In June 2022 I was with 16 others in Sicily on a tour I had organized in conjunction with Sicily Tour, an excellent travel company in Siracusa. I had requested that we visit Morgantina, an archeological site not far from the more famous Roman villa of Casale near the town of Piazza Armerina. I didn't expect that we would first visit the small museum in Aidone, near Morgantina, which displays artifacts excavated from the site. After passing an array of huge urns, we came to a gorgeous terracotta head of Hades, which the guide explained had been returned to the museum from the Getty in Los Angeles. The head was illegally excavated in the 1970s, sold by Robyn Symes, a London antiquities dealer (now known to have traded in illegally excavated and exported antiquities) to Maurice Templesmann, who sold it to the Getty in 1985. Proof that it came from Morgantina came when a bit of the blue beard was found in the San Francesco Bisconti section of the Morgantina archeological site. Morgantina was dedicated to the goddess Demeter and Demeter, her daughter Persephone and her daughter's abductor Hades were depicted there in several versions. I believe this label was the first one I have ever seen in a museum that states that the object had been illegally excavated and subsequently acquired by a museum.
Wandering farther through the museum, I found a small group of spectacular silver vessels, the Morgantina silver, which the Metropolitan Museum purchased in 1981 or 1982 from Robert Hecht, another dealer who was charged with illegal trafficking in Italy. The Met fought to keep the silver for decades, finally agreeing to return it in 2011.
It's interesting to note the changes in value as looted items moved through the market. This route of the Morgantina silver is from Lucy Thomas, Morgantina Silver, on the Trafficking Culture website:
“The route was as follows: Vincenzo Bossi and Filippo Baviera, tombaroli in Enna, sold the silver for 110 million lire ($27,000) to Orazio Di Simone, a Sicilian middleman based in Lugano in Switzerland, who sold it for $875,000 to Robert Hecht, who sold the silver to the Metropolitan Museum for $3 million[1].”
A major figure in the fight to retrieve artifacts from Morgantina has been Malcolm Bell, director of the excavations at Morgantina for many years and it was writings by him that inspired me to want to visit Morgantina in the first place.
Triglyphs and metopes from Temple C, Selinunte, ca. 550 BC |
Triglyphs and metopes from Temple E, Selinunte, 460-450 BC |
Having just been at Selinunte, I could feel where these objects might have been and even have a sense of them as part of the ancient culture of the place. I realized that the Parthenon marble sculptures would have a similar power if they were seen in sunny Athens, near their original home, as opposed to the British Museum, in often cloudy and grey London. In December 2022 I was in London and looked at them there. I believe I would have a better chance of understanding where they were placed and how they functioned if they were closer to their original site.
detail, Temple E metope, depicting Artemis's dogs attacking Actaeon in punishment for having seen Artemis naked. Note that her head, arms and feet are marble and the rest is limestone. 460-450 BC |