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 5 of 7)
Jason Felch and I learned from confidential Getty documents and dozens of interviews that while True was building her reputation as a reformer, she maintained curatorial ties to suppliers of unprovenanced, and likely illicit, objects. In 1992, she agreed to meet two men at a Zurich bank to inspect a gold Greek funerary wreath from the fourth century B.C. Rattled by the encounter, True turned down the wreath, writing to the dealer who had referred her to the two sellers that “it is something that is too dangerous for us to be involved with.” [True, in her statement, wrote that she described the situation that way “not because the wreath was questionable but because it was impossible for the museum to deal with completely unreliable and seemingly capricious people.”] Four months later, the dealer offered it himself, at a price reduced from $1.6 million to $1.2 million. True recommended it and the museum bought it. The Getty would return the wreath to Greece in 2007.
Jason and I also documented that True’s superiors, who approved her purchases, knew the Getty might be buying illicit objects. Handwritten notes by John Walsh memorialized a 1987 conversation in which he and Harold Williams debated whether the museum should buy antiquities from dealers who were “liars.” At one point, Walsh’s notes quote Williams, a former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, as saying: “Are we willing to buy stolen property for some higher aim?” Williams told us he was speaking hypothetically.
Even in 2006, some 18 years after the Getty purchased its goddess, the statue’s origins and entry into the market remained obscure. But that year a local art collector in Sicily told Jason that tomb raiders had offered him the goddess’s head, one of three found around Morgantina in 1979. According to previous Italian newspaper reports, the torso had been taken to a high place, pushed onto a blunt object and broken into three roughly equal pieces. The pieces were then loaded into a Fiat truck and covered with a mountain of loose carrots to be smuggled out of the country.
While Jason was reporting in Sicily, I went to Switzerland to interview Renzo Canavesi, who used to run a tobacco shop and cambia, or money-changing house, near Chiasso, just north of the Italian border. For decades the border region had been known for money-laundering and smuggling, mostly in cigarettes but also drugs, guns, diamonds, passports, credit cards—and art. It was there in March 1986 that the goddess statue first surfaced in the market, when Canavesi sold it for $400,000 to the London dealer who would offer it to the Getty.
The transaction had generated a receipt, a hand-printed note on Canavesi’s cambia stationery—the statue’s only shred of provenance. “I am the sole owner of this statue,” it read, “which has belonged to my family since 1939.” After the London dealer turned the receipt over to authorities in 1992, an Italian art squad investigator said he thought Canavesi’s statement was dubious: 1939 was the year Italy passed its patrimony law, making all artifacts discovered from then on property of the state. After a second lengthy investigation in Italy, Canavesi was convicted in absentia in 2001 of trafficking in looted art. But the conviction was overturned because the statute of limitations had expired.
Canavesi twice declined to talk to me, so I asked some of his relatives if they had ever noticed a giant Greek statue around the family home. A niece who had taken over Canavesi’s tobacco shop replied: “If there had been an expensive statue in my family, I wouldn’t be working here now, I’d be home with my children.” Canavesi’s younger brother, Ivo, who ran a women’s handbag business from his home down the mountain from Sagno, said he knew nothing about such a statue. “Who knows?” he said with a chuckle. “Maybe it was in the cellar, and no one spoke about it.”
By then, Jason and I were crossing paths with a law firm the Getty had hired to probe its antiquities acquisitions. Private investigators working for the firm managed to secure a meeting with Canavesi. He told them his father had bought the statue while working in a Paris watch factory, then carted it back in pieces to Switzerland, where they wound up in a basement under Canavesi’s shop. Then he showed the investigators something he had apparently shared with no previous inquisitor.
He pulled out 20 photographs of the goddess in a state of disassembly: the marble feet covered in dirt, one of them configured from pieces, on top of a wooden pallet. The limestone torso lay on a warehouse floor. A close-up showed a dirt-encrusted face. Most telling was a picture of some 30 pieces of the statue, scattered over sand and the edges of a plastic sheet.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









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