Saturday 5 May 2018

British Museum Launches Another database for Portable Antiquities


The British Museum has launched a new antiquities database project, after its department of ancient Egypt and Sudan received a £998,769 grant from the Cultural Protection Fund, which is run by the British Council and the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport(Laura Chesters, 'British Museum launches Egyptian antiquities database to track looted artefacts' Antiques Trade Gazette 4th May 2018). The database will focus on antiquities from Egypt and Sudan, but is expected to eventually expand to include artefacts from other regions.
The project will include antiquities in circulation on the international art market as well as in private collections, and is designed to become an academic resource but should also “act as a deterrent to looting and other illicit activity”. The museum believes the database will make the “art market more transparent”. [...]  The project will prioritise documenting objects seen in the trade since 1970 which is the year UNESCO’s convention to prevent the illicit trade of cultural property came into force. The museum said the antiquities trade – including auction houses, dealers, and dealers’ associations – have endorsed the project. They will share images and data and are working alongside legal experts and the police.
'They' being dealers? Yeah? The actual scale of that type of how far that sort of laudable behaviour goes beyond the usual facadism remains to be seen.The project however will be staffed by trainees who will get just enough experience by the time their stint ends:
A team based at the museum will oversee the development of the database and it will provide on-the-job training and equipment to antiquities staff from the Ministry of Antiquities in Egypt and the National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums in Sudan. Twelve trainees will be taught how to document antiquities on six-month training schemes.
And it is less cklear what those people wioll do with that experience on returning to Egypt and Sudan, when the database itself is in London. Also is that going to deal with the 'British' trade, or the global one? Will there be opportunities for dealers and collectors to report what they currently have (legally) in their possession?

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