The San Antonio Museum of Artwork (Sama) has repatriated 9 antiquities to Italy, eight of which had been recognized by way of images that had been seized from the convicted seller and smuggler Giacomo Medici. The ninth object, a marble head of the Greek god Hermes, had been excavated from historic Roman homes on the Caelian Hill in Rome within the late nineteenth century and, a long time later, was bought to the San Antonio collector Gilbert M. Denman Jr by an Italian antiquities seller who offered no provenance paperwork; Denman donated it to the Sama in 1986.
The museum and the Italian Ministry of Tradition had signed a long-term settlement on cultural collaboration and change in 2023, and had been in discussions in regards to the current repatriations for greater than a yr. Below the phrases of the settlement, eight of the 9 repatriated artefacts will stay on show on the Sama, on mortgage from Italy. After the mortgage ends, different antiquities of comparable worth could also be despatched from Italy to San Antonio on an eight-year mortgage, as per the phrases of the settlement. The marble head of Hermes, in the meantime, has been returned to the Italian authorities.
“We sit up for continued collaboration with the ministry to share extraordinary works from Italy’s wealthy cultural heritage with our guests from South Texas and around the globe,” Emily Ballew Neff, Sama’s director, stated in an announcement.
Works returned to the Ministry of Tradition of Italy that stay on view on the San Antonio Museum of Artwork embody a fish plate from the workshop of Asteas and Python (round 340BC, left) and a krater or mixing bowl that includes a nude younger man and seated lady, and attributed to Python (round 330BC, proper) Courtesy Ministry of Tradition of Italy and San Antonio Museum of Artwork
The works that stay on show at Sama all originate from Athens or southern Italy. They embody a terracotta plate adorned with three fish from round 340BC, a pair of jugs often known as epichyses with giant looping handles from the latter half of the 4th century BC, an almost 3ft-tall terracotta and pigment statue of a feminine determine from the 4th or third century BC and a krater or mixing bowl from round 330BC adorned with two figures (a nude younger man and a seated lady) rendered in a red-figure approach. All of them handed by way of public sale homes and sellers in New York and London through the Eighties and 90s previous to being acquired by the museum.
In 2016, a German scholar named Jörg Deterling alerted the museum that its marble head of Hermes had been excavated from the Caelian Hill, prompting the museum to conduct additional analysis and call Italy’s Ministry of Tradition. The ministry confirmed its provenance later that yr and requested the artefact’s return.
Luigi La Rocca, who leads Italy’s division for the safety of cultural heritage, stated in an announcement: “This settlement strengthens cultural relations between Italy and america, and stands as a world greatest follow within the area of combating illicit trafficking of cultural property.”
This isn’t the primary time that images seized throughout investigations into the smuggler Giacomo Medici (who was convicted in 2004) have offered key proof a long time later. Final yr, the Altes Museum in Berlin returned 21 Apulian vases to Italy after 4 of them had been recognized in Polaroid photographs present in Medici’s workplace in Geneva.








