The Goddess Goes Home
Following years of haggling over its provenance, a celebrated statue once identified as Aphrodite, has returned to Italy
- By Ralph Frammolino
- Photographs by Francesco Lastrucci
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 7)
The statue bore few clues to the figure’s identity. Its head was a bit small. Something had been torn from its right hand, which ended at broken knuckles. But based on its drapery and voluptuous figure, Marion True, who had become the Getty’s antiquities curator in 1986, concluded that the figure was likely Aphrodite. In her pre-purchase curator’s report to the museum board, True made clear that acquiring the statue would be a coup, even with its then-record $18 million price tag. “The proposed statue of Aphrodite would not only become the single greatest piece of ancient art in our collection,” she wrote, “it would be the greatest piece of Classical sculpture in this country and any country outside of Greece and Great Britain.”
Yet the statue had appeared out of nowhere, unknown to leading antiquities experts. The London dealer who offered it to the Getty provided no documentation of its provenance and would say only that its prior owner had been a collector in a Swiss town just north of Italy. The museum’s Rome attorney told the Italian Ministry of Culture “an important foreign institution” was considering buying the statue and asked if it had any information on the piece; the answer was no. Among the outside experts consulted by True, two raised questions about the statue’s legitimacy. One of them, Iris Love, an American archaeologist and friend of True’s, said she told True: “I beg you, don’t buy it. You will only have troubles and problems.” [In a written statement to Smithsonian, True said Love was shown photographs of the statue but “had nothing to say herself about the possible provenance or importance of the object” and “offered no counsel about purchase.”]
The director of the Getty’s Conservation Institute, Luis Monreal, inspected the statue before the purchase was completed. He noted recent breaks in the torso—looters commonly break artifacts into pieces for easier transport—and fresh dirt in the folds of the dress. Concluding that it was a “hot potato,” he pleaded with John Walsh, the museum’s director, and Harold Williams, CEO of the Getty Trust, to reject it.
They didn’t. Critics excoriated the Getty for buying the “orphan,” as art insiders call antiquities offered for sale without provenance. Other museums had acquired smaller orphans, discreetly inserting them into their collections, but the magnitude of this acquisition riled foreign officials and archaeologists alike; they argued that the goddess had almost certainly been looted. Italian officials claimed she had been taken from an ancient site in the Sicilian town of Morgantina, once a Greek colony. Journalists descended on a sleepy excavation site there and reported that it was a favorite target of looters. The local archaeological superintendent said the Getty attorney’s request for information on the statue had never been forwarded to her. An American legal publication, the National Law Journal, ran a photograph of the artwork and a story with the headline “Was This Statue Stolen?”
Around the same time, a Sicilian judge accused the Getty of harboring two other looted objects on loan. The museum removed them from public view and returned them to their owners—and then put its prize statue on permanent display in early 1989. (The Getty’s purchase did not violate Unesco sanctions because Italy had not yet petitioned the State Department for cultural import restrictions, as a federal implementing law required.)
Meanwhile, the museum was growing into a cultural behemoth. The Getty Trust’s endowment, aided by the 1984 sale of Getty Oil, approached $5 billion. To its Roman villa-style museum near Malibu it added, in 1997, the Getty Center, a vast modernist complex on a hill overlooking Los Angeles’ hip Westside.
Marion True became an outspoken proponent for reform in the antiquities market, openly criticizing what she called her U.S. museum colleagues’ “distorted, patronizing and self-serving” justifications for buying suspect artifacts. She helped Cyprus officials recover four sixth-century Byzantine mosaics stolen from a church. She began to return Getty objects known to have been looted, including hundreds of pieces from the museum’s study collection—pieces of scholarly, if not aesthetic, value. By November 1995, she had pushed through a new policy committing the Getty to acquiring antiquities only from documented collections, essentially pulling the museum out of the black market. The policy was the first of its kind at a major collecting institution.
And yet True had something of a shock when she traveled to Rome in 1999 to return three looted Getty artifacts to the Italian government. She was signing the paperwork in a ceremony at Villa Giulia, the museum for Etruscan antiquities, when an Italian prosecutor named Paolo Ferri approached.
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Comments (11)
Hello, I am wondering if there is any way to get in tough with Iris Love? thank you.
Posted by krystallia on May 12,2013 | 04:18 PM
I agree with Alan in his statement of other countries returning their "acquired" artifacts to their places of origin. Seems most museums worldwide have abscounded "booty" in their cellars!
Seems Paris has an Egyptian obelisk in it's city midst, also.
Where did Iraq's treasures end up? etc.
Posted by C Carpenter on November 26,2011 | 10:45 PM
7 Nov 11
Re: A Goddess Goes Home
Now that the Italians have learned the virtues of having stolen antiquities returned to their original homelands ["A Goddess Goes Home"], I eagerly await their plan to return the thirteen obelisks that reside in Rome to Egypt.
Alan Campbell
San Diego, CA 92109
Posted by Alan Campbell on November 16,2011 | 02:07 PM
I have read Chasing Aphrodite, the book by Ralph Frammolino and Jason Felch, on the history of looted art sold abroad, and it raises fascinating and complex questions about what fuels black markets. Large museums preserve items of art, but how can we ever know the meaning if we don't know where they came from, or if they were sacred objects, or what else might be part of their story of origin.
Posted by Horanel on November 14,2011 | 01:26 PM
Is the provenance of valuables so many thousands of years ago really enough to "own" something? It never really belonged to Italy nor the people who inhabit that territory today. The Italy today is not the society and regime that existed 4000 years ago. The artifacts of ancient Greece and Italy rightfully belongs to everyone and to no one.
Posted by david on November 9,2011 | 07:02 PM
I think the world of Smithsonian and I'm sure you checked your facts, but I wanted to take a shower after reading the article. Ralph Frammolino's utter loathing of the Getty jumps off the page like a poisonous fume. Yes, he points out that the Getty wasn't the only museum that played fast and loose with antiquities and that they have changed their policies, but he makes the place sound like a dreary collection of questionable junk and "scholarly interest only" curios run by borderline thugs. The other institutions mentioned don't come across as quite so seedy and he doesn't hint that both of the Getty's locations are spectacular buildings with significant collections.
It was poor taste to print the article as it appeared. There's a good story and lots of moral instruction in there, but if Ares had written "The Many Loves of Aphrodite" it would contained less venom.
Posted by Peter Grant on November 1,2011 | 04:46 PM
I find it a little odd that such an ugly, scarecrow of a "sculpture of antiquity" could garner such a huge amount of ardor simply because someone claimed the thing had an elaborate and sketchy history while Getty and a small town in Italy battled egos for years. Just to say where this morbidly obese, very poorly clad "Aphrodite" belongs is kind of silly. Aidone's one museum probably needed something that looked more local and this was said to be stolen. You have to notice that the sculptor's talents really do not fit any known Greek period as far as its style (Hellenistic, for instance)and just is no where near The Venus de Milo in artistic quality as well as being in very poor shape. The sculptor's lack of finishing on her dress just accentuates the obvious difference between the unfinished, awkwardly rendered limestone body and the screwed on marble appendages! I'm no expert but I've studied enough art history to find articles like this one and that equally dubious "Velazquez" article last year a little beneath Smithsonian's standards. Sorry.
Posted by Deborah Taylor on November 1,2011 | 04:04 PM
I thought most all art and ancient artifacts were just on lone for a period of time like the Piata, Davinci's anatomical scetches, Egyptian, India's art or otherwise?
Posted by on October 29,2011 | 11:39 AM
It is good thing to return the cultural wealth to its country of origin .
But are you going to return all things from Egypt ?
Will British Museum follow that suite and return artifacts from India , Egypt ??
This will make all museums in USA and UK empty .
How much this will help ? I don't know !
Posted by NILESH SALPE on October 24,2011 | 10:45 AM
This is a wonderfully written story that pulls together all the pieces of the scattered reporting I have read in recent years. Frammolino's work is to be mightily commended.
Posted by John Keahey on October 23,2011 | 02:46 PM
This controversy over the Getty and how it obtained many of its antiquities has been going on for years now.
I consider myself fortunate to have gotten the opportunity to see the statue featured in this story at the Getty Villa before it was repatriated. As much as I will miss the statue, there is no doubt in my mind that returning the statue was the right thing to do.
There are many other institutions in this country and around the world who have obtained antiquities by way of questionable practices. It is my sincere hope that these institutions will find it in their hearts to do the right thing and return these treasures to their rightful countries of origin.
Posted by Odyssey8 on October 21,2011 | 07:32 PM