Ancient artefacts will be returned to Greece and Italy

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/247321 https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/247321

The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has announced the recovery of ancient artefacts worth a staggering $2.2 million, which will be returned to Greece and Italy. “The return of these pieces is the product of a substantial and ongoing investigation into several traffickers,” District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg Jr. said in a statement. “I am pleased we have now seized more than 120 antiquities throughout the investigation, and that is continuing to this day. I am grateful to our antiquities trafficking team and partners in Greece for their outstanding collaboration and partnership.” The seizure of these objects comes after a similar announcement earlier this month, when District Attorney Bragg revealed the recovery of 107 Italian artefacts valued at $1.2 million. These items were also linked to notorious antiquities smugglers such as Giacomo Medici, Giovanni Franco Becchina, and Robert Hecht. Among the most significant of the Italian items was a Terracotta Kylix Band-Cup from the mid-6th century BCE. This ancient drinking vessel was found at the Etruscan site of Vulci in the 1960s and smuggled out of Italy by dealer Robert Hecht. It was later acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2017 before being seized by the DA's Antiquities Trafficking Unit (ATU). Other notable pieces include an Apulian Volute Krater from 320-310 BCE and a 4th century BCE Bronze Patera, both of which were also smuggled by high-profile traffickers before being recovered by the ATU.

L'ufficio del procuratore distrettuale di Manhattan ha annunciato la riscoperta di artefatti greci e italiani per un valore di oltre 2 milioni di dollari. Secondo l'avvocato Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., la restituzione di 120 artefatti antichi è il risultato di un'indagine su diversi contrabbandieri di arte antica. Il signor Bragg ha detto di aver ringraziato tutti che hanno lavorato per riportare indietro questi artefatti antichi. Questo annuncio arriva poco dopo la restituzione di altri 107 reperti per un valore di oltre 1 milione di dollari. I contrabbandiere sono Giacomo Medici, Giovanni Franco Becchina e Robert Hecht. Uno dei reperti più antichi è una coppa in terracotta del VI secolo a.C. Questa coppa si trovava nel sito archeologico di Vulci ed è stata rubata negli anni '60 da Robert Hecht. Nel 2017, il Metropolitan Museum of Art ha recuperato la coppa grazie al team investigativa per opere d'arte rubate. Altri artefatti rubati e poi recuperati includevano un cratere a volute proveniente dal Puglia risalente al 320-310 d.C. e una patera in bronzo del IV secolo d.C. Questi due oggetti furono rubati da contrabbandieri professionisti.