Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Thailand welcomes the return of trafficked antiquities from New York's Metropolitan Museum !

Thailand welcomes the return of trafficked antiquities from New York's Metropolitan Museum

Time:2024-05-22 09:41:21 source:Global Grounds news portal

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand’s National Museum hosted a welcome-home ceremony Tuesday for two ancient statues that were illegally trafficked from Thailand by a British collector of antiquities and were returned from the collection of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The objects -- a tall bronze figure called the “Standing Shiva” or the “Golden Boy” and a smaller sculpture called “Kneeling Female” -- are thought to be around 1,000 years old.

This most recent repatriation of artwork comes as many museums in the U.S. and Europe reckon with collections that contain objects looted from Asia, Africa and other places during centuries of colonialism or in times of upheaval.

The Metropolitan Museum had announced last December that it would return more than a dozen artifacts to Thailand and Cambodia after they were linked to the late Douglas Latchford, an art dealer and collector accused of running a huge antiquities trafficking network out of Southeast Asia.

Related information
  • Seoul AI summit opens with companies including Google, Meta, OpenAI pledging to develop AI safely
  • China honors promise to ensure smooth running of Chengdu Universiade: Xi
  • Reims and Rennes drop points in the French league chase for a European place
  • Overseas experts hail Xi's notion of building modern Chinese civilization
  • Microsoft's AI chatbot will remember everything you do on a PC
  • Gang violence takes toll on Haiti health facilities: UN
  • Capitals' Nick Jensen is conscious and alert after being stretchered off the ice
  • IOM assists in voluntary return of 133 Pakistanis from Libya
Recommended content
  • UN maritime tribunal says countries are legally required to reduce greenhouse gas pollution
  • Group seeking to recall Florida city's mayor says it has enough signatures to advance
  • For Boston Marathon's last 100 years, it all starts in Hopkinton
  • India's top court refuses to hold appointment of election commissioners
  • Protesters against war in Gaza interrupt Blinken repeatedly in the Senate
  • Interview: U.S. discriminatory subsidies disrupt NEV supply chain: expert