Reading Archives

With this blog, I am planning to offer, as regularly as possible, critical observations on the scholarly and popular literature analyzing the nature of archives or contributing to our understanding of archives in society. I hope this blog will be of assistance to anyone, especially faculty and graduate students, interested in understanding archives and their importance to society.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Unholy Business

Over the past two years, I have commented on a number of books about the looting of antiquities and the ethical and legal challenges and troubles in the marketplace for art, including Peter Watson, The Medici Conspiracy: The Illicit Journey of Looted Antiquities, from Italy’s Tomb Raiders to the World’s Greatest Museums (New York: Public Affairs, 2006); Lawrence Rothfield, ed., Antiquities Under Siege: Cultural Heritage Protection After the Iraq War (Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press, 2008); Michael J. Bazyler and Roger P. Alford, eds., Holocaust Restitution: Perspectives on the Litigation and Its Legacy (New York: New York University Press, 2006); Cynthia Saltzman, Old Masters, New World: America’s Raid on Europe’s Great Pictures 1880-World War I (New York: Viking, 2008); James Cuno, Who Owns Antiquity? Museums and the Battle Over Our Ancient Heritage (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008); Don Thompson, The $12 Million Stuffed Shark: The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008); and Christopher Hitchens, The Parthenon Marbles: The Case for Reunification (London: Verso, 2008). My hope in reading such studies is to, first, learn what role archives and records (and the professionals who manage them) play in such situations, and, second, what archivists can learn about the implications of these cases on their own collections and collecting. Generally, we don’t learn a lot about the roles of archives and archivists, but we certainly can gain an understanding about how and why archival documents are valued, traded, and acquired.

Nina Burleigh, Unholy Business: A True Tale of Faith, Greed, and Forgery in the Holy Land (New York: Smithsonian Books, 2008) is a lively account of the forged James Ossuary, purported to be the first direct physical evidence of Jesus Christ (James being the brother of Jesus). Burleigh, in analyzing this case, reveals the underbelly of the market in ancient relics, the role of religion and nationalism in this market, and, of course, provides another study in the age-old art of forgery and the reasons why forgery seems ever to be with us. She ends the book with this assessment of the nature of forgery: “The forger or forgers had more personal motives than national pride or blind faith. Greed was part of it, surely, but something else was at work too. Human life is finite, while history is, if not eternal, relatively so. To create bits of the ancient past is to become, perhaps, something more than mortal. For some of those who can, it might be impossible to resist the temptation to sneak a tiny yet indelible fingerprint onto the vast canvas of yesteryear, and forge a personal link with an ancient temple priest or pharaoh, before our short time on earth comes to an end” (p. 256). Other studies of forgery have come to similar conclusions about its motivations.



There isn’t much in the book about the role of archives or records, although occasionally we catch a glimpse of how such evidence is useful. A description of the role of an expert in ancient Semitic epigraphy reveals her reliance on her own diaries: “Ada is the sort of woman who keeps detailed records of her days in small annual diaries. At the end of each year, she tucks them – filled with her tiny Hebrew script, tied with a white ribbon – into a cardboard box, and these boxes are now the piled-up story of her years. Opening a box, she easily found the diaries she needed, because they bristled with yellow Post-it notes, marking the pages she had referred to during interviews with the police and then at the court. She proceeded to leaf through each page, reading from right to left, entries highlighted with pink highlighter” (p. 4). There are allusions to the gathering of other evidence, comparisons of ancient texts and the materials used in the creation of ancient sources, and so forth. However, it is in such references to the Semitic expert’s diaries that we see the manner in which records are created and used even by those who are both fabricating antiquities and assessing their veracity.

While Burleigh examines in detail one case about how the market for antiquities creates the opportunities for forgers to operate, Sharon Waxman, Loot: The Battle Over Stolen Treasures of the Ancient World (New York: Times Books, 2008) provides a sweeping view of the race to acquire objects extracted illegally from archaeological sites and stolen from museums and private collections. Waxman asserts right from the start that this illicit trade is the result of a complex set of issues regarding national identities. While in the past European colonizers carried off artworks and archaeological artifacts to demonstrate their power or to develop theories of cultural domination, today “once-colonized nations seek to stand on their own, the countries once denuded of their past seek to assert their independent identities through the objects that tie them to it. The demand for restitution is a way to reclaim history, to assert a moral imperative over those who were once overlords. Those countries still in the shadow of more powerful empires seek to claim the symbols of antiquity and colonialism to burnish their own national mythmaking” (p. 4).



Waxman’s book is a complete dialogue about the variety of perspectives about the role of museums, the restitution of art and archaeological materials, the laws and nature of the marketplace influencing what happens with these ancient treasures, and the sometimes bizarre stories and personalities that emerge in these debates. She ranges over cases in Egypt, France, Greece, Turkey, Italy, England, and the United States, and, along the way, Waxman has some critical things to say about the role of museums and their curators and benefactors in creating an environment where the international looting is encouraged. Some of the evidence about the difficulties in the antiquities trade concerns the reluctance of both cultural institutions and governments to open their records that ought to document the provenance of the acquisition of the artifacts. Waxman states, “There is no simple way to track the source of these acquisitions or tally their provenances, no database for the public to consult. In the age of computers, this seems a strange lapse of information and one that denies the public the benefit of transparency” (p. 220).

Contemporary archivists who have become well versed in the role of power in the creation of records and the establishment and maintenance of archives will find it interesting to read about the role of power in the museum world in Waxman’s book. “So while humanism may indeed have motivated the founding notion of the museum,” Waxman reflects, “there were other forces at play in the eighteenth century, namely a notion of culture that was not so much universalist as imperialist. In this view, the creation of Western museums like the British Museum – whatever the official philosophy – was actually informed by power, by empires that felt entitled to occupy distant lands and claim their cultural patrimony along with their natural resources, to take the symbols of ancient civilizations from elsewhere and fill their own museums with trophies that confirmed their power in the world” (p. 268). The point she makes is that in the present debates about the ownership, display, and research of the remains of the ancient world, it is difficult to separate the contemporary roles of the museums from their origins. Waxman urges the museums to be up front about their past activities: “The history of plunder and appropriation must be acknowledged and aired for the public to understand the true origins of these great works of antiquity. No museum can legitimately claim to be a custodian of history if it ignores the history of its own objects for reasons of personal convenience” (p. 373). Such sentiments apply equally to archives today as museums.

2 Comments:

At 2:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"The point she makes is that in the present debates about the ownership, display, and research of the remains of the ancient world, it is difficult to separate the contemporary roles of the museums from their origins. Waxman urges the museums to be up front about their past activities: “The history of plunder and appropriation must be acknowledged and aired for the public to understand the true origins of these great works of antiquity. No museum can legitimately claim to be a custodian of history if it ignores the history of its own objects for reasons of personal convenience” (p. 373). Such sentiments apply equally to archives today as museums. "

Very often there is this image and need for drama about museums and "loot", for publication and popular mini-series. However, there needs to be some discussion also not about the fact that leading museums keep accession records long before they ever created online catalogs or card catalogs which still do not contain such levels of "transparency" in business transactions to protect ownership rights of the museums as well. You can be assured though that leading museums do maintain long runs of auction catalogs for the same purpose of their in house accession records that are not found in the archives but with the depts. themselves and are still added to by hand.

Most leading museums maintain long runs of old auction catalogs for these purposes and are kept in the museum general reference collections, very often annotated in pencil with the corresponding local accession numbers for this cross reference and history of provenance.

Take a look at what's available at the NY Public Library collections in terms of back records of auction records/sales some going back to the 18th century. Some collections may discard these auction catalogs, however you can be sure leading museums maintain them for such reasons. It's called also "collection management" in museum libraries today. Archives and libraries must choose carefully esp these days what their professional priorities are--less staff = less accurate management of collections? or maintain the standard required for the organization. Most opt for do less simply because they feel they have no other option or adequate leadership saying otherwise.

http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/art/artarc/auction/auctions.html

Miriam & Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs
Art & Architecture Collection

AUCTION SALES INDEXES:
Books, CD-ROM's and On-Line Services

With a Selected List of Sotheby's & Christie's Catalogs at the New York Public Library

The following is a guide to auction sale indexes, price guides and catalogs. Since individual auction houses do not issue their own indexes, the use of these compilations provides the best approach to finding sale information. Each index provides different coverage in terms of dates, contents and scope.

also a commonly used database
SCIPIO (Sales Catalogs Index Project Input Online)
[MAZ 88-2402]
Dates Covered: 1981 to 1985

Contents:

Paintings
Prints
Sculpture
Ceramics
Decorative Arts
Furniture
Drawings
Jewelry
Instruments
Photographs
Silver
Watercolors
Rugs
Arms & Armour
Notes: Contains holdings of auction catalogs at: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art, and supplemented by Library of the Getty Center and the National Gallery of Art Library. Searchable by date of sale, auction house, phrase or word, title, phrase or word, place of sale, collector/seller.

 
At 3:16 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Over the past two years, I have commented on a number of books about the looting of antiquities and the ethical and legal challenges and troubles in the marketplace for art,..."

"My hope in reading such studies is to, first, learn what role archives and records (and the professionals who manage them) play in such situations, and, second, what archivists can learn about the implications of these cases on their own collections and collecting. Generally, we don’t learn a lot about the roles of archives and archivists, but we certainly can gain an understanding about how and why archival documents are valued, traded, and acquired."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I believe that archivists and librarians do have a role in this, not all archivists just sit behind a desk anymore--but are actively involved in creating access to collections themselves as well--leading archivists today create records to collections as well, and curators add more information to special types of such collections--since the average student or volunteer would not be typically knowledgeable and held responsible enough to do so.

I wanted to provide a link to share as an example of what many museums have been doing for the last 5 years or more--increasingly you will see acquisitions information via online access --here is an excellent collection from the Cleveland Museum of Art website at : http://www.clemusart.com/explore/

ex: select an engraving image to look at the record information more

what does it tell us - accession information with a year - and acquisitions information.


This is just one example of whats been happening --keep in mind also that while this may seem "new" by being included online--this information was usually readily available at the museums as well in curatorial depts. These days, unless something does not exist online, some people tend to imagine it just never "existed". This is a misconception.

While some of these issues are not always "out front", most museums do take them very seriously and consider it very much so not only part of the top tier staff responsibility, but every staff members responsibility as well, down to the gallery attendants and other volunteers working under the same organization and yes--held in public trust. Many leading museums were actually, the *first to establish American museum professional standards*, something that other museums around the world later learned from as well.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home