Norton Simon Museum to return contested ancient statue to Cambodia
Norton Simon Museum to return ancient statue to Cambodia as a 'gift'
Cambodia plans an exhibition of contested statues being returned to the country
An ancient statue heading back to Cambodia has been on display at Norton Simon since 1976
The
Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena announced that it will return an
ancient statue acquired nearly 40 years ago to Cambodia, after talks
with government officials seeking the repatriation of antiquities it
believes were looted from ancient sites.
Museum officials said
Tuesday that the 10th century sandstone statue known variously as the
"Temple Wrestler" or "Bhima" will be returned to Cambodia as "a gift."
The ancient "Bhima" is the twin of another contested statue that is also being returned to Cambodia. The "Duryodhana" was the subject of a complex legal fight that involved the auction house Sotheby's, which had been planning to sell the work.
The planned sale was called off and an agreement was reached in December for the "Duryodhana" to be returned.
The twin statues are believed to have been taken from the temple complex at Koh Ker, an archaeological site in the northern part of the country. They are expected to form a centerpiece display in a special exhibition at the Cambodian National Museum.
Details of the transfer will be announced at a later date.
In agreeing to return the "Bhima," the Norton Simon "has made the right decision," said Tess Davis, a cultural heritage attorney and affiliate researcher at the University of Glasgow in Scotland, who has fought for the return of looted antiquities from Asia. "These statues were all plundered from Cambodia. They are war loot. They are stolen property."
Cambodia secured the return of two other Koh Ker works that were in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
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