Bust in Massachusetts Museum May Be a Stolen Antiquity

2nd statue allegedly stolen from Turkey is seized by NY authorities
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 5, 2023 2:23 PM CDT
Looting Probe Leads to Roman Bust in Massachusetts
The bust, believed to show a daughter of Marcus Aurelius or Septimius Severus.   (Worcester Art Museum)

A bronze bust believed to depict the daughter of an ancient Roman emperor has been seized from an art museum in Massachusetts by New York authorities investigating antiquities stolen from Turkey, per the AP. The seizure is the latest in an ongoing investigation into a smuggling network involving objects looted from Bubon in southwestern Turkey and trafficked through Manhattan. The bust known as "Portrait of a Lady" was acquired in 1966 by the Worcester Art Museum about 40 miles west of Boston. The seizure comes weeks after the Manhattan district attorney's office seized a statue thought to portray the Roman emperor and philosopher Marcus Aurelius from a Cleveland, Ohio, museum.

Worcester Art Museum officials said in a statement that the bust taken from their possession (which has vanished from the museum's website) dates from AD 160 to 180 and is believed to be a life-sized portrayal of a daughter of Marcus Aurelius or another Roman emperor, Septimius Severus. Museum officials said they had "limited information" about the bust's history when they acquired it nearly six decades ago. "We are very thankful for the new information provided to us," said Matthias Waschek, the museum's director. "The ethical standards applicable to museums are much changed since the 1960s, and the Museum is committed to managing its collection consistent with modern ethical standards."

Marcus Aurelius ruled as Roman emperor from AD 161 to 180 and was a Stoic philosopher whose Meditations have been studied over the centuries. Septimius Severus' reign from AD 193 to 211 was marked by his efforts to convert the government into a military monarchy. Turkey first made claims about the Marcus Aurelius statue in 2012 when it released a list of nearly two dozen objects in the Cleveland museum's collection that it said had been looted from Bubon and other locations. Museum officials said at the time that Turkey had provided no hard evidence of looting. (More on that here.)

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