Thirty Pre-Hispanic Artifacts Claimed by Mexico to be Auctioned in Paris

The Mexican government called on France Tuesday to halt the sale of 30 pre-Hispanic artifacts, the latest salvo in Mexico’s battle to stop what it has called previously “illicit trade in cultural goods.”

The artifacts, which include Mayan and Teotihuacan objects valued between roughly $79,000 and $127,000 total, are slated to be auctioned in a May 13th sale by the Paris–based auction house the Cornette de Saint Cyr.

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Of the 358 objects in the lot, the Large Standing Figure (250-650 C.E.) is expected to fetch the highest bid with an estimated sale price between $26,000 and $47,000. The 13-inch green schist sculpture was exhibited in the 2012 exhibition “El Quinto sol: Artes de México,” at the Musée Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac in Paris. It is unknown exactly how the piece ended up in France; however, according to the auction house, it hails from a private collection.

Mexico’s secretary of culture, Alejandra Fraustro, called out the sale in a tweet, demanded that the auction house “stop the sale of 30 pieces that are part of the cultural wealth of Mexico.”

In France, laws regulating the sale and auction of cultural property leave restitution decisions to the private owner’s discretion, thereby limiting the government’s legal scope of action.

The historical and artistic heritage of Mexico has been impacted by centuries of looting. In February, the Mexican embassy in France — together with Ecuador, Guatemala, Panama, Peru, and the Dominican Republic— spoke out against a similar occurrence to little avail.

“We deplore the continuing practices of illicit trade in cultural goods that undermine the heritage, history and identity of our original peoples,” they said in a joint letter.

“The auctions promote looting, looting, illicit trafficking and laundering of goods perpetrated by international organized crime; they deprive the pieces of their cultural, historical and symbolic essence, reducing them to simple decorative objects for individuals and giving rise to a counterfeit market,” it went on.

Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who became president of Mexico in 2018, has prioritized the recovery of stolen objects as a political cornerstone. Over the last three years, through the “My heritage is not for sale” campaign, the country has recovered more than 5,000 pre-Hispanic objects.

Source: artnews.com

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