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A Year in Provenance

~ Learning to protect art and antiquities

A Year in Provenance

Tag Archives: antiquities

The Value of Unprovenanced Antiquities

15 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by markhamcaerus in The Basics

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art market, artefact, artifact, collecting, cultural preservation, excavation, looting, provenance, research, value

“Regarding the issue of unprovenanced antiquities: surely even without substantiated provenance, there is still some factual knowledge to be derived– the approximate age of the item, for instance, and its general geographic origin? As a layperson in this area, I understand the additional value of confirmed provenance, but should that also mean that an item lacking provenance has no value at all?”

This was a great question in response to my last post, discussing a magazine editorial on scholarship, ethics, and artefacts lacking in proper archaeological provenance. (An unprovenanced artefact is one with an incomplete or unscientific record of its origin). The one-sentence answer is yes, there is always something to be gained from any existing piece. The more complete, complex answer has to do with the importance of knowledge and the nature of scientific inquiry. In archaeology, consider provenance another word for context. The moment something is pulled out of the ground, 90 percent of its meaning is lost.

Continue reading →

Unprovenanced Artifacts—Publish or Perish?

26 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by markhamcaerus in Ethics and Essays, The Basics

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art crime, art market, artefact, artifact, authenticity, Biblical Archaeology Review, Biblical Archaeology Society, collecting, cultural preservation, excavation, provenance

Click to read the editorial

Click to read the editorial

This editorial from the most recent issue of Biblical Archaeology Review does an excellent job of summarizing the concerns raised by studying artefacts that were inadequately, improperly, or even illegally excavated. Within this example, comparing two scholarly books, author Hershel Shenks outlines every major problem currently being debated; I highly recommend it as a brief introduction to a typically abstruse discussion.

What to Do with Unprovenanced Artifacts—Publish or Perish?

Continue reading →

Artistic Pinspiration!

27 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in The Purely Irreverant

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

antiquities, art crime, art theft, art trafficking, artefact, artifact, board, heist, looting, Pinterest

vermeer_the_concert_new Practical people, on hearing that one’s chosen field is something like art history or anthropology, will often ask (perhaps not unreasonably), “but what can you do with that?”. If an archaeologist or other rare species seems frustrated by the question, it is not for lack of an answer, but rather, because the questioner is missing the point. No one plunges deeply into an abstract academic profession because a magazine article listed it in “Top Ten Careers for Wealth and Prestige”; we do it because we love it. When I was a student, and still now when I work, whenever I get caught up in the effort, or am sick of stumbling on a problem-block, I always come back to the art, and am always cured. An hour in a gallery, or a museum, alone with something a thousand years old, and the wonder, the amazement at humankind and its history remind me why I wanted to do this. Continue reading →

Links: AIA and Archaeology Day

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in Resources and Techniques

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Tags

antiquities, archaeology, artefact, artifact, cultural heritage, cultural preservation, excavation, in situ, museum

For a bit of a field trip from A Year in Provenance’s usual topics, this Saturday, 20 October 2012 is National Archaeology Day, the second annual event from the Archaeological Institute of America, encouraging interest in archaeology. Local chapters of the AIA and affiliated organisations put on events throughout the country, for children and adults (archaeology is one of the few professions that let adults have fun, too—why should children be the only ones who get to play in the dirt?). Search for events or read the related blog at www.nationalarchaeologyday.org. Continue reading →

Glossary: In Situ

16 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in Glossary

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antiquities, archaeology, art, artefact, artifact, cultural preservation, excavation, in situ, provenance, research

In situ, a Latin expression used in English and other languages, is possibly the most important term in archaeology. It means the original site, spot, or context, and is usually mentioned when discussing an excavation, where an object’s findspot must be accurately recorded. In archaeology, the value of an object is in its relation to the space and the other objects around it; analysis and technology can reveal what something was made of, how, and when, it could even hint at how it was used, but only the context can tell us what it meant to the people who used it. This is a crucial concept in studying provenance, the history of an object—knowing where something came from means little without knowing where it started. (N.B. the term doesn’t really have any application in the fine art world, only archaeology).

Why is it important that an artefact be discovered in situ? As one archaeologist said, “it’s not what you find, it’s what you find out.”

The Impact of Art Crime II: Cultural Loss Is Forever

11 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in The Basics

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antiquities, archaeology, art, art crime, art market, art theft, art trafficking, artefact, artifact, cultural heritage, cultural preservation, in situ, looting, provenance

In economics, there is a model called the broken window fallacy. The example is a thug that breaks a store window: a new window, supplies, and labour all have to be expended to repair the damage, none of which would have happened without that crime. Money is spent, things are happening; doesn’t that stimulate the economy? Two seconds’ thought shows the absurdity; destruction is not productive, and crime does not create prosperity. (If that still seems abstract, imagine being the owner of that store). Now imagine that there were no windows on earth that could replace the broken one. People could offer different kinds of walls, a door installed in the hole left by the window, or a security grill, but there could never again be a window for people to look into. Continue reading →

New Glossary Feature

10 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in Glossary

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art, art crime, art market, artefact, artifact, cultural preservation, excavation, interdisciplinary, provenance, repatriation

Thanks to recent comments- and a few blank looks- A Year in Provenance now features a glossary page (see the menu bar at the top of each page, above the header, or Menu, below the header on the mobile version). Researching a subject that crosses boundaries, disciplines, and frequently, languages, flings a host of terminology at the reader; this new glossary project hopes to make this less baffling, if not actually clear! Even the specialists don’t always agree on meanings or usage of terms, so I shall do my best. Each new term will be added with a short post discussing what a term means in context, and what ambiguity, if any, remains; the glossary page will have the brief, precise definition for quick reference, and each term will be linked back to its explanatory post. Continue reading →

What Provenance Research Can Do: Looting

07 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in The Basics

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art crime, art market, art theft, art trafficking, artefact, artifact, cultural heritage, cultural preservation, looting, provenance

Of all forms of art crime, looting of archaeological and historical sites is the most destructive. When an artwork is stolen from a gallery or museum, there is always a risk that the work will be unwittingly ruined, but at least the damage will be limited to a single piece. This is cold comfort when confronted with losing a masterpiece, but by comparison, the loss of a single site is immense. Looters are interested only in what they think will fetch a good price, and will throw away, cut through, or literally bulldoze anything that doesn’t appeal to them. Continue reading →

The Abstract Becomes Personal

30 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in Ethics and Essays

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art crime, art theft, art trafficking, artefact, artifact, authenticity, cultural heritage, cultural preservation, excavation, international law, looting, provenance

I was breakfasting with a friend a few days ago, cheerfully exchanging notes on current projects and dueling with iPhone apps, when my friend excitedly showed me an e-commerce listing for some “ancient glass beads”, purportedly from Afghanistan. She was interested in them for jewelry-making and colour inspiration, and wanted to know what I thought. I was stunned—the research I do every day, the main focus of my work, was suddenly, intrusively personal. I have fought back tears, hearing reports of decimated archaeological sites or carelessly destroyed paintings, yet this simple craft supply had made the meaning of provenance real to me as nothing had before. Continue reading →

Rescue and Return for Near Eastern Antiquities

25 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by markhamcaerus in Resources and Techniques, Stories from the Field

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

antiquities, archaeology, art crime, art theft, art trafficking, artefact, artifact, Baghdad Museum, cultural heritage, FBI, international law, looting, museum, repatriation

FBI—Iraqi Antiquities Returned

Click the picture to go to the full story on the FBI website.

The looting of the Baghdad Museum in 2003 and the subsequent looting of archaeological sites throughout Iraq are among the greatest devastations to ever happen in archaeology. The looting, on a smaller scale, continues to this day, and the attack on the museum in 2003 deserves discussion of its own. Once looted, the sites are destroyed and lost forever, but law enforcement agencies across the globe are continuing, most of a decade later, to save anything possible of the literally tens of thousands of stolen pieces. Continue reading →

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