in early September 1996.Footnote 50

Figure 1. Apulian Volute-krater Attributed to the Virginia Exhibition Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 8.001. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 2. Athenian Black-figured Amphora Attributed to the Swing Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 4.022. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

The scandal over antiquities handled by Sotheby’s that broke in the mid-1990s may have meant that dealers will have started to avoid mainstream auction houses when trying to disperse their stock. The choice of smaller, lesser-known, and less prominent auction houses and galleries may have been a way to distract buyers from the issue of ethical acquisition and to provide reassurance to the collector and the final recipient of their collection.

The Italian Origins of the Walsh Collection

One of the striking things about the majority of the material that was seized from Fordham is that it is unambiguously placed in Italy due to fabric or style: Apulian, Paestan, and Campanian pottery from Southern Italy; Caeretan, Volsinian, and Faliscan pottery as well as architectural terracottas from Etruria. For example, the returns include some Etruscan white-on-red ware associated with Cerveteri (Figure 3), a lidded biconical pithos (A26), and a house-shaped cinerary urn (A27).Footnote 51 Similar pottery has been included in the returns from Princeton and the Getty.Footnote 52 It is also telling that it has been well-observed that such types of pottery are “quite rare in American collections”:Footnote 53 why have so many items featured among the returns from US collections to Italy? Four pieces of white-on-red ware dating to the late seventh century at Fordham had been specifically linked to Crustumerium in Latium: two lidded pyxides (A56–57) and two ollas with four attached bowls (A58–59) (Figure 4).Footnote 54 It is reported that they were “found at the border of Etruscan, Faliscan, and Latin territories,” suggesting but without stating a Crustumerium findspot.Footnote 55 De Puma specially noted that their “place of manufacture may have been Crustumerium, from which several good examples of similar vessels in the White-on-Red style have been excavated.”Footnote 56 De Puma also identified a similar olla in the Linz haul from Austria and another that had been returned from the December 1996 seizure from Antiquarium, Ltd. in New York.Footnote 57 The four Crustumerium pieces from Fordham were all acquired from Harmer Rooke Numismatics. The two impasto amphorae that have been returned to Italy from the Cleveland Museum of Art appear to have characteristics that are strongly similar to items that have been excavated at Crustumerium.

Figure 3. Etruscan White-on-Red Kernos. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 5.010. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 4. Olla With Four Trays from Lazio. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. inv. 2007.1.3. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

The return of two Paestan pieces from Fordham – a bell-krater attributed to Python (Figure 5) and a lekythos attributed to the Aphrodite painter – join the growing number of Paestan pieces that have been returned to Italy from North American collections. These include the Asteas krater and the Asteas squat lekythos from the Getty, bell-kraters attributed to Python from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, a lekythos seized from an unspecified Manhattan gallery, and a krater from the Speed Art Museum in Kentucky.Footnote 58 In addition to these pieces, a Paestan tomb fragment apparently consigned to Michael Steinhardt was intercepted at Newark Liberty Airport in April 2011,Footnote 59 and three other fragments from an unspecified collection were handed over to Italy by the Manhattan DA in July 2022.Footnote 60

Figure 5. Paestan Red-figured Bell-krater Attributed to Python. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 4.005. Image Courtesy of Fordham University

The looting of cemeteries in Apulia is well-recognized and documented.Footnote 61 The Fordham return includes 12 Apulian pieces including two volute-kraters (A14–15), a lebes gamikos (A16), a hydria (A13), an epichysis (oinochoe) (A19), a pair of amphorae (A17–18), and five pateras (A8–12); there are also two Canosan pieces (A20–21). These Fordham objects join three pieces returned from Boston, a volute-krater and other items from the Cleveland Museum of Art, two volute-kraters from the Dallas Museum of Art, three volute-kraters, one bell-krater, two pelikai and a loutrophoros from the Getty, a dinos from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, a volute-krater, a loutrophoros and a guttus from Princeton, a pair of lekythoi from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, a bell-krater and situla seized from Christie’s, and a kantharos from an unspecified Manhattan gallery.Footnote 62 The scale of these returns from a specific region is a reminder of the concerns about the continuing damage to the unexcavated and unrecorded archaeological record in Southern Italy.

These areas of Central and Southern Italy, from which the Fordham returns were derived, indicate the places that were being targeted by looters who were supplying antiquities to dealers and specifically to Almagià.

Hints at Archaeological Groups of Material?

The scientific excavation of tomb groups in Etruria and Apulia suggests that pairs or groups of material could be placed together in the same grave or burial chamber.Footnote 63 It is possible that the pairs among the Fordham material, especially pieces that surfaced at the same point in time, may reflect items that had been derived from the same looted archaeological context. Such pairs include two Apulian pateras attributed to the Perrone-Phrixos group (A8–9); two Apulian amphorae attributed to the Patera painter (A17–18), two Etrusco-Corinthian olpai attributed to the Vitelleschi painter (A42–43), two Etrusco-Corinthian olpai attributed to the Bearded Sphinx painter (A44–45), a pair of Volsinian stamnoi (A52–53), and a pair of Caeretan cups attributed to the Castellani Caeretan painter (A36–37). However, little more can be said about the contexts from which they were removed as that information has been lost or destroyed.

The presence of architectural terracottas among the Fordham returns (B1–5) is reminiscent of the fragments that were returned from Princeton, those seized from Michael Steinhardt, one from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, as well as the antefix showing a satyr and maenad from the Getty. It is proposed that the Fordham fragments came from the sanctuary of Vigna Marini Vitalini at Cerveteri.Footnote 64 Architectural terracottas also featured prominently in the significant return of material from the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen to Italy.Footnote 65 Although the precise details were not released, there appear to have been around 500 accessioned objects, including architectural fragments derived from locations at Cerveteri and Veii. There is a possibility that some of the Fordham and Copenhagen fragments came from the same structure, though this will need to be confirmed through future research and publication. Such groups of materials are a reminder of the scale of looting that has been sustained by archaeological sites in Etruria to supply the market and to meet the acquisitive tastes of museum curators and private collectors not only in North America but also in Europe.

Athenian Pottery from Italian Contexts

The Fordham returns also include three Athenian black-figured and three red-figured pots. Attic pottery has been found in large numbers in the cemeteries of Etruria, as well as in those associated with the Greek colonies in Southern Italy and Sicily.Footnote 66 This category of material has featured prominently in the returns to Italy and has included material that can be placed at specific sites in Etruria.Footnote 67 But where is the Fordham pottery likely to have been found? Complete pots, even when they have been reconstructed from fragments, were probably placed in large monumental tombs of the type found in Etruria. The amphora attributed to the Swing painter (A2) has nine parallels on the Beazley Archive Pottery Database (BAPD); four are reported to have been found at Vulci and five have no recorded findspot.Footnote 68 Does this suggest that Etruria is a likely findspot? Perhaps, but there is no certainty. Such an approach is not necessarily fruitful because the object may just as easily have been found elsewhere. The column-krater attributed to the Agrigento painter (A6) (Figure 6) has parallels with three others listed on BAPD; of these, one is from Megara Hyblaea in Sicily, one from Numana in Italy, and a fragment was found during the excavation of the Athenian agora. It is a reminder that looting has intellectual consequences for the interpretation of pottery as key information about context has been lost for good.Footnote 69 Speculation is a very poor substitute for academic certainty.Footnote 70

Figure 6. Athenian Red-figured Column-krater Attributed to the Agrigento Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 11.008. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

This discussion of recently surfaced Athenian pottery raises serious intellectual questions. This has been implicitly illustrated by the exhibition of Athenian pottery attributed to the so-called Berlin painter at the Princeton University Art Museum.Footnote 71 The loss of contextual information means that scholars tend to focus on stylistic or iconographic questions relating to the pottery rather than raising issues about how such objects were viewed and displayed in antiquity.Footnote 72 Indeed, the discussion of the distribution of pots attributed to the Berlin painter depends more on reported (and insecure) findspots than on secure archaeological contexts.Footnote 73 It also needs to be remembered that the stylistic framework that has been developed for such pot painters does not rest on sound archaeological foundations.

Implementing Due Diligence

University museums – indeed, all museums – need to apply the highest ethical standards for their acquisitions and should conduct appropriately rigorous searches as part of the due diligence process.Footnote 74 The Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford, included this statement in its review of recent acquisitions:

It is unlikely that there will be another Museum Report quite like this one from the Ashmolean. In 1992, the Museum registered with the Museums and Galleries Commission, and as a consequence of this, our acquisition policy is now in line with that laid down by the Museums Association Code of Practice for Museum Authorities. This is perhaps no bad thing, especially in the light of the sleaziness and corruption which has recently come to characterize some aspects of commercial dealing in antiquities, activities for which serious scholars can only be the fall guys.Footnote 75

Some responded to the crisis in the supply of uncontested objects by encouraging the use of loans from archaeological collections.Footnote 76 What actions should be put in place by university museums to enhance their due diligence process?Footnote 77

A key place to start is with the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property. If the history of the object under consideration cannot be traced back to the period before 1970 then it should require further investigation.Footnote 78 The research will require the sight of authenticated documentation that demonstrates that the object was placed in a particular collection or sale. Authenticated documentation requires the acquiring museum to check that the information has not been falsified.Footnote 79 A vague description from a sale catalog may not relate to the actual object that is under consideration. Oral histories need to be investigated and interrogated. The cases of the Ka-Nefer-Nefer mummy case and the Cleveland (“Leutwitz”) Apollo show how the reported histories appear to contain a number of inconsistencies that are contradicted by other documentation.Footnote 80 Those recommending acquisitions should be suspicious of unauthenticated placement of objects in the 1960s that may be seeking to provide reassurance to the purchaser by stating a date prior to the 1970 benchmark.

While 1970 is the recognized international benchmark due to the 1970 UNESCO Convention, individual national legislation relating to cultural property needs to be taken into account. Curators recommending the acquisition of an object that is likely to have been found in a particular country would need to demonstrate, again using authenticated documentation, that the item had left the country either before the appropriate legislation was put in place or implemented, or that appropriate export certificates had been issued. Such a position would cover material such as fragmentary Early Cycladic marble figures derived from the Keros haul, architectural terracottas from the temples at Düver in Türkiye, and the Roman imperial bronze statues from Bubon in Türkiye.Footnote 81

The names of previous collectors, dealers, and galleries need to be explored.Footnote 82 Are any of the names associated with previous seizures and returns? How were the collections documented? Was there a catalog? Did the gallery feature the object in any publication or advertisements in other magazines? Additional care needs to be taken if the object is said to have passed through an auction at Sotheby’s in London during the 1980s and 1990s.Footnote 83 Equally, there have also been concerns raised about antiquities surfacing at Christie’s in the 1990s and 2000s.Footnote 84 Athenian figure-decorated pottery can be checked against the Beazley Archive Pottery Database (BAPD) and South Italian pottery in the various lists produced by A. Dale Trendall and others.Footnote 85 For some of the pots in the Walsh collection, such a check indicated that the location was with Almagià rather than the gallery that was cited in the acquisition paperwork.

Images of the object should first be checked with the Art Loss Register (ALR). While this is an appropriate place to search for objects that have been stolen from, say, a museum or private collection, it is unlikely that it covers material that has been looted in recent years. It should not need saying: objects were not photographed when they were placed in an Etruscan grave 2,500 years ago. Thus, something that has been looted in recent years will not necessarily have been recorded on the database. It has been observed that some galleries sold antiquities with ALR certificates but these do not provide a guarantee that the object was not removed from the ground by illicit means. Other databases to be consulted include those managed by Interpol (Stolen Works of Art Database), as well as by individual countries.Footnote 86 Seized photographic and documentary archives, including the Medici Dossier, the Schinoussa Archive, the Becchina Archive, as well as Almagià’s “Green Book” deserve a search.Footnote 87 Objects that are likely to have been acquired from Italy should be checked against the records held by the Italian authorities.

Careful curators would be wise to obtain second opinions from colleagues. While colleagues at other museums might be considered rivals for the purchase or acquisition, academic colleagues should be consulted. For example, in the case of the Minneapolis Doryphoros (“Spear Carrier,” a later copy of the fifth century BCE work by the Greek sculptor Polykleitos), a German specialist in Roman sculpture recommended to the curators that the museum should not make the acquisition because of the declared link with Stabiae when the statue was put on display in Munich.Footnote 88 The statue is now subject to a claim from Italy that could have been avoided if its background had been explored in a thorough manner in the first place.

Due diligence also means making the acquisitions known and open to scrutiny. In North America, museums are encouraged to place images and details on the AAMD Object Register.Footnote 89 Indeed, the display of a limited selection of fragments from the Bothmer broken pot collection on the AAMD Object Register allowed a link to be made with an Attic red-figured cup in Rome and the pieces have since been reunited.Footnote 90 The simple listing of objects with limited details and no images needs to be replaced with a fuller publication that maps the journey of the object through various collections.Footnote 91 Such information should also be placed on the museum’s website though not all collections have chosen to reveal knowledge by this means.Footnote 92 These print and digital presentations of the history or biography of an object should try and establish the journey from the ground to its present location by providing relevant details and evidence.

Past acquisitions may pose a potential reputational threat to the museum. This makes a retrospective due diligence process essential.Footnote 93 The Dallas Museum of Art responded to the concerns about material acquired from Almagià by checking its records and offering to return to Italy several objects that included a pair of Etruscan bronze shields and an Apulian volute-krater attributed to the Underworld painter.Footnote 94 Some museums may contain material obtained from, say, Robin Symes, Gianfranco Becchina, or Galerie Nefer. For example, a “spiky-handled impasto amphora” of a type known from Crustumerium was bequeathed to Princeton University Art Museum by John B. Elliott in 1998.Footnote 95 Elliott’s acquisitions were influenced by Robert Guy:

For several years Elliott took advice from the then curator of ancient art at the museum, Robert Guy, a respected authority on Greek vase painting whose tastes were nearly as eclectic as his own. Guy watched Elliott collect and occasionally put things in his way. The older man was grateful, and he helped his helper in many ways, underwriting significant purchases of ancient art for the museum.Footnote 96

Guy had served as associate curator of ancient art at Princeton from 1984 to 1991, suggesting the likely window of acquisition of the amphora by Elliott. When was the Elliott amphora acquired? Did Guy “put it in Elliott’s way”? The museum has now clarified that the amphora was acquired by Elliot from Almagià: as has been noted above, Guy worked alongside Almagià on material that had recently left Italy.Footnote 97 Should the amphora now be returned? Such object histories should encourage museums to consider returning objects to the countries where they were originally found.

The discussion relates to formal acquisitions, whether by gift, purchase, or bequest. But such an approach also needs to be applied to long-term loans as well as to temporary exhibitions. It is clear from the Steinhardt return that at least six pieces had been placed on loan first to the Musée de l’art et d’histoire, Geneva, and then the J. Paul Getty Museum before being sold by Robin Symes to William and Linda Beierwaltes.Footnote 98 Among the 2022 seizures from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art was a pair of Roman statues of Castor and Pollux that had been placed on long-term loan.Footnote 99 Although it was claimed by the museum that “The provenance of the two Roman works on loan to the Museum is well known and published” and that they were “probably [found] from the Mithraeum in Sidon, excavated in the 19th century,” there were suspicions as the figures were reported in the Schinoussa archive as coming from Syria. This contradicted the reported history of the statues:

ex-private collection, Lebanon; Asfar & Sarkis, Lebanon, 1950s; George Ortiz Collection, Geneva, Switzerland; collection of an American private foundation, Memphis, acquired in the early 1980s.Footnote 100

The figures also seem to have been associated with the Merrin Gallery in 1995; the known association with Robin Symes is not mentioned. In terms of short-term loans to exhibitions, the loan of one of the Icklingham Bronzes, apparently looted from a Roman settlement in Suffolk in the east of England, by Shelby White to Harvard University Art Museums raises concerns.Footnote 101 It should be recalled that two of the Fordham pieces loaned to the exhibition, “The Horse in Ancient Greek Art” at The National Sporting Library and Museum at Middleburg, Virginia, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts were returned to Italy (A11, A15).Footnote 102 The histories of other items in the exhibition are equally disturbing.

Conclusion

These returns from Fordham are a reminder of the difficulties of trying to form a collection of classical antiquities from purchases that have been made on the market in recent decades. This is not an issue confined to North America, as evidenced by the exhibitions of Etruscan and Italian antiquities held by European private collectors.Footnote 103

The handing over of the figure-decorated cup fragments said to have been found at Barbarano Romano in Italy from the San Antonio Museum of Art puts renewed pressure on Harvard University Art Museum that acquired the fragments, reportedly without a findspot from the collection of J. Robert Guy, a former curator at Princeton University Art Museum. Guy himself had worked with Almagià on the Barbarano Romano fragments before they were sent to Texas.Footnote 104 The identification of Almagià as a source for part of Dietrich von Bothmer’s extensive collection of pot fragments may also prove to be significant.

Many of the earlier returns from North American collections to Italy passed through the hands of three main dealers: Gianfranco Becchina, Giacomo Medici, and Robin Symes.Footnote 105 The most recent returns from Fordham, as well as the Steinhardt collection, have shed light on the actions of a further dealer, Edoardo Almagià, who was handling material from looted archaeological sites in defined regions of Italy. In particular, the relationship between Medici and Almagià is one that may need to be explored in more detail. But there are also questions about the association between Almagià and the galleries selling and dispersing the antiquities that had been derived from him. Are there objects in other US collections that followed the same routes? Antiquities handled by Almagià are now recognized as potentially toxic; it would be appropriate for museums and collectors who hold such material to contact the Italian authorities to check that their objects do not feature in the photographic and documentary archive known as the “Green Book.” It is clear from Almagià’s “Green Book” that there are well over 1,000 items still to be identified, and this suggests that there are likely to be further uncomfortable revelations in coming years. The Fordham case also serves as a cautionary reminder for museums, antiquities dealers, and all buyers to conduct rigorous due diligence checks prior to the acquisition of potentially illegal material.Footnote 106

Perhaps the main lesson that needs to be learned from the Fordham return is that each of the items lost its original context and, therefore, the ability to inform our understanding of the object in its contemporary setting. Findspots, associated material, and chronological markers have been lost for good. Even the publication of a scholarly catalog of the collection has limited value when interpretation is derived necessarily from parallels and comparative material. Such secure and reliable information and knowledge cannot be retrieved, thus the Walsh collection and its display at Fordham is yet another stark reminder of the scale of looting that is undertaken to provide material for the market, collectors, and museums.

Acknowledgements

I am particularly grateful to Barbara Belelli Marchesini, and Francesco di Gennaro for discussing the issue of material derived from Crustumerium with me. I would like to thank John D’Angelo, Richard Daniel De Puma, Nathan Elkins, Laetitia La Follette, Patricia Lulof, Elizabeth Marlowe, Marina Micozzi, Victoria Reed, Bridget Sandhoff, Christos Tsirogiannis, Jennifer Udell, Sophie Vigneron, and Justin St P. Walsh who have offered constructive comments and advice on the material discussed in this study. Corinna Storino clarified the details surrounding the acquisition of the impasto amphora at Princeton.

Appendix 1: Objects seized from Fordham University

A Pottery

Corinthian

  1. 1. Corinthian alabastron. Inv. 7.057. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 28–29, no. 6.

Athenian

Black-figured

  1. 2. Athenian black-figured amphora attributed to the Swing painter. Inv. 4.022. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 24, 1996; reported to have formed part of the Emilio Ambron collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 32–35, no. 8 (Figure 2).

  2. 3. Athenian black-figured neck-amphora attributed to the circle of the Antimenes painter. Inv. 7.031. BAPD 24304. Source: Charles Ede, London; William R. and Linda C. Houston; Christie’s New York, June 4, 1999, lot 11. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 44–47, no. 11.

  3. 4. Athenian black-figured hydria attributed to the Leagros group. Inv. 11.006. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 48–51, no. 12.

Red-figured

  1. 5. Athenian red-figured cup attributed to the painter of Berlin 2268. Inv. 7.060. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 29, 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 36–39, no. 9.

  2. 6. Athenian red-figured column-krater attributed to the Agrigento painter. Inv. 11.008. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 64–67, no. 17 (Figure 6).

  3. 7. Athenian red-figured bell-krater. Inv. 7.037. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 68–71, no. 18.

South Italian

Apulian

  1. 8. Apulian patera attributed to the workshop of the Darius painter/the Perrone-Phrixos group. Inv. 2007.2.61 [formerly 4.006]. Source: Arte Primitivo – Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1984; previously, New York market, Almagià. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1991, 160, no. 18/267a, pl. xl, 5; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 84–85, no. 22.

  2. 9. Apulian patera attributed to the workshop of the Darius painter/the Perrone-Phrixos group. Inv. 11.010. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics; previously, New York market, Almagià. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1991, 160, no. 18/273a, pl. xl., 6; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 86–89, no. 23.

  3. 10. Apulian patera with knob handles. Inv. 4.008. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 90–93, no. 24.

  4. 11. Apulian patera attributed to the Baltimore painter. Inv. 11.003. Source: Sotheby’s London December 11, 1989, lot 167; Sotheby’s London July 13, 1987, lot 298; Sotheby’s London December 12–13, 1983, lot 403. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1992, 284, no. 27/63a; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 94–97, no. 25; Schertz and Stribling Reference Schertz and Stribling2017, 109, 136, no. 42.

  5. 12. Apulian patera attributed to the Maplewood painter. Inv. 2007.1.58 [formerly 4.003]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics; previously, New York market, Almagià. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1991, 59, no. 201a, pl. ix, 3–4; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 329.

  6. 13. Apulian hydria is probably to be attributed to the Baltimore painter. Inv. 5.001. Source: reported to be Christie’s New York, June 6 [4], 1999, lot 42 [but not this piece]. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

  7. 14. Apulian volute-krater attributed to the Baltimore painter. Inv. 7.070. Source: Arte Primitivo; previously, New York market, Almagià. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1992, 271, no. 27/13a, pl. lxxi, 1; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  8. 15. Apulian volute-krater attributed to the Virginia Exhibition painter. Inv. 8.001. Source: Arte Primitivo, 1994; previously, New York market, Almagià. Bibl. Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1992, 332, no. 28/86-1, pl. lxxxvi, 3–4; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 114–17, no. 32; Schertz and Stribling Reference Schertz and Stribling2017, 109, 136, no. 43 (Figure 1).

  9. 16. Apulian lebes gamikos perhaps attributed to the Darius painter. Inv. 7.035. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, January 1996. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 338.

  10. 17. Apulian amphora attributed to the Patera painter. Inv. 5.003. Source: Harmer Rooke Galleries, March 31, 1993. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

  11. 18. Apulian amphora attributed to the Patera painter. Inv. 5.005. Source: Harmer Rooke Galleries, October 8, 1986, lot 113; reported to be from the Tallarico collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 333.

  12. 19. Apulian epichysis. Inv. 7.013. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 98–101, no. 27.

Canosan

  1. 20. Canosan askos with serpentine figure. Inv. 2007.1.31 [formerly 3.023]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, October 8, 1986, lot 118. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 327.

  2. 21. Canosan vessel in the shape of a sphinx. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 9, 1994, lot 30. Inv. 7.011. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 336.

Campanian

  1. 22. Campanian bell-krater. Inv. 11.007. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 343.

Paestan

  1. 23. Paestan bell-krater attributed to Python. Inv. 2007.1.60 [formerly 4.005]. Source: Arte Primitivo, 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 80–83, no. 21 (Figure 5).

  2. 24. Paestan lekythos attributed to the Aphrodite painter. Inv. 5.009. Source: Howard Rose Galleries. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 102–05, no. 29.

Etruscan

Villanovan

  1. 25. Villanovan impasto biconical cinerary urn. Inv. 7.008. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 335.

White-on-red pottery

  1. 26. Etruscan white-on-red biconical pithos with lid. Inv. 7.039. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 142–43, no. 40.

  2. 27. Etruscan white-on-red house-shaped cinerary urn. Inv. 6.002. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 144–45, no. 41.

  3. 28. Etruscan white-on-red kernos with birds and other designs. Inv. 5.010. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 146–47, no. 42 (Figure 3).

Caeretan

  1. 29. Caeretan impasto amphora with spirals and fish. Inv. 7.063. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, June 1994. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 166–67, no. 50.

  2. 30. Caeretan impasto amphora with spirals and bird. Inv. 7.064. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, June 1994. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 168–69, no. 51.

  3. 31. Caeretan impasto amphora with incised fish and rosettes. Inv. 7.067. Source: probably Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 170–71, no. 52.

  4. 32. Caeretan impasto amphora with incised tree and palmettes. Inv. 7.065. Source: probably Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 176–77, no. 55.

  5. 33. Caeretan dolium with metope stamp of a centaur. Inv. 2007.1.53 [formerly 3.045]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, June 9, 1994. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 185–87, no. 58.

  6. 34. Caeretan skyphos. Inv. 4.015. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 330.

  7. 35. Caeretan oinochoe with knotted handle. Inv. 4.028. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 331.

  8. 36. Caeretan kylix with maenad attributed to the Castellani Caeretan painter. Inv. 4.034. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 331.

  9. 37. Caeretan Kylix with satyr attributed to the Castellani Caeretan painter. Inv. 4.035. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

Impasto

  1. 38. Etruscan amphora with a horse and rider. Inv. 7.066. Source: probably Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 172–73, no. 53.

  2. 39. Etruscan impasto amphora with incised spiral ornament. Inv. 2007.1.5 [formerly 2.004]. Source: Arte Primitivo (Howard Rose). Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 174–75, no. 54.

  3. 40. Etruscan stamnoid olla with ribs and upturned handles. Inv. 2007.1.6 [formerly 2.005]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 326.

Bucchero

  1. 41. Etruscan bucchero chalice with winged caryatid support. Inv. 10.022. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

Etrusco-Corinthian

  1. 42. Etrusco-Corinthian olpe attributed to the Vitelleschi painter. Inv. 2007.1.14 [formerly 3.006]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, January 1992. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 188–89, no. 59.

  2. 43. Etrusco-Corinthian olpe attributed to the Vitelleschi painter. Inv. 2007.1.51 [formerly 3.043]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, June 9, 1994, lot 33. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 190–91, no. 60.

  3. 44. Etrusco-Corinthian olpe attributed to the Bearded Sphinx painter. Inv. 2007.1.29 [formerly 3.021]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, December 5, 1992. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 192–93, no. 61.

  4. 45. Etrusco-Corinthian olpe attributed to the Bearded Sphinx painter. Inv. 2007.1.37 [formerly 3.029]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, December 5, 1992. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 194–95, no. 62.

Faliscan

  1. 46. Faliscan column-krater. Inv. 4.020. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 9, 1994, lot 31. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 330.

  2. 47. Faliscan bell-krater with Dionysos and satyrs. Inv. 2007.1.57 [formerly 4.002]. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 9, 1994, lot 34. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 329.

  3. 48. Faliscan stamnos. Inv. 4.031. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 331.

  4. 49. Faliscan stamnos. Inv. 4.036. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991.Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

  5. 50. Faliscan kylix attributed to the Sokra group. Inv. 4.013. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 330.

  6. 51. Faliscan askos in the form of a duck. Inv. 4.032. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, March 5, 1991. Said to be from Cerveteri. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 331.

Volsinian

  1. 52. Volsinian stamnos with handles in the form of a sea monster. Inv. 4.039. Source: Howard Rose Gallery, September 24, 1996; previously, Emilio Ambron. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

  2. 53. Volsinian stamnos with handles in the form of a sea monster. Inv. 4.040. Source: Howard Rose Gallery, September 24, 1996; previously, Emilio Ambron. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

Other Etruscan pottery

  1. 54. Etruscan amphora attributed to the Michali painter. Inv. 4.019. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 330.

  2. 55. Etruscan dish with black bands on the rim and underside of the foot. Inv. 4.041. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, March 5, 1991. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 332.

Latium

  1. 56. Latium white-on-red pyxis with lid. Inv. 7.038. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. De Puma Reference De Puma2010, 99, fig. 7; De Puma Reference De Puma2012, 283, fig. 7; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 148–51, no. 43.

  2. 57. Latium white-on-red pyxis with lid. Inv. 7.040. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. De Puma Reference De Puma2010, 99, fig. 8; De Puma Reference De Puma2012; 283, fig. 8; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 152–53, no. 44.

  3. 58. Latium kernos with four trays. Inv. 2007.1.3 [formerly 2.002]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. De Puma Reference De Puma2010, 100, fig. 10; De Puma Reference De Puma2012, 283, fig. 10; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 154–55, no. 45 (Figure 4).

  4. 59. Latium kernos with four trays. Inv. 2007.1.4 [formerly 2.003]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. De Puma Reference De Puma2010, 100, fig. 10; De Puma Reference De Puma2012, 283, fig. 10; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 156–57, no. 46.

B Architectural Terracottas

  1. 1. Etruscan terracotta antefix with kneeling kore. Inv. 2007.1.53 [formerly 3.045]. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, 1996. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 204–07, no. 63.

  2. 2. Etruscan terracotta antefix with head of a woman. Inv. 2007.1.20 [formerly 3.012]. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 24, 1996; reported to be from the Emilio Ambrun [sic.] collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 208–11, no. 64.

  3. 3. Etruscan terracotta antefix with head of a woman. Inv. 2007.1.17 [formerly 3.009]. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 24, 1996; reported to be from the Emilio Ambrun [sic.] collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 212–13, no. 65.

  4. 4. Etruscan terracotta antefix with head of a woman. Inv. 2007.1.34 [formerly 3.026]. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 24, 1996; reported to be from the Emilio Ambrun [sic.] collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 214–15, no. 66.

  5. 5. Etruscan terracotta antefix with head of a woman. Inv. 2007.1.45 [formerly 3.037]. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 24, 1996; reported to be from the Emilio Ambrun [sic.] collection. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 216–17, no. 67.

C Terracotta Votives

  1. 1. Italic terracotta votive head of a young man. Inv. 10.016. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 226–27, no. 68.

  2. 2. Italic terracotta votive head of a youth with tousled hair. Inv. 10.013. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 9, 1994, lot 35. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 228–29, no. 69.

  3. 3. Italic terracotta votive head of a youth with two earrings. Inv. 10.014. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 230–31, no. 70.

  4. 4. Italic terracotta votive head of a boy. Inv. 10.018. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 23233, no. 71.

  5. 5. Italic terracotta votive bust (?) of a youth with an earring. Inv. 10.015. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 234–35, no. 72.

  6. 6. Italic terracotta votive head of a young man. Inv. 10.027. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 236–37, no. 73.

  7. 7. Etruscan or Latium votive male head. Inv. 10.002. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  8. 8. Etruscan or possibly Latium votive male head. Inv. 10.004. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  9. 9. Etruscan, possibly Falerii, votive male head. Inv. 10.006. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  10. 10. Etruscan votive male head. Inv. 10.009. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  11. 11. Etruscan votive male head. Inv. 10.010. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  12. 12. Etruscan votive male head. Inv. 10.011. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  13. 13. Etruscan votive head of a youth. Inv. 10.024. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

  14. 14. Etruscan or possibly Latium votive head of a youth. Inv. 10.029. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

  15. 15. Etruscan votive head of a youth. Inv. 10.032. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

  16. 16. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.001. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  17. 17. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.003. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  18. 18. Southern Italian or Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.005. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

  19. 19. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.007. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  20. 20. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.008. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  21. 21. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.012. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  22. 22. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.017. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  23. 23. Etruscan votive female head. Inv. 10.020. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  24. 24. Etruscan votive right foot. Inv. 10.019. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 341.

  25. 25. Etruscan votive right foot. Inv. 10.021. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

  26. 26. Etruscan votive left foot. Inv. 10.028. Source: Arte Primitivo, June 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

  27. 27. Etruscan votive left foot. Inv. 10.033. Source: Arte Primitivo, September 1999. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 342.

D Sculpture

  1. 1. Marble torso of Hercules. Inv. 9.001. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics, January 12, 1996. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 252–55, no. 77.

  2. 2. Child’s marble sarcophagus with lid and inscription. Inv. 2007.1.8 [formerly 2.007]. Source: Arte Primitivo, after November 30, 1998. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 272–75, no. 82.

  3. 3. Marble statue of Aphrodite. Inv. 7.069. Source: Arte Primitivo, February 28, 1997. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 340.

E Bronzes

  1. 1. Bronze Near Eastern spear head. Inv. 6.013. Source: Harmer Rooke Numismatics. Bibl. Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 334.

Appendix 2: Concordance for Walsh Catalogue

Footnotes

1 The seizure from Fordham took place on May 28, 2021. The items were listed in the search warrant dated May 18, 2021. For details of the Steinhardt return, see District Attorney New York County 2021. For the report on the Steinhardt return: Mashberg Reference Mashberg2021a. Fifty-one items from the Steinhardt seizure were due to be repatriated to Italy and 48 Steinhardt items were returned to Italy in July 2022: District Attorney New York County 2022. For an earlier return from the Steinhardt collection: see Gill Reference Gill2018, 319, no. 1.

2 Six of the Getty pieces had been derived from the Barbara and Lawrence Fleischman collection: True and Hamma Reference True and Hamma1994, 182–89, nos 86, 87, 88–89 A–D; De Puma Reference De Puma2000, 5–10, nos 7–8, pls. 468–470, 471, 1–4. The seventh piece was an Attic red-figured stemless cup attributed to the Marlay painter: BAPD 41037; Walsh Reference Walsh1987, 163, no. 13. For two of the Athenian red-figured pots returned from San Antonio, see Shapiro et al. Reference Shapiro, Picón and Scott1995, 171, 179, nos 86 and 90. Both collections are discussed in Chippindale and Gill Reference Chippindale and David2000. The San Antonio fragments are considered in Gill Reference Gill2022a. For the issue of “provenance” at the Getty and in San Antonio: Saunders et al. Reference Saunders, Barr, Budrovich, Hopkins, Costello and Davis2021; Powers Reference Powers, Hopkins, Costello and Davis2021.

3 The Boston material had been acquired from Jonathan Kagan and Sallie Fried in early 1996, and all had been purchased from Edoardo Almagià who, in turn, had claimed to have purchased them in Basel.

4 Almagià material from “an ongoing investigation” was among the objects returned to Italy in July 2022: District Attorney New York County 2022. An Etruscan thymiaterion, formerly in the Fleischman collection, was seized from the Getty Museum in August 2022 and is due to be returned to Italy: True and Hamma Reference True and Hamma1994, 354, no. 228 (inv. 96.AC.253). Almagià supplied a number of Attic pottery fragments to the collection of Dietrich von Bothmer; e.g., Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University inv. 2006.051.011B, attributed to the Kleophrades painter; Malibu inv. 87.AE.154, attributed to the Triptolemos painter and from the same cup as 103 fragments sold by Galerie Nefer (90.AE.35); Walsh Reference Walsh1987, 143, no. 6.

5 For another Etruscan antefix linked to Almagià: Stanfill Reference Stanfill2001, “A New York-based Italian dealer, Edoardo Almagià, became a friend and mentor; it was from him that I made my first purchases … Among them … an Etruscan antefix in the shape of a woman’s face, the edges of her headdress broken off in a way that only made her startling gaze more poignant. I placed her at the center of the mantelpiece, marveling that she had survived.”

6 For Symes: Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2013; Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2016a. For Medici: Watson and Todeschini Reference Watson and Todeschini2006. For Becchina: Gill Reference Gill2018.

7 The press release, “Michael Steinhardt Surrenders 180 Stolen Antiquities Valued at $70 Million,” was issued on December 6, 2021 but is no longer available on-line. The story was covered by Mashberg Reference Mashberg2021b.

8 The issues are explored in Watson Reference Watson1997c. See also Gill Reference Gill1997.

9 The items are discussed in Gill Reference Gill2018. For Princeton: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 106–14. Dallas returned the items unprompted by Italian authorities after identifying Almagià material in its collection: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 37–42.

10 Maynard Reference Maynard2010.

11 For the background to the story: Eakin and Povoledo Reference Eakin and Povoledo2010.

12 The 270 objects are discussed in Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012. For a review of the Fordham catalogue: Sandhoff Reference Sandhoff, Cavaliere and Udell2014. The Etruscan antiquities from Fordham form one of two case studies discussed in La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018.

13 For the impact of CPIA on a major museum’s collecting pattern for South Italian pottery: Gill and Chippindale Reference Gill and Chippindale2008.

14 For a snapshot of Texas private collections at the time of the 1970 UNESCO Convention: Hoffmann Reference Hoffmann1970. For the ongoing place of the 1970 UNESCO Convention as a benchmark date for acquisitions: Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2013; Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2019; Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith, Francioni and Vrdoljak2020; Reed Reference Reed, Hopkins, Costello and Davis2021, 223–25.

15 For the case of the Sarpedon krater: Gill Reference Gill, by and Barker2012. The Sevso Treasure: Mundell-Mango Reference Mundell-Mango1990. The Aidonia Treasure: Demakopoulou and Divari-Valakou Reference Demakopoulou and Divari-Valakou1997. The Dekadrachm Hoard: Rose and Acar Reference Rose, Acar and Vitelli1996.

17 Another US university museum, Duke University, faced the same question in this same year: Neils Reference Neils2012, 546.

18 Chippindale and Gill Reference Chippindale and David2000: Gill Reference Gill, Hufnagel and Chappell2019b, 804–6. For further observations on this approach: Marlowe Reference Marlowe2016; Bell III Reference Bell2016; Gill Reference Gill2016. For a flawed response to the absence of “provenance”: Mackenzie Reference Mackenzie2005, 13–14.

19 Watson Reference Watson1997a; Watson Reference Watson1997b; Watson Reference Watson2000; Silver Reference Silver2005. One of the European collectors discussed by Gill and Chippindale acknowledged that he had become aware of the academic research through the press coverage.

20 Fourteen objects from the Beierwaltes collection formed part of the return of antiquities from the Steinhardt collection. For the phenomenon of the private collector, with a discussion of some of these individuals: Thompson Reference Thompson2016.

21 For example, White Reference White1998; White Reference White and Gibbon2005; see also Ortiz Reference Ortiz, Robson, Treadwell and Gosden2006. For a response from Shelby White to academic criticism of collecting: Mead Reference Mead2007. A further series of antiquities from the Shelby White collection were returned to Italy during 2022 and 2023: Gill Reference Gill2023a; Gill Reference Gill2023b.

22 United States v An Antique Platter of Gold [1999] 184 F3d 131 (2d Cir.); United States v Schultz (2003) 333 F3d 393 (2d Cir). For the Schultz case: Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith, Brodie, Kersel, Luke and Tubb2006. The Schultz case drew attention to the creation of the fictional Thomas Alcock Collection to provide a false history. For Schultz’s associate, Jonathan Tokeley-Parry: Tokeley Reference Tokeley2006. For a landmark case for Guatemalan antiquities: United States v Hollinshead (1974) 495 F.2d 1154 (9th Cir.). For a key case for antiquities derived from Mexico: United States v McClain (1977) 545 F.2d 988 (5th Cir.).

23 Watson Reference Watson1997c; Watson and Todeschini Reference Watson and Todeschini2006. For the context of the issues: Gill and Chippindale Reference Gill and Chippindale2007. For wider discussion: Marlowe Reference Marlowe2013. See also Silver Reference Silver2009.

24 For a case study of the objects passing through a single Manhattan gallery: Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2020. For other galleries and auction houses: Gill Reference Gill and Moshenska2017; Gill Reference Gill2018. The Manhattan DA issued a press release on July 20, 2022, that noted the return to Italy of 60 antiquities seized from the Royal-Athena Galleries in Manhattan: District Attorney New York County 2022. For a commentary on antiquities surfacing on the market: Gill Reference Gill, Rocks-Macqueen and Webster2014.

25 Gill and Chippindale Reference Gill and Chippindale2006. See also La Follette Reference La Follette2017; Gill Reference Gill2018.

26 Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 11.

27 Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 134–35, no. 37 (inv. L.2010.1). The hut urn was acquired through Christie’s (New York) on December 18, 1996, lot 164. See also La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018, 82–83, fig. 3. One of the reviews of the catalog missed the opportunity to explore the ethical issues raised by the Villanovan hut: Adelman Reference Adelman2016.

28 Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 264–67, no. 80. The head had formally been in the collection of Mr and Mrs Charles Lipson; it was purchased from Arte Primitivo on March 14, 1997. For the Bubon bronzes: Vermeule Reference Vermeule1980; Kozloff Reference Kozloff1987; Inan Reference Inan, Borchhardt and Dobesch1993; Mattusch Reference Mattusch1996, 150, 331–39, numbers 50–51. The bronze statue of Lucius Verus in the Shelby White collection was returned to Türkiye in November 2022 and placed on display in the Antalya Museum. The headless statue of Marcus Aurelius acquired by the Cleveland Museum of Art is reported to be under investigation and subject to a legal challenge, and the headless statue of Septimius Severus that had been placed on loan with New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art (which may go with the head of the emperor that forms part of the collection in the Ny Carlsberg in Copenhagen) was returned to Türkiye in March 2023. For issues surrounding recently surfaced (“ungrounded”) Roman antiquities: Marlowe Reference Marlowe2013.

29 The tension between archaeologists and museum professionals in a university setting is explored by Rorschach Reference Rorschach and Rhodes2007. See also Lee Reference Lee2023 for a discussion of the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University.

30 Noted at Gill Reference Gill2018, 291. For a misplaced attempt to defend the acquisition of such material: Owen Reference Owen and Cuno2009; for a response Gill Reference Gill2020a, 231–32. For the more recent case of the Hobby Lobby Tablets: United States v Approximately Four Hundred Fifty (450) Ancient Cuneiform Tablets and Approximately Three Thousand (3,000) Ancient Clay Bullae, Verified Complaint in Rem and Stipulation of Settlement, 17-CV-03980 (E.D.N.Y. 2017).

31 Zirganos Reference Zirganos2007; see also Gill Reference Gill2020a, 24; Gill Reference Gill2024a; for a short discussion of some of the objects see Gaunt Reference Gaunt2005. Tsirogiannis notified the Hellenic Ministry of Culture about the items. Three items were returned in January 2024 (Lee Reference Lee2024): a Minoan larnax, a marble figure from a funerary naiskos, and a marble statue of a Muse. The terracotta pithos identified by Tsirogiannis remains at the Carlos Museum, although an image was found in the Becchina archive. For a recent discussion of the Carlos Museum: Lee Reference Lee2023. In August 2023 the Carlos Museum transferred the title of three items, a Laconian cup (Jiang Reference Jiang, Carpenter, Langridge-Noti and Stansbury-O’Donnell2016), an Attic Band Cup, and an Apulian volute krater (Aellen et al. Reference Aellen, Cambitoglou and Chamay1986, 24 [col. pl.], 190–99), to Italy: the two cups were derived from Palladion Antike Kunst and the krater from the Hydra Gallery. At the same time, the Carlos Museum indicated that it would be returning a fragment of a Wild Goat style plate from the Timpone della Motta Sanctuary in Francavilla Marittima (Mittica Reference Mittica2018, 39, fig. 3) and an Apulian fishplate (apparently handled by Becchina) to Italy.

32 For example, Wescoat and Anderson Reference Wescoat and Anderson1989. See also Butcher and Gill Reference Butcher and David1990.

33 For the collection: Paul Reference Paul1997. The acquisition was defended by James Cuno (who was at Harvard at the time of the acquisition): Cuno Reference Cuno2008, 22–23; see Gill Reference Gill2009; Gill Reference Gill2020a, 138. For earlier discussion after the acquisition: Robinson and Yemma Reference Robinson and Yemma1998. The significance of these sherd collections is explored elsewhere: Gill Reference Gill2022a. For the university curator who formed the collection that now resides at Harvard: Williams Reference Williams2020.

34 For an example of how the fragments were split and reunited, see the Attic red-figured cup attributed to Makron that was returned to Italy from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2022: inv. 1978.11.7.b–c (BAPD 6920). See Bowley and Mashberg Reference Bowley and Mashberg2023; Gill and Tsirogiannis Reference Gill and Tsirogiannis2023. The first two fragments were purchased from Fritz Bürki in 1978 (inv. 1978.11.7.b–c) along with two other fragments from a separate cup attributed to Makron (inv. 1978.11.7.a, d). Much of the rest of the returned cup was purchased from the Summa Galleries in Beverley Hills in 1979 (inv. 1979.11.8), followed by the acquisition, both by gift and purchase, of further fragments from Frieda Tchacos (inv. 1988.11.4, 1990.120) and Dietrich von Bothmer (inv. 1989.42, 1994.172). For Tchacos and fragments from Galerie Nefer: Gill Reference Gill2020b.

35 For example, Museums Association 2010.

37 For the disclosure of the history of objects (although omitting one piece that passed through the hands of Robin Symes): Gill Reference Gill1990. For the Symes material in the collection: Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2013.

38 Shefton Reference Shefton1985. For further objects from the Shefton collection: Boardman, et al. Reference Boardman, Parkin and Waite2015.

39 For example, The Egypt Centre at Swansea University (Prifysgol Abertawe) that forms a home for the Egyptological collection of the pharmaceutical millionaire Sir Henry Wellcome: Gill Reference Gill2005. For other Wellcome material in UK university collections: de Peyer and Johnston Reference de Peyer and Johnston1986. For recent acquisitions by the Manchester Museum of the University of Manchester: Prag Reference Prag1988.

40 Marlowe Reference Marlowe2022. The complexity of the issue may be illustrated by the movement of Leonard Stern’s collection of Cycladic, which has been placed in the care of the Hellenic Ancient Culture Institute (HACI) so that it could be displayed in part in the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens before being placed on long-term loan at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art: see Fappas Reference Fappas2022; Tsirogiannis et al. Reference Tsirogiannis, David and ChippindaleForthcoming. The collection includes at least one figure identified by Tsirogiannis from the Becchina photographic archive.

41 Pogrebin Reference Pogrebin2007.

42 Padgett 1983–86 [Reference Padgett1991]; see also Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2013; Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2016b; Gill Reference Gill2018, 296; Gill Reference Gill2020a, 34–35.

43 Watson Reference Watson1997c. See also Watson Reference Watson1985.

44 Walsh purchased at least five other items from this sale, including Apulian and Etruscan pottery: lots 26, 32, 42, 52, and 58; Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, nos 31, 33, 35, 36, and 49.

45 However, the amphora does not appear to have been in the auction of June 4 [not June 6], 1999. Lot 42 was an amphora attributed to the Baltimore painter.

46 The earliest piece purchased by Walsh from this source was a Middle Corinthian amphoriskos on February 28, 1978: Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 26–27, no. 5 (inv. 6.016).

47 A further unseized piece is the Apulian loutrophoros attributed to the Baltimore painter: Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 106–09, no. 30. This was acquired from Howard Rose on March 5, 1996.

48 A further unseized piece is an Etruscan bucchero caryatid chalice: Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 180–81, no. 56 (inv. 10.030). This was purchased from Arte Primitivo in June 1999.

49 For a discussion of the naming of the Virginia Exhibition painter: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 98–99.

50 For information: https://arteprimitivo.com/scripts/aboutus.asp (last accessed March 27, 2024).

51 For such an urn from the Banditaccia Cemetery at Cerveteri: Cristofani Reference Cristofani1985, 155–56, no. 6.27.

52 Princeton: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 110. Getty: True and Hamma Reference True and Hamma1994, 182–87, nos 86–87.

53 De Puma Reference De Puma2013, 113.

54 For the pieces: La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018, 87, figs. 8–9.

56 Cavaliere and Udell Reference Cavaliere and Udell2012, 156 under no. 46. For the removal of some information from catalog entries see La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018, 85.

57 Aichmeir Reference Aichmeir1998, no. 79; di Gennaro Reference di Gennaro and Tomei2006; Belelli Marchesini Reference Belelli Marchesini and Tomei2006. The material from Antiquarium Ltd. was specifically linked to Almagià.

58 Gill Reference Gill2018, 312, nos 28–29, 315 no. 6, 317 no. 1, 321 no. 6 (previously part of the Kluge private collection). See also Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2014; Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2017; Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis, Hufnagel and Chappell2019, 821–29; Gill Reference Gill2024b.

59 Gill Reference Gill2018, 320 no. 1.

60 District Attorney New York County 2022.

62 Gill Reference Gill2018, 308 nos 7–9, 308–09 nos 3–7, 310 nos 1–2, 312, nos 21–27, 315 no. 5, 315–16 nos 2–3 and 13, 320 nos 4–5, 321 no. 5; Gill Reference Gill2024b.

63 See Gill and Tsirogiannis Reference Gill and Tsirogiannis2023 for a discussion of the phenomenon.

64 Lulof Reference Lulof, Cavaliere and Udell2012, 200–03, Footnote n. 22. See also La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018, 83–84, fig. 5. It had been incorrectly suggested that the Fordham fragments feature in the Medici Dossier: La Follette Reference La Follette, Carpino, Muratov and Saunders2018, 84.

65 Gill Reference Gill2020a, 115–23. For the catalog of the collection: Christiansen et al. Reference Christiansen, Winter and Lulof2010.

66 Spivey Reference Spivey, Rasmussen and Spivey1991; Gill and Vickers Reference Gill and Vickers1995; Osborne Reference Osborne2001; Bundrick Reference Bundrick2019. For the possibility that some “Athenian” pottery was made in Etruria: Gill Reference Gill1987.

67 For example, Sgubini Reference Sgubini1999; Godart and De Caro Reference Godart and De Caro2007, 78–79, no. 10. The cup, pieced together from fragments, was dedicated to Hercle at Cerveteri. For a discussion of the fragments: Gill and Chippindale Reference Gill and Chippindale2007, 573.

68 An amphora attributed to the Swing painter and appearing in the Becchina archive was identified by Dr Christos Tsirogiannis when it was due to be auctioned at Christie’s (London) on April 15, 2015, lot 83. It was withdrawn from the sale.

69 For an exploration of the issues for Athenian figure-decorated pottery through the case of the Sarpedon (Euphronios) krater: Gill Reference Gill, by and Barker2012. See also Silver Reference Silver, Cherry and Rojas2015.

70 For a helpful case study see Walsh Reference Walsh2017.

71 Padgett Reference Padgett2017.

72 The issues are explored in Vickers and Gill Reference Vickers and David1994. For a response to this from those associated with the market: Gill Reference Gill2007a.

74 For an example from the United Kingdom that identified architectural terracottas from Cisterna di Latina: Gill Reference Gill2019a, 72. However, terracottas from the same series remain in the British Museum.

75 Vickers Reference Vickers1992, 246. For the current Museums Association Code of Ethics, see https://www.museumsassociation.org/campaigns/ethics/code-of-ethics/.

76 For the positive ethical stance taken by the then curatorial team at the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University: Butcher and Gill Reference Butcher and David1990; see also Anderson Reference Anderson2017.

77 For an important contribution to the North American setting: Reed Reference Reed, Hopkins, Costello and Davis2021.

78 For a discussion of the 1970 benchmark: Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2019, 286–87; Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2023. For the importance of this benchmark to help “articulate” a museum’s acquisition policy: Rorschach Reference Rorschach and Rhodes2007, 68. For the need to develop a new policy: La Follette Reference La Follette and La Follette2013, 55–57.

79 For examples: Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2019, 288–91.

80 Gill Reference Gill2020a, 43–74; Gill Reference Gill, Fabiani, Burmon and Hufnagel2024c. The fact that the same gallery handled both pieces may perhaps be significant.

81 For Keros: Sotirakopoulou Reference Sotirakopoulou2005, with a response Gill Reference Gill2007b. For Düver: Thomas Reference Thomas1964/65. A fragment of the Düver frieze was returned to Türkiye from a New York private collection in November 2022: it surfaced on the New York market in October 2021. For Bubon: see above (p. 5).

82 For example, Gill Reference Gill2019a.

85 For example, Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1978; Trendall and Cambitoglou Reference Trendall and Cambitoglou1991.

87 Gill and Tsirogiannis Reference Gill, Tsirogiannis and Charney2016. For the ALR’s access to images from the Medici Dossier: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 149–50.

89 For the AAMD Object Registry: https://aamd.org/object-registry. For discussion of the Object Register: Gerstenblith Reference Gerstenblith2019, 293–95. For the AAMD policy on the acquisition of archaeological material: Association of Art Museum Directors 2013.

90 Tsirogiannis and Gill Reference Tsirogiannis2014.

91 Contrast the approach of reviewing and presenting recent acquisitions for the Fitzwilliam Museum (Gill Reference Gill1990) with the listings for New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art (Picón Reference Picón1990/91), Princeton University Art Museum (Princeton University Art Museum 1990), or the J. Paul Getty Museum (Walsh Reference Walsh1990).

92 An exemplary museum in this respect is Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts.

94 Gill Reference Gill2020a, 37–42.

95 Princeton inv. 1998–406. The website for Princeton University Art Museum has started to add additional information about acquisitions. In this case, it notes, “Purchased by John Elliott from Edoardo Almagia, NY; by bequest to the Museum in 1998”.

96 Padgett Reference Padgett2002, 37.

97 District Attorney New York County 2021, 44.

98 Details may be found in District Attorney New York County 2021, 23–26, 30 (6 examples). The Ka-Nefer-Nefer mummy mask is also reported to have been loaned to the same museum: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 55.

99 New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art inv. Inv. L.2008.18.1, .2. See District Attorney New York County 2023.

100 Royal-Athena Galleries, Art of the Ancient World XII (2001) no. 12.

101 Mattusch Reference Mattusch1996, 262–63, no. 31. For discussion of the looting of the site: Browning Reference Browning and Tubb1995. In England such looting is described by the euphemism of ‘nighthawking’: Oxford Archaeology 2009.

102 Some of the issues surrounding loans are explored in a review of this exhibition: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 91–102. Several other pieces on loan to the exhibition from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts were returned to Italy in 2023: Schertz and Stribling Reference Schertz and Stribling2017, nos 19, 20, and 26; see Gill Reference Gill2024b.

103 For European collections: e.g., Aellen et al. Reference Aellen, Cambitoglou and Chamay1986; Jucker Reference Jucker1991; Chamay Reference Chamay1994. For Etruscan material in a European public collection, e.g., Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen: Gill Reference Gill2020a 115–23.

104 District Attorney New York County 2021, 44. For the fragments: Gill Reference Gill2022a. Among the San Antonio returns is a fragmentary Attic black-figured cup with nonsense inscriptions: Shapiro et al. Reference Shapiro, Picón and Scott1995, 267, no. 178. Other such collections of fragments are known, for example, the Cahn collection of South Italian fragments: Cambitoglou and Chamay Reference Cambitoglou and Chamay1997.

105 Watson and Todeschini Reference Watson and Todeschini2007; Tsirogiannis Reference Tsirogiannis2016a. See also Watson Reference Watson, Brodie, Kersel, Luke and Tubb2006. For further discussion of another dealer: Gill Reference Gill2019a. For a dealer/collector linked to material from Southern Italy: Gill Reference Gill2021. Becchina and Symes material featured in the Search Warrant for New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art in July 2022: Supreme Court of the State of New York 2022.

106 For example, the head of Drusus Minor returned from the Cleveland Museum of Art (and acquired in 2012) after it was shown that it had come, not from a 19th-century Algerian collection as had been stated, but from Sessa Arunca in Italy: Gill Reference Gill2020a, 75–84. For the dangers of reported histories: Reed Reference Reed, Hopkins, Costello and Davis2021, 229. For the issue of licit export permits: Walsh Reference Walsh2017, 280–83.

References

Adelman, Charles M., Review of Barbara Cavaliere and Jenifer Udell (editors), “Ancient Mediterranean Art”, The William D. and Jane Walsh Collection at Fordham University. Classical Review, 66(2016): 237–39.Google Scholar
Aellen, Christian, Cambitoglou, Alexandre, and Chamay, Jacques, Le Peintre de Darius et son Milieu: Vases grecs d’Italie méridionale. Hellas et Roma, vol. 4 (Geneva: Association Hellas et Roma, 1986).Google Scholar
Aichmeir, Rupert, Linzer Privatsammlung antiker Keramik (Linz: Eigenverlag, 1998).Google Scholar
Anderson, Maxwell Lincoln, Antiquities: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Association of Art Museum Directors, Introduction to the revisions to the 2008 Guidelines on the Acquisition of Archaeological Material and Ancient Art (2013), https://aamd.org/sites/default/files/document/Guidelines%20on%20the%20Acquisition%20of%20Archaeological%20Material%20and%20Ancient%20Art%20revised%202013_0.pdf (Last accessed May 11, 2024)Google Scholar
Belelli Marchesini, Barbara, “Olla con quattro piattelli,” in Roma. Memorie dal sottosuolo: Ritrovamenti archeologici 1980/2006, edited by Tomei, M. A. (Milano: Electa, 2006): 228.Google Scholar
Bell, Malcolm III, “Notes on Marlowe’s ‘What we talk about when we talk about provenance’,” International Journal of Cultural Property 23 (2016): 254–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boardman, John, Parkin, Andrew, and Waite, Sally, eds, On the Fascination of Objects: Greek and Etruscan Art in the Shefton Collection (Oxford: Oxbow, 2015).Google Scholar
Bowley, G., and Mashberg, T., “The Kylix Marvel: Why Experts Distrust the Story of an Ancient Cup’s Rebirth,” New York Times April 19, 2023, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/19/arts/kylix-cup-greek-metropolitan-museum.html (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
Brodie, Neil, Kersel, Morag M., Luke, Christina, and Tubb, Kathryn W., eds. Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade. Cultural Heritage Studies (Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Browning, John, “A Layman’s Attempts to Precipitate Change in Domestic and International ‘Heritage’ Laws,” in Antiquities Trade or Betrayed: Legal, Ethical and Conservation Issues, edited by Tubb, K. W., (London: Archetype, 1995): 145–49.Google Scholar
Bundrick, Sheramy D., Athens, Etruria, and the Many Lives of Greek Figured Pottery (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butcher, Kevin, and David, W.J. Gill, “Mischievous Pastime or Historical Science?Antiquity 64 (1990): 946–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cambitoglou, Alexander, and Chamay, Jacques, eds, Céramique de Grande Grèce. La collection de fragments Herbert A. Cahn. Hellas et Roma, vol. 8 (Zurich: Akanthus, 1997).Google Scholar
Cavaliere, Barbara, and Udell, Jennifer, eds, Ancient Mediterranean Art: The William D. and Jane Walsh Collection at Fordham University (New York: Fordham University Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Chamay, Jacques, L’Art des Peuples Italiques 3000 à 300 avant J.-C. (Naples: Electa, 1994).Google Scholar
Chippindale, Christopher, and David, W.J. Gill, “Material Consequences of Contemporary Classical Collecting,” American Journal of Archaeology 104, no. 3 (2000): 463511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chippindale, Christopher, David, W.J. Gill, Salter, Emily, and Hamilton, Christian, “Collecting the Classical World: First Steps in a Quantitative History,” International Journal of Cultural Property 10, no. 1 (2001): 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christiansen, J., Winter, Nancy A., and Lulof, Patricia S., Architectural Terracottas and Painted Wall Plaques, Pinakes: c. 625-200 BC (Copenhagen: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, 2010).Google Scholar
Cristofani, Mauro, ed., Civiltà degli etruschi (Milano: Electra, 1985).Google Scholar
Cuno, James, Who Owns Antiquity? Museums and the Battle Over Our Ancient Heritage (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
de Peyer, R.M., and Johnston, Alan W., “Museum Supplement. Greek Antiquities From the Wellcome Collection: A Distribution List,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 106 (1986): 286–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Puma, Richard Daniel, Etruscan Painted Pottery. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu. Fasc. 9. Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, USA, fasc. 34. (Malibu: The J. Paul Getty Museum, 2000).Google Scholar
De Puma, Richard Daniel, Etruscan Art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2013).Google Scholar
De Puma, Richard Daniel, “Crustumerium and Etruria,” in International Congress of Classical Archaeology. Meetings Between Cultures in the Ancient Mediterranean (Rome, 22–26 September 2008), Bollettino di Archeologia Online, 96101 (Rome, 2010).Google Scholar
De Puma, Richard Daniel, “Rapporti tra Crustumerium e l’Etruria: La ceramica,” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 113 (2012): 279–84.Google Scholar
Demakopoulou, Katie, and Divari-Valakou, Nicoletta, The Aidonia Treasure (Athens: Ministry of Culture Archaeological Receipts Fund, 1997).Google Scholar
di Gennaro, Francesco, “Le olle a coppette e la ceramica di impasto a superficie rossa dipinta in bianco,” in Roma. Memorie dal sottosuolo: Ritrovamenti archeologici 1980/2006, edited by Tomei, M. A. (Milano: Electa, 2006): 228.Google Scholar
District Attorney New York County, In the matter of a Grand Jury Investigation into a Private New York Antiquities Collector. December 6, 2021, https://images.law.com/contrib/content/uploads/documents/292/102693/2021-12-06-Steinhardt-Complete-Agreement-w-Exhibits-Filed.pdf (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
District Attorney New York County, D.A. Bragg Returns 142 Antiquities Valued at Nearly $14 Million to the People of Italy. July 20, 2022, https://www.manhattanda.org/d-a-bragg-returns-142-antiquities-valued-at-nearly-14-million-to-the-people-of-italy/ (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
District Attorney New York County, D.A. Bragg Announces Return of 12 Antiquities To The People of Lebanon. September 7, 2023, https://manhattanda.org/d-a-bragg-announces-return-of-12-antiquities-to-the-people-of-lebanon/ (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
Eakin, Hugh, and Povoledo, Elisabetta, “Italy Focuses on a Princeton Curator in an Antiquities Investigation,” New York Times, June 2, 2010.Google Scholar
Elia, Ricardo J., “Analysis of the Looting, Selling, and Collecting of Apulian Red-figure Vases: A Quantitative Approach,” in Trade in Illicit Antiquities: The Destruction of the World’s Archaeological Heritage, edited by Brodie, N., Doole, J., and Renfrew, C. (Cambridge: McDonald Institute, 2001): 145–53.Google Scholar
Fappas, Ioannis D, Homecoming (Athens: Museum of Cycladic Art, 2022).Google Scholar
Gaunt, Jasper, “New Galleries of Greek and Roman Art at Emory University: The Michael C. Carlos Museum,” Minerva 16, no. 1 (2005): 1317.Google Scholar
Gerstenblith, Patty, “Recent Developments in the Legal Protection of Cultural Heritage,” in Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade, edited by Brodie, N., Kersel, M. M., Luke, C., and Tubb, K. W. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2006): 6892.Google Scholar
Gerstenblith, Patty, “The Meaning of 1970 for the Acquisition of Archaeological Objects.” Journal of Field Archaeology 38 (2013): 364–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerstenblith, Patty, “Provenances: Real, Fake, and Questionable,” International Journal of Cultural Property 26 (2019): 285304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerstenblith, Patty, “Theft and Illegal Excavation: Legal Principles for Protection of the Archaeological Heritage,” in The Oxford Handbook of International Cultural Heritage Law, edited by Francioni, F. and Vrdoljak, A. F. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020): 200–26, https://doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198859871.003.0009 (Last accessed May 11, 2024).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerstenblith, Patty, Cultural Objects and Reparative Justice: A Legal and Historical Analysis(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “METRU.MENECE: An Etruscan Painted Inscription on a Mid-Fifth Century BC Red-figure Cup from Populonia,” Antiquity 61 (1987): 8287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Recent Acquisitions by the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 1971-1989,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 110 (1990): 290–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Sotheby’s, Sleaze and Subterfuge: Inside the Antiquities Trade.” Antiquity 71 (1997): 468–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “From Wellcome Museum to Egypt Centre: Displaying Egyptology in Swansea,” Göttinger Miszellen 205 (2005): 4754.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., Review of Robson et al and Brodie et al (editors), Journal of Field Archaeology, 32, no. 1 (2007a): 103106.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J.. Review of Peggy Sotirakopoulou, “The ‘Keros Hoard’: Myth or Reality? Searching for the Lost Pieces of a Puzzle (Athens: N.P. Goulandris Foundation - Museum of Cycladic Art, 2005)”. American Journal of Archaeology 111, no. 1 (2007b): 163–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., Review of James Cuno, “Who Owns Antiquity? Museums and the Battle Over Our Ancient Heritage (Princeton University Press, 2008)”. American Journal of Archaeology 113, no.1 (2009): 104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “The Material and Intellectual Consequences of Acquiring the Sarpedon Krater,” in All the King’s Horses: Essays on the Impact of Looting and the Illicit Antiquities Trade on our Knowledge of the Past, edited by, P. K. Lazrus and Barker, A. W. (Washington DC: Society for American Archaeology, 2012): 2542.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Looting Matters: Blogging in a Research Context,” in Blogging Archaeology, edited by Rocks-Macqueen, D. and Webster, C. (Landward Research Ltd. 2014): 4459 & 246–67. https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/40600881/2014-blogging-archaeology-ebook (Last accessed May 29, 2024).Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J.,“Thinking About Collecting Histories: A Response to Marlowe,” International Journal of Cultural Property 23, no. 3 (2016): 237–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “The Market for Ancient Art.” In Key Concepts in Public Archaeology, edited by Moshenska, G. (London: UCL Press, 2017): 197200.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Returning Archaeological Objects to Italy.” International Journal of Cultural Property 25, no. 3 (2018): 283321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: Nicolas Koutoulakis, the Antiquities Market and Due Diligence.” Journal of Art Crime 22 (2019a): 7178.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “The Return of Looted Objects to Their Countries of Origin: The Case for Change,” in The Palgrave Handbook on Art Crime, edited by Hufnagel, S. and Chappell, D. (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019b): 797813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., Context Matters: Collating the Past (Amelia: ARCA, 2020a).Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: The Fragmentary Gifts of Werner Nussberger,” Journal of Art Crime 24 (2020b): 5760.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: The Graham Geddes Collection and Loans to Museums,” Journal of Art Crime 25 (2021): 99106.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: Fragmented Athenian Cups,” Journal of Art Crime 27 (2022a): 7784.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: The Minneapolis Doryphoros,” Journal of Art Crime 28 (2022b): 7781.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: Returns from the Shelby White Collection,” Journal of Art Crime 29 (2023a): 4955.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: Returns from the Shelby White Collection: An Addendum,” Journal of Art Crime 30 (2023b): In press.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: The Michael C. Carlos Museum Returns Antiquities,” Journal of Art Crime 31 (2024a): In press.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Context Matters: The Returns from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts,” Journal of Art Crime 31 (2024b): In press.Google Scholar
Gill, David W. J., “Tantalising Evidence and a Failed Legal Claim: The Case of the St Louis Art Museum Mummy Mask,” in Cultural Property Crime: 2021 Transatlantic Cultural Property Crime Symposium Proceedings, edited by Fabiani, M., Burmon, K. M., and Hufnagel, S., Transnational Criminal Justice (New York: Routledge, 2024c): 2742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Chippindale, Christopher, “Material and Intellectual Consequences of Esteem for Cycladic Figures,” American Journal of Archaeology 97 (1993): 601–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Chippindale, Christopher, “From Boston to Rome: Reflections on Returning Antiquities,” International Journal of Cultural Property 13, no. 3 (2006): 311–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Chippindale, Christopher, “The Illicit Antiquities Scandal: What it has done to Classical Archaeology Collections,” American Journal of Archaeology 111, no. 3 (2007): 571–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Chippindale, Christopher, “South Italian Pottery in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Acquired Since 1983,” Journal of Field Archaeology 33, no. 4 (2008): 462–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Polaroids from the Medici Dossier: Continued Sightings on the Market,” in Art Crime: Terrorists, Tomb Raiders, Forgers and Thieves, edited by Charney, N. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016): 229–39, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-40757-3_17 (Last accessed May 11, 2024).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W. J., and Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Piecing Together the Story of a Pair of Makron’s Fragmented Cups,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 42, no. 4 (2023): 345–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gill, David W.J., and Vickers, Michael, “They Were Expendable: Greek Vases in the Etruscan Tomb,” Revue des études anciennes 97 (1995): 225–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godart, Louis, and De Caro, Stefano, eds, Nostoi: Capolavori ritrovati. Roma, Palazzo del Quirinale, Galleria di Alessandro VII, 21 dicembre 2007 – 2 marzo 2008 (Rome: Segretariato Generale della Presidenza della Repubblica, 2007).Google Scholar
Hoffmann, Herbert, Ten Centuries That Shaped the West (Houston: Institute for the Arts, Rice University, 1970).Google Scholar
Inan, Jale, “Neue Forschungen zum Sebasteion von Bubon und seinen Statuen,” in Akten de II. Internationalen Lykien-Symposions, edited by Borchhardt, J. and Dobesch, G. (Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1993).Google Scholar
Jiang, An, “Karneia and Kitharoidos: Rereading a Laconian Cup in the Michael C. Carlos Museum,” in The Consumer’s Choice: Uses of Greek Figure-Decorated Pottery, edited by Carpenter, T. H., Langridge-Noti, E., and Stansbury-O’Donnell, M. D., Selected Papers on Ancient Art and Architecture, vol. 2 (Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, 2016): 2340.Google Scholar
Jucker, I., Italy of the Etruscans: Archaeological Finds from the First Millennium BCE (Jerusalem: The Israel Museum, 1991).Google Scholar
Kozloff, Arielle P., “Bubon: A Re-assessment of the Provenance,” Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art 74, no. 3 (1987): 130–43.Google Scholar
La Follette, Laetitia, “The Trial of Marion True and Changing Policies for Classical Antiquities in American Museums,” in Negotiating Culture: Heritage, Ownership, and Intellectual Property, edited by La Follette, L. (Amherst and Boston: University of Massachusetts Press, 2013): 3871.Google Scholar
La Follette, Laetitia, “Looted Antiquities, Art Museums and Restitution in the United States since 1970.” Journal of Contemporary History 52 (2017): 669–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
La Follette, Laetitia, “The Impact of the 1970 UNESCO Convention on Unprovenanced Etruscan Antiquities in the United States,” in Collecting and Collectors from Antiquity to Modernity, edited by A. Carpino, T. D’Angelo, Muratov, M., and Saunders, D., Selected Papers on Art and Architecture, vol. 4 (Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, 2018): 7592.Google Scholar
Lee, Stephanie M., “The Little Museum’s Big Score: Emory University wanted only the finest antiquities. It didn’t ask a lot of questions,” The Chronicle of Higher Education August 23, 2023, https://www.chronicle.com/article/the-little-museums-big-score (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
Lee, Stephanie M.., “Emory U. is Returning 3 Allegedly Looted Antiquities to Greece,” The Chronicle of Higher Education, January 22, 2024.Google Scholar
Lulof, Patricia S., “Etruscan Roofs and Their Decoration,” in Ancient Mediterranean Art: The William D. and Jane Walsh Collection at Fordham University, edited by Cavaliere, B. and Udell, J. (New York: Fordham University Press, 2012): 196217.Google Scholar
Mackenzie, Simon, Going, Going, Gone: Regulating the Market in Illicit Antiquities (Leicester: Institute of Art and Law, 2005).Google Scholar
Marlowe, Elizabeth, Shaky Ground: Context, Connoisseurship and the History of Roman Art, Debates in Archaeology (London: Bloomsbury, 2013).Google Scholar
Marlowe, Elizabeth, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Provenance: A Response to Chippindale and Gill.” International Journal of Cultural Property 23, no. 3 (2016): 217–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marlowe, Elizabeth, “Responsible Stewards of Classical Antiquities? The Society for American Archaeology’s ‘Statement on Collaboration’ and Non-American Material Culture,” Advances in Archaeological Practice 10 (2022): 249–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mashberg, Tom. 2021a. “Michael Steinhardt, Billionaire, Surrenders $70 Million in Stolen Relics,” New York Times December 7, 2021.Google Scholar
Mashberg, Tom. 2021b. “More Than 200 Ancient Artifacts Are Repatriated to Italy.” New York Times December 16, 2021: 10.Google Scholar
Mattusch, Carol C., The Fire of Hephaistos: Large Classical Bronzes from North American Collections (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Art Museums, 1996).Google Scholar
Maynard, W. Barksdale, “Italy’s Antiquities and U.S. Museums: A Q&A with Edoardo Almagià,” Princeton Alumni Weekly July 7, 2010, https://paw.princeton.edu/article/italy%E2%80%99s-antiquities-and-us-museums-qa-edoardo-almagi%C3%A0-%E2%80%9973 (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
Mead, Rebecca, “Den of Antiquity: The Met and the Antiquities Market,” The New Yorker April 9, 2007: 5261.Google Scholar
Mittica, Gloria, Francavilla Marittima: Un patrimonio ricontestualizzato (Vibo Valentia: Adhoc Edizioni, 2018).Google Scholar
Mundell-Mango, Marlia, “Un nouveau trésor (dit de <<Sevso>>) d’argenterie de la basse antiquité,” Comptes rendus de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres 134, no. 1 (1990): 238–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Museums Association, Acquisition: Guidance on the Ethics and Practicalities of Acquisition. Ethical Guidelines. Advice from the Museums Association Ethics Committee. Museums Association (2010), https://archive-media.museumsassociation.org/ethicalguidelines_acquisitions.pdf (Last accessed May 11, 2024).Google Scholar
Neils, Jenifer, “University Antiquities Collections: Old and New.” American Journal of Archaeology 116 (2012): 543–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortiz, George, “Overview and Assessment After Fifty Years of Collecting in a Changing World,” in Who Owns Objects? The Ethics and Politics of Collecting Cultural Artefacts, edited by Robson, E., Treadwell, L., and Gosden, C. (Oxford: Oxbow, 2006): 1532.Google Scholar
Osborne, Robin G., “Why Did Athenian Pots Appeal to the Etruscans?World Archaeology 33, no. 2 (2001): 277–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, David I., “Censoring Knowledge: The Case for the Publication of Unprovenanced Cuneiform Tablets,” in Whose Culture? The Promise of Museums and the Debate Over Antiquities, edited by Cuno, J. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009): 125–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oxford Archaeology, Nighthawks and Nighthawking: Damage to Archaeological Sites in the UK & Crown Dependencies Caused by Illegal Searching & Removal of Antiquities. Strategic Study. Final report. Oxford: English Heritage (2009), https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/publications/nighthawks-nighthawking/ (Last accessed May 29, 2024).Google Scholar
Padgett, J. Michael, “An Attic Red-figure Volute-krater,” Minneapolis Institute of Arts Bulletin 66 (1983–1986) [1991]: 6677.Google Scholar
Padgett, J. Michael, “Objects of Desire: Greek Vases from the John B. Elliott Collection,” Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University, 61 (2002): 3748.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Padgett, J. Michael. ed. 2017. The Berlin Painter and His World: Athenian Vase-painting in the Early Fifth Century B.C. (New Haven: Princeton University Art Museum, 2017).Google Scholar
Paul, Aaron J., “Fragments of Antiquity: Drawing Upon Greek Vases,” Harvard University Art Museums Bulletin 5, no. 2 (1997): 187.Google Scholar
Picón, C.A., “Greek and Roman Art,” Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art 121 (1990/91): 3132.Google Scholar
Pogrebin, Robin, “Fordham Opens Its Gift: An Antiquities Museum,” New York Times December 6, 2007.Google Scholar
Powers, Jessica, “Provenance Research and the Ancient Mediterranean Collection in the San Antonio Museum of Art,” in Object Biographies: Collaborative Approaches to Ancient Mediterranean Art, edited by Hopkins, J. N., Costello, S. K., and Davis, P. R. (Houston: The Menil Collection, 2021): 190205.Google Scholar
Prag, A. John N. W, “Museum Supplement: Acquisitions by the Manchester Museum 1970–1987,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 108 (1988): 290–94.Google Scholar
Princeton University Art Museum, “Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1989,” Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 49, no. 1 (1990): 2457.Google Scholar
Reed, Victoria S., “Collecting Antiquities Since 2008: A Look at Guidelines and Best Practices for American Museums,” in Object Biographies: Collaborative Approaches to Ancient Mediterranean Art, edited by Hopkins, J. N., Costello, S. K., and Davis, P. R. (Houston: The Menil Foundation, 2021): 221–41.Google Scholar
Robson, Eleanor, Treadwell, Luke, and Gosden, Chris, eds, Who Owns Objects? The Ethics and Politics of Collecting Cultural Artefacts (Oxford: Oxbow, 2006).Google Scholar
Robinson, Walter V., and Yemma, John, “Harvard Museum Acquisitions Shock Scholars,” Boston Globe, 16 January 1998: A1.Google Scholar
Rorschach, Kimerly, “Scylla or Charybdis: Antiquities Collecting by University Art Museums,” in The Acquisition and Exhibition of Classical Antiquities: Professional, Legal, and Ethical Perspectives, edited by Rhodes, R. F. (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007): 6573.Google Scholar
Rose, Mark, and Acar, Özgen, “Turkey’s War on the Illicit Antiquities Trade,” in Archaeological Ethics, edited by Vitelli, K. D. (Walnut Creek: Alta Mira, 1996): 7189.Google Scholar
Sandhoff, Bridget, Review of Cavaliere, Barbara and Udell, Jenifer (editors), “Ancient Mediterranean Art”, The William D. and Jane Walsh Collection at Fordham University, Etruscan Studies 17 (2014): 103–7.Google Scholar
Saunders, David, “The Distribution of the Berlin Painter’s Vases,” in The Berlin Painter and His World: Athenian Vase-painting in the Early Fifth Century B.C., edited by Padgett, J. M. (New Haven: Princeton University Art Museum, 2017): 107–31.Google Scholar
Saunders, David, Barr, Judith, and Budrovich, Nicole, “The Antiquities Provenance Project at the J. Paul Getty Museum,” in Object Biographies: Collaborative Approaches to Ancient Mediterranean Art, edited by Hopkins, J. N., Costello, S. K., and Davis, P. R. (Houston: The Menil Foundation, 2021): 206–19.Google Scholar
Schertz, Peter, and Stribling, Nicole, The Horse in Ancient Greek Art (Middleburg: National Sporting Library & Museum, 2017).Google Scholar
Sgubini, Anna Maria Moretti, Euphronios epoiesen: Un dono d’eccezione ad Ercole Cerite (Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 1999).Google Scholar
Shapiro, H.A., Picón, C.A., and Scott, G.D., eds, Greek Vases in the San Antonio Museum of Art (San Antonio: San Antonio Museum of Art, 1995).Google Scholar
Shefton, Brian Benjamin, “A Greek Lionhead in Newcastle and Zurich,” Antiquity 59 (1985): 4244.Google Scholar
Silver, Vernon, “Smuggling Ring Used Sotheby’s 110 Times, Italian Probe Shows,” Bloomberg.com 4 November 2005, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000100&sid=azabN6ff7SnQ&refer=germany.Google Scholar
Silver, Vernon, The Lost Chalice: The Epic Hunt For a Priceless Masterpiece (New York: William Morrow, 2009).Google Scholar
Silver, Vernon, “Pot Biographies and Plunder,” in Archaeology for the People, edited by Cherry, J. F. and Rojas, F., Joukowsky Institute Perspectives (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2015): 6980.Google Scholar
Sotirakopoulou, Peggy, The “Keros Hoard”: Myth or Reality? Searching for the Lost Pieces of a Puzzle (Athens: N.P. Goulandris Foundation - Museum of Cycladic Art, 2005).Google Scholar
Spivey, Nigel, “Greek vases in Etruria,” in Looking at Greek Vases, edited by Rasmussen, T. and Spivey, N. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991): 131–50.Google Scholar
Stanfill, Francesca, “Odyssey,” Town & Country 155 (2001): 5257.Google Scholar
Supreme Court of the State of New York, Search Warrant (County of New York: Supreme Court of the State of New York, 2022). https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/22272623/2022-07-11-met-w.pdf (Last accessed May 29, 2024).Google Scholar
Thomas, Nicholas, “Recent Acquisitions by Birmingham City Museum, Archaeological Reports (1964/65): 6370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, Erin L., Possession: The Curious History of Private Collectors from Antiquity to the Present (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Tokeley, Jonathan, Rescuing the Past: The Cultural Heritage Crusade (Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2006).Google Scholar
Trendall, A. Dale, and Cambitoglou, Alexander, The Red-figured Vases of Apulia, vol. I: Early Apulian (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978).Google Scholar
Trendall, A. Dale, and Cambitoglou, Alexander, Second Supplement to the Red-figured Vases of Apulia, Part I, University of London, Institute of Classical Studies, Bulletin Supplement, vol. 60 (London: Institute of Classical Studies, 1991).Google Scholar
Trendall, A. Dale, and Cambitoglou, Alexander, Second Supplement to the Red-figured Vases of Apulia, Part II, University of London, Institute of Classical Studies, Bulletin Supplement, vol. 60 (London: Institute of Classical Studies, 1992).Google Scholar
True, Marion, and Hamma, Kenneth, A Passion for Antiquities: Ancient Art from the Collection of Barbara and Lawrence Fleischman (Malibu, CA: J. Paul Getty Museum in Association with the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1994).Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, Unravelling the Hidden Market of Illicit Antiquities: The Robin Symes - Christos Michaelides Network and its International Implications. PhD Dissertation, PhD, Cambridge University, 2013.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Nekyia: A South Italian Bell-krater by Python in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,” Journal of Art Crime 11 (2014): 6368.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Due diligence? Christie’s Antiquities Auction, London, October 2015,” Journal of Art Crime 14 (2015): 2737.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Attitudes in Transit: Symes Material from Market to Source,” Journal of Art Crime 15 (2016a): 7986.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Prompt in Theory and Delay in Practice: A Case Study in Museum Ethics,” AP: Online Journal of Public Archaeology 6 (2016b): 1225.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Something is Confidential in the State of Christie’s,” in Art Crime: Terrorists, Tomb Raiders, Forgers and Thieves, edited by Charney, N. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016c): 200–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Unethical Actions, Inactions and Reactions by the Museum and Market Community to the Seizure of the Met’s Python Krater,” Journal of Art Crime 18 (2017): 6568.Google Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “Illicit Antiquities in American Museums: Diversity in Ethical Standards,” in The Palgrave Handbook of Art Crime, edited by Hufnagel, S. and Chappell, D. (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), 815–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, “The Antiquities Market We Deserve: ‘Royal-Athena Galleries’ (1942-2020).” Acta ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia 32 (2020): 147–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, and David, W.J. Gill, “‘A Fracture in Time’: A Cup Attributed to the Euaion Painter from the Bothmer Collection,” International Journal of Cultural Property 21, no. 4 (2014): 465–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsirogiannis, Christos, David, W.J. Gill, and Chippindale, Christopher. Forthcoming. “Pastiches, a Corrupt Corpus, and the Future Study of Cycladic Figures.”Google Scholar
Vermeule, Cornelius C. III, “The Late Antonine and Severan Bronze Portraits from Southwest Asia Minor,” in Eikones: Studien zum griechischen und romischen Bildnis. Hans Jucker zum sechzigsten Geburtstag gewidmet, Antike Kunst suppl. 12 (Bern: Francke, 1980): 185–90.Google Scholar
Vickers, Michael, “Recent Acquisitions of Greek and Etruscan Antiquities by the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 1981-90,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 112 (1992): 246–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vickers, Michael, and David, W.J. Gill, Artful Crafts: Ancient Greek Silverware and Pottery (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Walsh, John, “Acquisitions/1986,” The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal 15 (1987): 151238.Google Scholar
Walsh, John, “Acquisitions/1989.” The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal 18 (1990): 157, 59–209.Google Scholar
Walsh, Justin St P., “A Silver Service and a Gold Coin,” International Journal of Cultural Property 24 (2017): 253–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, Peter, “Sotheby’s Sells ‘Smuggled Art’,” The Observer December 1, 1985: 3.Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, “Ancient Art Without a History,” The Times August 14, 1997a.Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, “Fakes: The Artifice Behind the Artefact,” The Times August 15, 1997b.Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, Sotheby’s, the Inside Story (London: Bloomsbury, 1997c).Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, “How Forgeries Corrupt Our Top Museums,” The New Statesman December 25, 2000.Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, “Convicted Dealers: What We Can Learn,” in Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade, edited by Brodie, N., Kersel, M. M., Luke, C., and Tubb, K. W. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2006): 9397, https://doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813029726.003.0005.Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, and Todeschini, Cecilia, The Medici Conspiracy: The Illicit Journey of Looted Antiquities from Italy’s Tomb Raiders to the World’s Great Museums (New York: Public Affairs, 2006).Google Scholar
Watson, Peter, and Todeschini, Cecilia, The Medici Conspiracy: The Illicit Journey of Looted Antiquities from Italy’s Tomb Raiders to the World’s Greatest Museums, revised edition (New York: Public Affairs, 2007).Google Scholar
Wescoat, Bonna D., and Anderson, Maxwell Lincoln, Syracuse, the Fairest Greek City: Ancient Art from the Museo Archeologico Regionale “Paolo Orsi (Roma, Italia: De Luca edizioni d’arte, 1989).Google Scholar
White, Shelby, “A Collector’s Odyssey,” International Journal of Cultural Property 7 (1998): 170–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Shelby, “Building American Museums: The Role of the Private Collector,” in Who Owns the Past? Cultural Policy, Cultural Property, and the Law, edited by Gibbon, K. Fitz (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press/American Council for Cultural Policy, 2005): 165–77.Google Scholar
Williams, Dyfri, “The Life and Work of John Robert Guy,” Cahn Quarterly (2020): 13.Google Scholar
Zirganos, Nikolas, “Ποιο είναι το Carlos Museum,” enet.gr June 3, 2007.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Recorded Sources of the Material Returned to Italy from the Walsh Collection.

Figure 1

Figure 1. Apulian Volute-krater Attributed to the Virginia Exhibition Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 8.001. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Athenian Black-figured Amphora Attributed to the Swing Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 4.022. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Etruscan White-on-Red Kernos. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 5.010. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Olla With Four Trays from Lazio. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. inv. 2007.1.3. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Paestan Red-figured Bell-krater Attributed to Python. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 4.005. Image Courtesy of Fordham University

Figure 6

Figure 6. Athenian Red-figured Column-krater Attributed to the Agrigento Painter. Formerly Fordham University Collection inv. 11.008. Image Courtesy of Fordham University.