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CONTENTS:
In Italy, precious ruins are being loved to death
Sweden gives aboriginal skull back to Australia
New wave of thieving strikes after Cambodian coup
news flash (library thief Gilbert Bland)
ON MUSEUMS / An Explosive Scene, a Lock On the Crowds
In Italy, precious ruins are being loved to death
By Richard Boudreaux / Los Angeles Times
POMPEII, Italy -- Guido Barone doesn't make the rules here, so he can only wince at the latest
assault on this ancient Roman city -- by an army of backpacks.
Squeezing into Pompeii's fragile ruins on the backs of tourists, they scrape precious wall paintings as
their bearers pivot recklessly in overcrowded spaces.
"You cannot force people to leave those things outside," Barone says in dismay amid a traffic jam in
the House of the Vettii.
A part-time comic actor, he finds little amusement guiding visitors through Pompeii, the city buried
by the fiery eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79 and dug up over the last 2-1/2 centuries. He has
worked here 26 years, long enough to see rain, dust, sunlight, vandals and weeds erase much of what
Vesuvius had preserved intact.
The backpacks, which arrive each day by the thousands, are not just a new threat to the world's
oldest archeological dig. They are a measure of Italians' booming interest in their cultural wealth -- a
fascination the country's leaders are trying to cultivate in order to save the most battered treasures.
Their proposals are radical for Italy. They include private sponsorship for monuments such as
Pompeii, an idea that spawns visions of Disneylike theme parks with Roman togas and ads for Fiat. A
debate pitting American-style capitalism against traditional Italian state custody is just starting, but
there's an urgency to it.
According to the New York-based World Monuments Fund, no other nation has such a trove of
endangered churches, castles, palaces, museums, ancient forums and archeological unearthings. And
few other nations are experiencing such a rush by their people to see what's still standing.
Unfortunately, says Antonio Paolucci, the artistic superintendent of Florence, "the erosion of our
cultural patrimony is happening much faster than the growth in our political awareness" of the loss.
Italy's dubious blessing is a wealth too vast for the state to protect. The government lists 57,000
"major" monuments spread among every city and the smallest of towns.
In a nation that resembles a sprawling outdoor museum, it's small wonder that an average of 96 art
objects are reported stolen from church or state custody every day.
In the last four years, Mafia bombs have damaged the Uffizi Gallery in Florence and two art-rich
churches in Rome. Fires have swept through La Fenice, the 18th century opera house in Venice, and
the chapel that housed the Shroud of Turin. Faulty restoration has brought down the roof of the
cathedral in Noto, the jewel of Sicilian Baroque architecture.
If all that were not enough, earthquakes have been shaking hill towns across Umbria and the
Marches for weeks this autumn, toppling medieval bell towers and cracking scores of early
Renaissance frescoes, including some in the badly damaged Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi.
The same four years have brought a string of reformers to Italy's Ministry of Culture.
They have revalued what is being lost and coaxed the Treasury to spend more for preservation.
Museums closed for years are being reopened and visiting hours extended to make antiquity more
accessible -- and potentially profitable.
Italians are responding en masse.
The 33 largest museums reported a 20 percent increase in visitors last summer. That does not count
the smallish but exquisite Borghese Gallery, which has been filled to capacity since it reopened in June
after 14 years of repairs. It still requires booking more than a week in advance.
Nor does it count Pompeii, which is drawing more than 2 million visitors this year, up from 1.3 million
in 1993.
Many of the visitors are foreign, of course, but no one doubts that the renaissance is Italian.
Whether this grass-roots enthusiasm can be harnessed to save Italy's monuments is about to be
tested on Pompeii -- the most visited, underfunded and threatened of them all.
Life in today's Pompeii often resembles a film noir.
One weekend last spring, someone entered a closed excavation site and decapitated two plaster
cadavers. The field archeologist suspects vandals, but Pompeii's superintendent, Pietro Giovanni
Guzzo, says he took the Mafia-style gesture as a "warning" from one of his many enemies.
Guzzo's predecessor, removed nearly three years ago, has been under investigation for excavations
that were imaginary except in cost.
Guards once locked out tourists to protest Guzzo's stricter regime; he demands that they show up on
time and not sleep on the job.
The biggest problem is simply that too much of Pompeii has been dug up and not properly shielded
from the elements. A walk through the ruins with a veteran guide like Barone is an exercise in imagining
ancient treasures lost to modern neglect.
"Fifteen years ago this was a beautiful piece; every detail was absolutely clear," the pony-tailed
Neapolitan recalls, pointing the tip of his tartan umbrella at a still-life painting now faded beyond
recognition.
Turning to another blur in the same Vettii courtyard, he says: "We used to tell tourists, 'If you want
to know what kind of flowers they planted in their garden, look at this fresco.' "
Now the painted flowers are gone too.
Across the yard, in the adorably frescoed Room of the Cupids, Barone's umbrella points at the
ceiling, built of cheap reinforced concrete in the 1960s and already crumbling. A camera flash goes off,
and more tourists muscle in. Two elderly guards, engrossed in discussion with each other, ignore the
unruly crowd. A stray dog wanders in and curls up in the atrium.
Surveying the chaos, Barone ventures a prediction: "The next eruption of Vesuvius will save
Pompeii!"
In his spacious office at the edge of the ruins, Guzzo lights his pipe and ponders his mission.
Pompeii's superintendent has won worldwide applause from fellow archeologists, but he talks like a
man under siege.
"The area (of Pompeii) now open to the public is half what was open in the 1950s," the 53-year-old
Roman says. "At this rate, by 2040 we'll be reduced to half of that, and so on. ... This is the death of
Pompeii. Death will not come with one shock, as in an earthquake. But slowly and surely it will come --
unless we do something to reverse the trend."
His plan is to stop new excavations and pour resources into protecting and cataloging what has
been dug up.
"We must stop the walls from crumbling, freeze the deterioration so we can hand this ancient city to
our children," Guzzo says. "That's No. 1."
A minimal once-over repair, he estimates, will cost $310 million and take 10 years.
Copyright 1997, The Detroit News
Sweden gives aboriginal skull back to Australia
07:46 a.m. Nov 15, 1997 Eastern
STOCKHOLM, Nov 15 (Reuters)
- The skull of an unknown Australian aborigine which was
sent to Sweden in 1908 was handed to a delegation of aboriginal elders on Saturday, ending
a 10-year tussle to allow its return to its country of origin.
Sweden's National Museum of Ethnography gave the skull to a delegation from the
Tasmanian aboriginal community at a ceremony in Stockholm, marking the latest stage in a
campaign to retrieve aboriginal remains scattered across Europe.
The skull had been given to the Swedish consul in Australia early this century by the
Queen Victoria museum in Launceston in the state of Tasmania and the consul donated it
to the Swedish museum.
``Aboriginal remains used to be considered rather as collectors' items in Europe,'' Lyndon
Ormond-Parker, a spokesman for the Foundation of Aboriginal and Islander Research
Action (FAIRA) told Reuters.
``We don't know how many aboriginal remains are scattered around Europe but we believe
there could be as many as 2,000 in Britain alone.''
No one knows how old the skull is. Until recently it was considered to be Swedish state
property, but the museum was granted permission to return it to the Tasmanian aborigines.
``Our community has waited a long time for this special occasion,'' elder Laurie Lowery said
in a statement.
Elisabeth Lind, senior curator of the Southeast Asian and Pacific collection at the
Stockholm museum, said the delay in giving back the skull was due to administrative
reasons.
``It certainly was not unwillingness...but the government has to approve such a move and
you have to check carefully where the remains will go back to before it can be approved,''
she said.
^REUTERS@
(Philadelphia Inquirer)
New wave of thieving strikes after Cambodian coup
By Robin McDowell ASSOCIATED PRESS
SIEM REAP, Cambodia -- Cambodian villagers risked their lives in the
1970s hiding priceless wooden Buddha statues from Khmer Rouge
guerrillas set on wiping out religion. But now, four ancient statues
are gone -- stolen in the night from their most recent keeper, the
Balang Pagoda, about 140 miles northwest of Phnom Penh.
The theft of the 400-year-old statues was the first in what appears
to be a new wave of pillaging in a protected 80-square-mile area
around the ancient temples of Angkor in northwest Cambodia, said Oung
Von, who heads the Angkor Conservatory in Siem Reap province.
Angkor, the heart of the Khmer empire dating to the 7th century and
home to 273 Hindu and Buddhist monuments, has always been prey for
thieves who sell their stolen wares, mostly to Thailand.
The thefts of statues and art treasures have slowed in recent years,
however, thanks in part to the Heritage Police, set up with the help
of the international community in 1994. The recent increase in looting
could be linked to a bloody July coup by Second Prime Minister Hun
Sen. The takeover and subsequent fighting has scared off tourists and
investors, forcing desperate locals to find new ways to make money.
"Before July, looting was still going on, but far away from the
town," Oung Von said. "Now it is happening within the protected
area."
In recent weeks, a 12th-century Buddha head was stolen from the Bayon
temple, an 8th-century torso disappeared from the ruins of Prasat
Lolei, and a 12-century statue of an Apsara dancer was taken from an
entrance of Bantey Kdei temple.
The wooden Buddhas at the Balang Pagoda were stolen last month by
thieves who broke the door lock. The 5-foot figures were the most
spectacular of 41 statues at the monastery. "These are old statues,
belonging to the nation," said Soeum Chhup, a monk. "Now they're lost
forever."
Col. Chea Sophat, who heads the Heritage Police, fears protecting the
sprawling site will become harder.
"Everyone is getting poorer and poorer since the fighting in Phnom
Penh," he said. "They have no more ways to make money."
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 10:53:08 -0500 (EST)
To: securma@museum-security.org
From: dpascale
news flash (library thief Gilbert Bland)
Hello, thought the readers of this list might be interested in this
note that was posted to another list. I have received permission by
the sender to pass this along. dp.
- - I am pleased to report to Ex-Libris subscribers that on October
8, 1997, the North Carolina Library Association announced its
awarding of Honorary Membership to NC Superior Court Judge Robert H.
Hobgood. Judge Hobgood was so recognized because of his actions in
the December 1996 court appearance of library thief Gilbert Bland in
Orange County Superior Court in Hillsborough, NC. In this particular
court case, Bland was charged with stealing 26 items from the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, where he had hit
each of the three Special Collections departments. The local
assistant district attorney charged with prosecuting the case agreed
to a plea bargin under which Bland would acknowledge guilt but
receive no active time for the UNC thefts. Instead he would be
credited with time already served awaiting trial and given a
suspended sentence. When the plea bargain was presented to Judge
Hobgood, he immediately rejected it, stunning the assistant district
attorney, Bland, and Bland's lawyer. Hobgood stated "In my opinion,
the penalty is not severe enough for what the man has done. That is
why I'm rejecting the plea." He instructed that the attorneys
renegotiate. The result was a new plea under which Bland received8-10 months active time in a North Carolina prison, with credit for
the 103 days he had spent in the Orange County jail awaiting his
Hillsborough court appearance. Even with that time credit, Bland had
to serve an additional four and a half months in jail in North
Carolina. When he accepted the second plea agreement, Judge Hobgood
said "My main concern was that if there was ever a case in which the
victim was the state of North Carolina, this was one.... Any citizen
of the state of North Carolina would have a right to have access and
go into those materials." A number of newspapers in the state had
carried stories on Bland's court appearance and the judge's actions.
When asked by reporters to comment on the final sentence, the judge
described it as a "message to anyone in a similar circumstance to
know what a treasure we have in the library system." In conferring
honorary membership on the judge, NCLA stated "Judge Hobgood's
actions sent a clear message that theft of library materials should
be treated as a serious crime. The publicity his decision received
has helped us educate the public about the seriousness of library
theft. Also, his firmness in dealing with Bland sets a precedent that
can be cited to other judges and law enforcement officials when
library thefts occur in the future." Only one other honorary
membership was awarded by NCLA at the 1997 biennial conference.
Because Mr. Bland caused such damage to so many libraries across the
country, I thought the Ex-Libris community would be interested in
knowing about this award to Judge Hobgood.
(Museum-L)
ON MUSEUMS / An Explosive Scene, a Lock On the Crowds
Jonathan Mandell
I reprint below my column "On Museums" in today's Newsday in hopes
that it will encourage more of you to send me your ideas.
JOHN TRAVOLTA pulls a gun on the director of a museum in the new
movie "Mad City," takes her and a group of schoolchildren hostage and
eventually sets off some dynamite. But this does not worry real
museum director Brad Penka. "We have maximum security here," says
Penka, head of the Barbed Wire Museum. The particular barbed wire
museum that he heads - since there are, as he explains, at least
three such museums in the country - is 6 years old and located in
LaCrosse, Kan., which calls itself the barbed wire capital of the
world. "There are 1,700 varieties of barbed wire," Penka says. "We
have about 900 of them. We don't use any of it in our security
system." Tom Hennessy isn't concerned either. He is the curator of
the Lock Museum of America, which is in Terryville, Conn. (It just
locked up for the winter.) "First of all, there's no windows on the
first floor; it's built like a fort," he says. "I shouldn't say that,
because there are windows in the front. But the rest of the museum
doesn't have any." Begun 25 years ago, the Lock Museum of America now
has a collection of some 20,000 locks, not all of them from America.
Some are antiques from Europe going back to the 16th Century, and
there is one, from Egypt, that Hennessy originally thought was 4,000
years old. "But a locksmith visited from New York, and he's Egyptian,
and he's seen all the locks in the museums there, and he said he
figures it's 7,000 years old." These days, even locks and barbed wire
bring people into museums, rather than keep them out. Museums are
exploding, though not in the literal way they do in "Mad City." When a
TV reporter (Dustin Hoffman) is sent out at the beginning of the movie
to cover the story of the budget cuts at a fictional California
town's Museum of Natural History, where he stumbles upon a gun-toting
laid-off museum security guard (Travolta), his anchor says, "I see
dinosaurs there. I guess the fear today is that the museum might
share the same fate as those mighty beasts." If, like most other
cultural institutions, museums are having financial problems, the
only thing that the museum world really shares with the dinosaur is
its size. The number of museums is rising steadily. The United States
now has more than 8,000 museums, 1,200 of them art museums, a number
that is 50 percent higher than a quarter century ago. New museums are
opening up all the time, at least 50 last year in America alone
(including a museum of dentistry in Baltimore, four Indian museums,
at least seven science museums and the Lucy-Desi Museum in Jamestown,
N.Y.). This year the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, N.M., the
Guggenheim in Bilbao, Spain, and the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New
York City are among those that have opened to flash and fanfare. Many
alreadyestablished museums are greatly expanding, with the Ukrainian
Museum in the East Village, for example, this month having broken
ground on a building that will increase its exhibition space more
than tenfold. People are visiting museums more than ever; new
attendance records are being set every year. In the second half of
1989, the Nassau County Museum of Art had about 20,000 visitors; last
year, they clocked 226,000. "As America's favorite tourist
attractions, museums ranked third [behind shopping and outdoor
activities]," according to the recent report of the National
Endowment for the Arts titled "American Canvas," "well ahead of
sports, gambling, nightlife and amusement parks." (Not to mention
John Travolta movies.) "I think it's because people are becoming more
interested in the old, in history," offers Lt. Joy Macfarlane of San
Quentin, which is the oldest prison in California, begun in 1852 and
still incarcerating criminals. San Quentin would have been an apt
place for the Travolta character, for more than one reason. For the
past three years a small building on the prison grounds has served as
the San Quentin State Prison Museum. "It includes stuff that goes
back to the beginning - old weapons and locks and uniforms," says
Macfarlane. This is a museum open to the public - inmates are not
invited - though, as the lieutenant admits, "we haven't gotten too
many people yet." Give them time, lieutenant, give them time.
Jonathan Mandell can be reached online about this column, which will
run in this space every other week, at OnMuseums@aol.com. Copyright
1997, Newsday Inc.