The Art Newspaper - The District Attorney of New York has filed a motion with the States Supreme Court asking for the return to Iran of an ancient limestone relief which it seized from a London antiquities dealer last October.
The work in question, an eight-inch bas-relief of a Persian soldier holding a shield and spear, dates from the fifth century BC and was stolen from Persepolis, the ancient ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire, in 1935, the motion states.
It was confiscated by the district attorneys office from the stand of Rupert Wace at the Tefaf New York art fair last autumn.
In a statement issued following the seizure, Wace said he bought the work from AXA Art Insurance which had, in turn, acquired it legally from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts where it had been on display or in storage since 1951.
But in the motion filed to the Supreme Court on 24 May, the assistant district attorney Matthew Bogdanos accuses Wace and his partner in the purchase, the London dealer Sam Fogg, of failing to make reasonable inquiry into the objects provenance before buying it. The only steps they took were to ask the Canadian museum for its file on the object and to obtain a certificate from the Art Loss Register stating that the relief was not listed as stolen on the organisations database, the motion states.
Based on the absence of reasonable inquiry by Wace and Fogg, a jury may infer that both or either of [them] knew that the Persian Guard Relief was stolen, Bogdanos writes. He adds that he can not rule out criminal charges in connection with the dealers possession of the object but that this is not to suggest that an indictment is in the offing.
What Bogdanos fails to mention is that before purchasing the relief Wace consulted with two experts in Middle Eastern archaeology and also did additional research on the objects provenance, the dealers lawyer, Pierre Valentin of the firm Constantine Cannon, tells The Art Newspaper. Bogdanos did not speak with Wace or Fogg directly but instead reconstructed the events leading up to their purchase of the relief from documents released by the dealers when they were issued with a subpoena following the antiquitys seizure, Valentin says. This subpoena did not specifically ask for documentation relating to due diligence enquiries made by Wace or Fogg into the objects provenance before buying it. The District Attorneys office did not respond to our enquiries over the weekend.
Meanwhile, a court in Canada is also considering the ownership of the Persian relief in a separate legal process initiated by AXA Art Insurance after Wace asked the firm to reimburse him for the purchase of the antiquity following its seizure (AXA declined to do this; the firm did not respond to our enquiries). The insurance company is seeking to assert that it, and not Iran, had title to the antiquity after it took possession of it from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and that it was therefore within its rights to sell it to Wace.
Bogdanos accuses Wace and Fogg of seeking to resolve the dispute in Canada because the country is a safe-haven jurisdiction that permits stolen works of art to be laundered with the passage of time. But Wace and Fogg are not parties to AXAs case and have nothing to do with the Canadian proceedings, Waces lawyer says.
Despite the action in Canada, Bogdanos urges the New York Supreme Court to assert its own right to resolve the dispute. New York is the only jurisdiction and this court the only venue to adjudicate the resolution of the stolen property in this criminal case, he writes, adding that New York state has the same overriding interest in the Persian Guard Relief that it has in all antiquities sold through New Yorks robust art marketnamely that the market be honest and law abiding.
Stolen property
The Persian bas-relief at the centre of the dispute was apparently stolen from Persepolis, a Unesco world heritage site, in 1935. At the time, the site was being excavated by archaeologists from the Oriental Institute in Chicago under an arrangement known as partage, whereby foreign organisations, usually universities, are given permission to excavate sites that host nations do not have the resources to excavate themselves.
The Oriental Institute has extensive documentation relating to its excavations of Persepolis and Wace and Fogg should have consulted its archives in Chicago, Bogdanos states in his motion. If they had, they would have found photographs of the bas-relief in situ as well as photographs of the same location, a staircase leading up to a palace, taken in 1935, which show the work missing from the wall, suggesting that by that date it had been stolen. The theft, which was reported to Tehran and also referred to in letters from the Oriental Institutes archaeological team at Persepolis, took place after Iran passed a patrimony law in 1930 which made the export of archaeological material without a government licence illegal.
Fifteen years after it disappeared from Persepolis, the relief was in the possession of the New York-based dealer Paul Mallon who offered it to the Canadian collector F. Cleveland Morgan. Morgan purchased it for just over $1,000 and then donated it to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts in 1951. It remained there for six decades until it was stolen in 2011. Following the theft, the museum, whose collection is insured by AXA, accepted an insurance payment of $1.18m Canadian dollars ($910,000) from the firm.
In 2014, the relief was recovered from a Canadian collector but the Montreal museum opted to keep the insurance payout and AXA took possession of the work. Wace then bought it from the insurance firm. Before he did so, he sought additional information on the antiquity from two experts: Michael D. Roaf, professor emeritus at the Institute of Near Eastern Archaeology in Munich and Hilary Gopnik, senior lecturer of Ancient Near Eastern Studies at Emory College in Atlanta, his lawyers say. Neither expert expressed a concern that the piece could have been stolen. Gopnik directed Wace to the Oriental Institutes website which includes hundreds of photographs of the Persepolis excavation but does not include images of the relief in question. Nor does the website indicate that additional images of the excavations are kept in the institutes archives in Chicago.
When contacted by The Art Newspaper, Gopnik did not immediately respond and Roaf says he had no recollection of corresponding with Wace. We sent him the specific time and dates of his email exchanges with the dealers office in January 2016 and he did not comment further.
Wace also sent a researcher to investigate the archives of the dealer Paul Mallon in Paris to seek information on the objects provenance.
On the market
After the relief had been shipped to Wace and Fogg in London in July 2016, Fogg sought further information about the antiquity from Lindsay Allen, a lecturer in Greek and Near Eastern history at Kings College, London. She examined the work in person and told the dealer that she had no doubt it had been stolen from Persepolis, the motion states. Even after Dr Allens warning, Wace and Fogg continued their now-knowing possession of stolen property and offered the Persian Guard Relief for sale, Bogdanos writes in his motion.
However, in a footnote to his motion, Bogdanos admits that, in fact, Allen considers all objects removed from source countries to be stolen, regardless of the circumstances of their removal. She told Fogg that any fragments taken from Persepolis were stolen, regardless of whether they were removed before or after 1930, the year when Irans patrimony law made it illegal to export archaeological material without a government licence, the footnote states.
Speaking to The Art Newspaper, Sam Fogg says that he asked Dr Allen what she meant by stolen. She said she believed that regardless of when objects were removed from sites or whether they were purchased or gifted in the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries, they should all be considered stolen. She was unable to say whether this relief left Persepolis in this century. She said it might be possible to find this information and I asked her to do this for us but when she did find out, she didnt tell us. Instead, after researching the relief in the archives of the Oriental Institute in Chicago, Dr Allen passed the information to the New York District Attorneys office, Bogdanoss motion states. Allen declined to comment.
The dealers exhibited the antiquity at Frieze Masters in London in October 2016 (where it was on offer for 2.2m, the motion states), then again at Tefaf Maastricht in March 2017 and, finally, at Tefaf New York in October 2017.
In a statement to The Art Newspaper, Pierre Valentin says: the relief had been on display in a public museum for over 60 years, had been heavily publicised in 2011 when it was stolen, and then again in 2014 when it was recovered. Rupert Wace acquired the piece from his own insurer, a regulated entity who in turn had acquired it from a world renowned museum and he and his partner Sam Fogg still carried out theirown due diligence. Rupert Wacecontacted pre-eminentuniversity scholars who had carried out research into Persepolis, checked the relevant art loss databases and instructed a researcher to search for information in the Mallon archives for provenance prior to 1950 when Mallon sold the relief. This was in addition to having requested the museums own file, and having been told by AXAthat there was no other provenance information. It is always possible to do more, but when considering what is reasonable due diligence, it is clear that Rupert Wace and Sam Foggwent beyondwhat would be expected of a reasonable person in thecircumstances.