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 10:14:36 source:World Wave 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
  • Australia's deputy prime minister pledges support to Solomon Islands during visit to Honiara
  • Riley's RBI single in 10th lifts Braves to 4
  • Have you heard the one about Trump? Biden tries humor on the campaign trail
  • Seeking engagement and purpose, corporate employees turn to workplace volunteering
  • How major US stock indexes fared Monday, 5/20/2024
  • Body of climber recovered after 1,000
  • Massachusetts police bust burglary ring that stole $4 million in jewels over six years
  • Oklahoma tornadoes kill 4; state of emergency issued amid damage
Recommended content
  • Juneteenth proclaimed state holiday again in Alabama, after bill to make it permanent falters
  • Dan Rather returns to CBS News after a bitter departure 18 years ago
  • South Africa marks 30 years since apartheid ended
  • Pope visits Venice to speak to the artists and inmates behind the Biennale's must
  • Thailand welcomes the return of trafficked antiquities from New York's Metropolitan Museum
  • Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla says playoff basketball doesn't change much from regular season