UNESCO and the Greek government have made longstanding appeals to the UK to enter into mediation over the possible return of the controversial ‘Elgin Marbles’, the sculptures removed by Lord Elgin from the Parthenon in the early 1800s that, following their purchase by the British Government in 1816, became part of the British Museum’s collection. This week the British Museum wrote an open letter to UNESCO declining to participate in mediation, but suggesting that it was open to a possible ‘joint venture’ with the Acropolis Museum.
British
Museum’s letter to UNESCO
Justifying its rejection of UNESCO’s
offer to mediate, the British Museum argued that the
matter fell outside UNESCO’s mandate to ‘preserve and safeguard endangered
cultural heritage’. Since the surviving Parthenon sculptures are “carefully
preserved in a number of European museums”, they “clearly do not fall into this
category".
Secondly,
the letter suggested that the UNESCO-facilitated mediation only concerns intergovernmental disputes, whilst
the British Museum “is
not a government body, and the collections do not belong to the British
Government.” It was expressed that any collaborative ventures
with Greek institutions would "not [be] on a government-to-government
basis".
The letter reminded UNESCO that the
British Museum has ‘routinely lent to Greece’, and enjoys
‘excellent collaborative relationships with Greek museums and universities’.
Sidestepping the long-running debate over the legality of Lord Elgin’s actions, the
British Museum stated that the Elgin Marbles are held “for the benefit of the world public, present and future”,
and invited the Museum’s Greek counterparts “to explore new ways of enabling
the whole world to see, study and enjoy the sculptures of the Parthenon.”
The
letter promoted the British Museum’s current exhibition ‘Defining Beauty: the Body in Greek Art’ as an
example of the ‘great public benefit’ of inter-museum loans. Meanwhile, the controversial loan
of one of the
Parthenon sculptures to Russia at the end of last year - which
at the time had provoked a furious reaction from the Greek government – was
described enthusiastically as ‘Russia’s first glimpse of the splendours of
fifth-century Athens’.
The
‘Ilissos’ from the Parthenon on display in the State Hermitage Museum,
St Petersburg, 6 December 2014 – 18 January 2015 (British Museum)
British Government’s letter to
UNESCO
A second letter addressed to UNESCO, sent on the
same date and signed by the UK Culture Minister Ed Vaizey, adopted a markedly
different tone.
The
letter made explicitly clear that the Elgin Marbles were ‘legally acquired by
Lord Elgin under the laws pertaining at the time” and thus the British Museum
possessed “clear legal title to the sculptures since 1816". The letter
asserted that "neither the British Government nor the British Museum are
aware of any new arguments to the contrary since 1985, when a formal Greek
request for the return of the sculptures was turned down".
The
British Government also called out what it saw as Greece’s intent to deny the
British Museum’s right of ownership during the mediation process, and added
that legislation limits the British Museum from de-accessioning objects in
their collections.
Reaction
The
Greek government responded by issuing a statement “deploring” the British
Museum’s refusal to enter mediation, adding: "British negativism is
overwhelming, along with its lack of respect for the role of mediators". It has been suggested that the UK’s
refusal to join the mediation process could result in legal
action by the
Greek government in an international court to reclaim the ancient sculptures.
Meanwhile the chairman of the British Committee for the Reunification of the Parthenon Marbles, Eddie O’Hara, said that the
British Museum “plays the game of offering a loan because they know the Greeks
would never accept a loan”. Any agreement involving the loan of the Elgin Marbles
would require recognition of the British Museum’s right of legal ownership and
a promise to return the sculptures.
UK polls have consistently showed
strong support in Britain for returning the sculptures: an opinion poll
conducted by YouGov in October 2014 showed that only 23%
of the British public thought the Marbles should stay in Britain.
Unfortunately, the public's appetite
for change has not been reflected at a political level. An early day motion tabled earlier this month in the
House of Commons urged the British Government to act to “reunite these
British-held Parthenon sculptures with those now displayed in the purpose-built
Acropolis Museum in the shadow of the monument to which they belong, the
Parthenon”. It garnered a mere 20 signatures out of a possible 455.