Neil Brodie 1998
“Pity the poor middlemen”
Culture Without Context no. 3, Autumn, 4‐6.
in a crate marked 'Peruvian handicrafts' and destined for Switzerland. Peruvian authorities have
issued a warrant for the arrest of the man who
despatched the crate, Rolando Rivas
Rivadeneyra, but the identity of the putative
Swiss recipient is not known. The episode shows
again how preColumbian antiquities are now
finding their way onto the European market since
the United States imposed import restrictions
following bilateral agreements reached under the
terms ofthe UNESCO Convention. This confirms
the effectiveness of the Convention in obstructing the flow ofsmuggled antiquities but also sadly
highlights how American initiatives are undermined by the continuing failure of European
governments to ratify. At the European Fine Art
Foundation (TEFAF) autumn fair in Basel, five
of the twenty new exhibitors were specialists in
ethnographic and preColumbian art and further
growth in preColumbian art was predicted. 'We
are talking high profits, low risk' said Carol
DiBattiste, Deputy US Attorney for south Florida,
in the November issue of the Art Newspaper.
Also in October a newly discovered
neolithic tomb near the village of Moureze in
southern France was looted. The local mayor was
moved to express his disgust with the human race
but hopefully his mood lightened when the contents of the tomb were returned within 24 hours.
There is some honour amongst (some) thieves
after all, although the damage had already been
done by removing the objects.
NJB
Information obtained from: The Times, Archaeology, TheArt Newspaper, The Boston Globe, The
New York Times, The International Herald Tribune, The Guardian and Th e Observer.
bought by the Metropolitan Museum in 1972
from Robert E. Hecht for $1 million, but now
thought to have been removed from an Etruscan
tomb in 1971 (Meyer 1973, 88). The tombarolo
who first excavated the vase claims to have received only $8800 for it (Slayman 1998,44).
The golden phiale of Achyris, from
Caltavutoro in Sicily, and presently impounded
by US Customs, was bought for $1.2 million in
1991 by Michael Steinhardt from the Ziirichbased dealer William Veres with Robert Haber
acting as an intermediary. Veres had acquired the
phi ale sometime after 1988 in exchange for
artworks valued at about $90,000 from Vincenzo
Cammarata, a Sicilian coin dealer, who had in
tum obtained it in 1980 from a fellow Sicilian
Vincenzo Pappalardo in exchange for goods
worth about $20,000 (Slayman 1998; Mason
1998).
Also from Sicily are the Morgantina
acroliths, excavated in 1979 by clandestini who
sold them for about $1100. The pieces were subsequently purchased in Switzerland by Robin
Symes who sold them on to Maurice Tempelsman
in 1980 for more than $1 million (Robinson 1998;
D' Arcy 1998).
In 1988 a Turkish farmer sold a broken
marble sculpture of Marsyas to the dealer Ali
Pity the poor middlemen
NEIL BRODIE
T
he illicit trade in antiquities is clandestine.
Transactions are hidden from view and
provenance is lost as a result, but the economics
of the trade are also obscured and it is not clear
what profits are realized over what period of time
and who, in financial terms, really benefits. Furthermore, when collectors don their humanitarian
mantles to argue that their purchase of antiquities injects money into hardpressed local
economies, it is not possible to assess how much
of their revenue does actually trickle down.
Over the years a number of cases of illicit
trading have been investigated, usually when a
valuable 'treasure' has been reclaimed or its status questioned, and several exchange chains have
now been revealed. Although these highprofile
cases are not representative of the illicit trade as
a whole, they do provide some information about
what sums of money change hands and what
profit margins exist, and for that reason they are
collected together here.
First there is the now notorious Euphronius
Krater, the 'hot pot' of Hoving (1993, 30740),
7
Kolasin for $7400. The piece was then smuggled
out ofTurkey and displayed for .$540,000 in New
York by Jonathan Rosen. After he was shown that
the object was stolen Rosen donated the statue to
the AmericanTurkish society and it was subsequently returned to Turkey in 1994 (Rose & Acar
1995,55).
Finally there is the case of a Song Dynasty
head, stolen from the Yongtai tomb in Henan
province, China. According to US Customs, it
was sold first in 1996 in Guangzhou for about
$840 before being moved to Hong Kong. There
it was bought by an American dealer who in 1997
offered it for sale in San Francisco for $125,000,
whereupon it was seized by the US authorities
(Maggio 1998).
These figures are summarized in Table 1,
which shows the initial and final prices realized,
together with the period of time that elapsed between sales.
Figure.l shows what percentage of the fmal
market price was received by the original finder/
excavator/thief. It is clear that in all cases over 98
per cent of the final price was destined to end up in
the pockets of the middlemen. The original finder
received very little and the final buyer can hardly
claim to have obtained a bargain. These percentages are not unusual: it has been observed for
instance that in the Peten looters received about
$200-$500 each for vessels which might ultimately
be sold for $100,000 (Hansen 1997,48). It is also
alleged that William Koch and his associates paid
roughly $3 million for the major part of the Elmali
hoard while one ofthe original three finders,Ahmet
Ali Senturk, received only $80 and a year in jail
(Komblut 1998).
Of course, the entire profit is not always
taken by a single middleman - often there is a
chain of transactions. But still, the profits involved are significant. The details of the Achyris
Initial price (US$)
Final price (US$)
20,000
1100
7400
8800
840
1.2 million
1 million
540,000
1 million
125,000
Achyris phiale
Morgantina acroliths
Statue of Marsyas
Euphronius krater
Yongtai head
Time lapse (years)
11
less than 6
1
Table 1. The riSing price of illicit antiquities.
Song Dynasty Head
r:-;F
=
Morgantina Acroliths
~
=
Euphronius Krater
=:;
~
=
:=;tr
=~
~=
:;o
=
:;~
;:=
:;~
~=
=~
-:i!I
:=
=
~
Achyris Phiale
Statue of Marsyas
=:;
~
o
=
~
:;=
=:;
~;:
=
:=;~
=
=;:c
-~
y-
10
20
30
40
=
=~-:.I
-~
50
~
60
70
80
Total Price 100%
• % of price received by original finder 0 % of price received by middlemen
Figure 1. The percentage of the final market price of an antiquity received by the original finder.
8
90
100
:.!il
phiale are reasonably clear and are set out in Figure 2. The largest profit was made by William
Veres, who bought the piece in Italy and sold it
in Switzerland, so that his high profit margin
probably reflects his equally high burden of risk
or cost incurred when transporting the piece
across the Italian border. It is worth noting for
purposes of comparison that the normal percentage of the selling price taken as commission by
Sotheby's auction house from a legitimate sale
varies between 18-26 per cent depending upon
price. Halfis taken from the buyer and half from
the seller.
These figures reveal the simple truth of the
illicit trade in antiquities - there are large sums
of money to be made, more than by legitimate
trading, and very little of the proceeds ever reach
the original finders. It is also likely that these large
sums, derived ultimately from rich collectors,
sustain the smuggling networks which support
the illicit trade. Collectors are, as Elia (1993) says,
the real looters; but the middlemen are the main
beneficiaries.
References
D' Arcy, D., 1998. Anatomy of plunder. The Art Newspaper (81) (May), 1,5.
Elia, R., 1993. A seductive and troubling work. Archaeology (January/February), 64-9.
Hansen, R.D., 1997. Plundering the Peten. Archaeology
(September/October), 48-9.
Hoving, T., 1993. Making the Mummies Dance. New York
(NY): Touchstone.
Kornblut, A. E., 1998. Coins of contention. The Boston
Globe (December 13), AO 1.
Maggio, M., 1998. A change of climate. The Art Newspaper 86 (November), 45.
Mason, P.D.c., 1998. United States Court issues important ruling on antiquities. Art, Antiquity and Law 3,
61-72.
Meyer, K., 1973. The Plundered Past. London: Arts Book
Society.
Robinson, W.V, 1998. Claims to Greek goddesses. The
Boston Globe (April) 4, AOI.
Rose, M. & O. Acar, 1995. Turkey's war on the illicit
antiquities trade. Archaeology (March/April), 45-
56.
Slayman, A.L., 1998. Case of the Golden Phiale. Archaeology (MaylJune), 36-49.
Cammarata
1
o Profit
V eres
• Purchase price
1
H aber
o
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
% of Sale Price
Figu re 2. Profits realized by middlemen handling the Achyris Pl1iale. (To allow for appreciation the price paid by
Cammarata has been adjusted upwards by 7.2 per cent per year for the eleven years it was in his possession. It has
been estimated that 7.2 per cent was ti1e average annual appreciation of the British Rail Pension Fund 's collection of
ancient glass over the same period of time [Antiques Trade Gazette, 13 December 1997, 7]).
9