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The Getty Museum returns to Italy an exceptional Orpheus and the Sirens, one of its jewels

2022-08-12T10:57:20.476Z


This life-size ensemble, a centerpiece of the Los Angeles museum, had been looted in southern Italy. He will return to Rome in September.


The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles will return to Italy, their country of origin, the ancient terracotta sculptures forming the exceptional ensemble

Orpheus and the Sirens

.

Representing the mythological hero practically life-size, the group is one of the finest pieces in the museum, where it has been exhibited for more than forty years.

Recent research proves that several of the exhibits, including the Orpheus, have been stolen or come from illegal excavations.

"Through information provided by

Matthew Bogdanos 

and the Manhattan District Attorney's Office Antiquities Trafficking Unit indicating the illegal excavation of

Orpheus and the Sirens,

we have determined that these items should be returned,"

a said Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum, in a statement reported by the

Los Angeles Times

.

According to the Getty, the group of figures, dating from around 350 to 300 BCE, is likely to have once decorated a tomb.

"Originally painted in bright colors, this large-scale sculptural ensemble is an outstanding example of the terracotta production characteristic of the Greek colonies in southern Italy,"

the artwork's dossier mentions.

Orpheus and the Sirens

, which represents the hero with the lyre seated with two sirens, was purchased by J. Paul Getty in 1976 from Banque Leu, a Swiss institution that has since disappeared.

The set would have been acquired on the recommendations of Jiri Frel, an archaeologist, at the time curator of antiquities of the institution.

For his merit, he transformed the museum into a recognized center of Greek culture and Roman art.

But, Jiri Frel resigned in 1986 after revelations proving that he had set up tax manipulations in order to expand the museum's collection.

Orpheus and the Sirens

is the main work concerned by the ongoing restitutions to have been exhibited to the public in recent years.

Since the museum publicly announced on August 11 the return of the looted objects to Italy, the sculpture has been removed from view by visitors.

The group, along with four other objects, will be sent to Rome from September.

The restitution thus includes three pieces acquired by J. Paul Getty in the 1970s and one in the 1990s: a colossal marble head of a 2nd century deity, a 2nd century stone mold for casting pendants and a painting oil painting from 1881 by Camillo Miola titled

The Oracle

entered the collections about fifty years ago.

The last is an Etruscan bronze thymiaterion from the 4th century BCE, purchased in 1996.

The Getty has returned dozens of items to Italy in recent years, but the Getty's management has resisted further requests.

Despite a 2018 decision from Italy's highest court, for example, he must return a bronze statue of a young Victory, but the museum is still contesting this decision and claiming its rightful ownership.

In March, an archaeologist also proved that parts of a mosaic on display at the American museum had passed into the hands of a known antiquities trafficker.

But the museum has not commented on these latest findings.

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2022-08-12

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