Asian Art Inquiry Will Be `Headache' for All Museums, Yazzy's at www.williamverdult.com
Saturday, January 26, 2008 at 09:01AM
According to Bloomberg a U.S. investigation into imports and donations of Southeast Asian art in California will be a ``headache'' for all U.S. museums, a museum director said.
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art was searched yesterday by federal agents investigating the origins of Southeast Asian objects given by dealers Jonathan and Cari Markell to the museum's collections. The museum, known as Lacma, and other California museums were shown search warrants by the federal government, which is looking into how certain collectors imported, purchased or donated Southeast Asian art, the museum said in a statement.
``After these raids, provenance research into Southeast Asian art is going to become a big headache for museums,'' said Franklin Robinson, director of Cornell University's Herbert F. Johnson Museum in Ithaca, New York.
U.S. museums have been fielding a growing number of claims from Italy and Greece that some art in the museums' collections is illegitimately owned. A vase called the Euphronios krater was sent back to Italy last week by New York's Metropolitan Museum, which bought it in 1972 for $1 million. Now directors and trustees face new challenges.
``We at the Cornell museum have been focusing on Greek and Roman antiquities and Chinese art,'' Robinson said in an interview. ``Going forward, we'll have to start paying as much attention to our Asian galleries.''
Lacma said it allowed the U.S. agents access yesterday to staff and records in the registrar's office, the development office and the Indian and Southeast Asian Art department, providing registrar's and donor files to the authorities.
Museum Cooperation
``Lacma will continue to look into the records associated with these objects and share findings with the public,'' Michael Govan, the museum's director, said in the statement.
The Internal Revenue Service, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement office, the National Park Service and other enforcement agencies are involved in the inquiry, according to an affidavit for a warrant filed by an IRS criminal investigator who has been scrutinizing the Markells since September 2003.
Customs officials that month intercepted a cargo shipment from Thailand on its way to a smuggler and the Markells, according to the affidavit, filed in U.S. District Court in California.
Undercover Agent
An undercover agent from the Park Service, posing as a collector, began dealing with the Markells, who sold the agent stolen Thai artifacts and illegally imported Burmese antiquities, also showing the agent objects stolen from China, according to the filing.
The dealers helped the agent to claim fraudulent charitable tax deductions by donating artifacts to museums, also providing fraudulent appraisals of the value of the objects, the filing said.
The affidavit asked the court for permission to search the Markells' gallery, green Dodge Grand Caravan and computers located at the gallery, their residence and Lacma.
Calls to the Markell residence and the Silk Roads Gallery in Los Angeles, which is owned by the Markells, according to the gallery Web site, weren't immediately returned.
Donors in the alleged scheme, which may have lasted 10 years, may have avoided attention from tax officials by contributing objects valued at less than $5,000, the Los Angeles Times reported.
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