Bank Of Baku

Amsterdam museum uncertain where to send back exhibits from Crimean museums

Amsterdam museum uncertain where to send back exhibits from Crimean museums
# 27 March 2014 02:15 (UTC +04:00)

Baku-APA.  Allard Pierson Museum, which is a subsidiary of Amsterdam University exhibiting Mediterranean antiquities and archeological finds, has not taken a decision yet on where to send back exhibits from the ‘Crimea: Gold and Secrets of the Black Sea’ collection, Yasha Lange, an official spokeswoman for the museum told Itar-Tass Wednesday, APA reports quoting ITAR-TASS.

 

 

“The exhibition that started in February includes exhibits loaned by five Ukrainian museums, four of which are located in Crimea,” she said. “Agreement on these exhibits was signed before the political coup in Ukraine” and Crimea’s transition to the Russian jurisdiction.

“That’s why it’s extremely important for the Allard Pierson Museum to exercise caution in this situation,” Lange said.

 

 

“The exhibits will remain in the Netherlands through to the end of the display, that is, until the end of August, after which they will be consigned to their legitimate owners,” she said.

“Considering the knottiness of the problem, including the problem of who these exhibits should be returned to and how, the situation is now being scrutinized by Amsterdam University’s legal advisors and we’ve also asked the Dutch Foreign Ministry for recommendations,” Lange said.

The exhibition ‘Crimea: Gold and Secrets of the Black Sea’ displays the results of archeological excavations made in Crimea, including gold jewelry and treasures, weaponry, and household utensils that tell the visitors about the rich history of the Crimean Peninsula.

 

 

The cost of these antiquities is believed to reach several hundred thousand U.S. dollars.

The problem around the Crimean exhibits loaned to the Amsterdam museum was highlighted on Tuesday by Dr. Mikhail Piotrovsky, the Director General of the State Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, who said at a news conference he was concerned by the fate of the collection of Scythian gold from the museums of Kerch, an ancient city in the east of Crimea.

The problem of where the collection is due to return upon the end of the exhibition - to Crimea or to Ukraine - or whether it will stay back in Europe forever is turning into a cultural dilemma, Dr. Piotrovsky said.

 

 

A number of mass media misinterpreted his words later as an indication of claims to the ownership of the collection allegedly made by the State Hermitage Museum.

“In the light of reports in a number of mass media on the alleged willingness of Russians museum directorates to take hold of the Crimean arts values that are currently exhibited in Europe, the State Hermitage Museum would like to make it clear that the concern the Association of Russian Museums and the Hermitage experts have expressed over the destiny of treasures from the Crimean museums does not mean in any way that either the State Hermitage Museum or any other Russian museums have claims to the Crimean museum collections,” the Hermitage museum directorate said in a special statement Wednesday.

 

 

“Dr. Piotrovsky’s words called for a professional, ethical and legal discussion of the current situation, which is part of a problem of security and integrity of the treasures loaned for exhibitions,” it said. “From the ethical grounds, the exhibits should return to the museums where they have been kept for hundreds of years but from the legal angle of view, they may belong to the museum fund of the country, from the territory of which they were loaned.

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