ppp Sat, 30 January 2016
Audrey Wilson
| A temporary exhibition of Koh Ker pieces was opened at the National Museum in 2014. Heng Chivoan |
Cambodia
is set to reclaim the last of the statues looted from the Koh Ker
complex known to be kept in public collections, with a US museum
agreeing to relinquish the piece from its permanent collection.
The
statue of the warrior god Rama has been held by the Denver Art Museum
for nearly 30 years. However, museum representatives said this week that
the artefact will soon make its return to Cambodia, though an official
agreement has not yet been reached.
The Rama torso – missing its head and its feet – remained on display in the museum’s Asian art gallery until last month.
“The
Denver Art Museum is currently in the process of returning the 10th
century Khmer sandstone sculpture to the Kingdom of Cambodia,” Christoph
Heinrich, the museum’s director, wrote in an email to Post Weekend.
“During
the course of research into works in the Museum’s collection and
following outreach to our colleagues in Cambodia, the DAM became aware
of new facts related to the piece’s provenance that were not available
to the museum when the object was acquired in 1986.”
Repatriations
of relics from the remote Preah Vihear province complex’s Prasat Chen
temple first captured international attention three years ago, following
an archaeological dig that uncovered a number of empty pedestals.
The
Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2013 volunteered to return two statues
from the temple’s western gopuram. Later that year – and following a
court dispute – Sotheby’s, Christie’s and the Norton Simon Museum
announced that they would repatriate their pieces.
Last
May, the Cleveland Museum returned its figure of the monkey god
Hanuman, from the temple’s eastern side – part of a representation of
the Hindu epic Ramayana. The US museum had previously insisted that the
statue did
not come from Prasat Chen.
Three
statues remain unaccounted for, likely in private collections. An
official announcement from both the Denver Art Museum and Cambodia was
set “for the near future”, according to a museum spokesperson.
National
Museum director Kong Vireak said a complete memorandum of understanding
had not yet been reached between the US museum, the National Museum and
the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts. He declined further comment.
Thai
Norak Sathya, secretary of state for the c, also confirmed that the
statue would make its return, but could not provide an exact date.
If repatriated, the Rama torso could join its counterparts in the Koh Ker room at the National Museum.
The
Cambodian government has focused on the return of the Koh Ker statues
because it was a set that could be made whole, said Tess Davis, a
researcher at the University of Glasgow and an antiquities lawyer
involved in the 2013 court case. “Those are all pieces that we all know
were stolen contrary to law in the civil war,” she said.
Davis
pointed out that as late as the 1960s, significant Khmer art
collections did not exist beyond Cambodia and France. Today, museums
across the US have artefacts on display. “For the most part, their
pieces only appeared on the market in the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s. And how
do you think they reached the market, many missing their feet and any
paperwork?” she said.
Additional reporting by Vandy Muong.
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