Metropolitan Museum of Art set to return stolen sculptures to Cambodia

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Thirteen stolen Khmer artworks that have been in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art will be returned to Cambodia, federal prosecutors said Friday.

โ€œAll of the pieces being returned today were tied directly to illicit trafficking, and specifically to a man named Douglas Latchford โ€” a collector and dealer [whom] my office charged in 2019 for running a vast antiquities trafficking network out of Southeast Asia,โ€ U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Damian Williams said in a statement.

Latchford, a British art collector, died in 2020, not long after he was charged with trafficking in stolen antiquities. After his death, his daughter donated all the Khmer artworks she had inherited from him to the Cambodian government.

In a statement, the museum said that in addition to the 13 artworks announced by Williams, it would also return an additional sculpture to Cambodia and two to Thailand, for a total of 16 artworks.

The museum also announced that some of the Hindu and Buddhist religious sculptures in question would remain on view temporarily until they were repatriated.

The artworks were made between the ninth and 14th centuries. Met officials โ€œproactivelyโ€ reached out to law enforcement and the Cambodian government after Latchford was indicted, according to the museum.

โ€œThe Met has been diligently working with Cambodia and the U.S. attorneyโ€™s office for years to resolve questions regarding these works of art, and new information that arose from this process made it clear that we should initiate the return of this group of sculptures,โ€ said Max Hollein, the museumโ€™s director and CEO, in a statement posted on the Metโ€™s website.

The museum has beefed up its provenance research in the past year, amid intensifying criticism from the art world and the international press about potentially looted artworks. But some experts say the museum continues to drag its feet in identifying and returning those works.

โ€œThe Met has been very…

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