{"id":16389,"date":"2025-04-24T11:16:03","date_gmt":"2025-04-24T09:16:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/?p=16389"},"modified":"2025-06-06T10:40:43","modified_gmt":"2025-06-06T08:40:43","slug":"the-world-wants-its-art-back-its-just-not-that-simple","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/16389\/the-world-wants-its-art-back-its-just-not-that-simple\/","title":{"rendered":"The world wants its art back \u2013 it\u2019s just not that simple"},"content":{"rendered":"
UNESCO, UNIDROIT, Interpol, ICOM, The Art Loss Register, the Open Restitution Project in South Africa, the Benin Dialogue Group\u2026<\/strong><\/p>\n The list of organizations working to return looted art to its rightful owners is getting longer. But while the goal sounds noble, \u2018just give everything back\u2019, the road to restitution is more complicated than that.<\/strong><\/p>\n So, what is looted art exactly?<\/strong><\/p>\n The United Nations gives the following definition: Looted art refers to cultural property that has been unlawfully taken, especially in the context of armed conflict, occupation, colonization, or illicit trafficking, and which, under international law, should be returned to its rightful owner or country of origin.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Curators of museums still find it a difficult topic to give a clear and definite term to. \u201cI find the term looted art uncomfortable\u201d, says provenance researcher Ilja Labischinski from the Ethnologisches Museum in Berlin. \u201cWe\u2019re not only talking about art objects. Some are seen as everyday objects, others are sacred or ceremonial. And it\u2019s not always easy to define whether they were taken under colonial conditions or not.\u201d<\/p>\n A little historical context<\/strong><\/p>\n In the days when Europe was a continent of colonizing as much a possible, it \u2018collected\u2019 a lot of art objects too. While the metropoles maintained control over its overseas colonies, it took a lot foreign objects back to Europe. Some objects were bought or \u2018gifted\u2019. However, many were taken by force, under threat, or under unequal power dynamics. It\u2019s estimated that European museums and institutions hold between 1 and 1.4 million African objects alone. The actual number may be even higher, especially when you factor in unregistered private collections.<\/p>\n According to Dutch historian Lodewijk Wagenaar: “In The Netherlands VOC agents took objects back home in the name of God and profit – and it wasn\u2019t just condoned, it was considered scientific progress.”<\/p>\n Nowadays, we have turned our faces 180 degrees and look very different to this topic. Looted art raises discussions, and sometimes even protests, about the question if we can still have it here in Europe. Lodewijk Wagenaar said in the Dutch mini-series \u2018Roofkunst\u2019: “If you impose our current attitude towards looted art on our ancestors, you will have 2 million scoundrels in the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. Then there is nothing right anymore.”<\/p>\n It has become a sensitive topic to talk about, because it touches on issues of heritage, identity, and historical injustice. And the European continent is not averse to historical injustice.<\/p>\n[aesop_gallery id=”16558″ revealfx=”off” overlay_revealfx=”off”]\n