Freakonomics Radio - 542. Is a Museum Just a Trophy Case?
Episode Date: May 11, 2023The world’s great museums are full of art and artifacts that were plundered during an era when plunder was the norm. Now there’s a push to return these works to their rightful owners. Sounds simpl...e, right? It's not. (Part 2 of “Stealing Art Is Easy. Giving It Back Is Hard.”)
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Last episode, we began with a simple question.
How do the artworks and artifacts that you see in a museum wind up in a museum?
For a long time, the entire art world didn't ask questions.
The Met got fooled by not probing deeply enough into the purported history that was given to us.
Guess what? My kids know it's looted.
But the museum world is changing.
Museums are now returning dozens of objects every single year.
It's like Olympic Games for restitution.
Even though technically we legally acquired these,
the origins of the acquisition was illegal,
so therefore everything else was tainted as well.
Today on Freakonomics Radio,
we will explore one dramatic case that isn't settled yet.
The disruption of the attack on the kingdom
cannot be overemphasized.
Most important pieces went directly to the British Museum.
They even took the bolts from the doors.
It turns out that stealing art can be relatively easy, but giving it back, that's the hard part.
If the job is to purify yourself by getting rid of the art, yeah, put it in a pit. Melt it.
The second episode in our series about returning art starts right now.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything with your host, Stephen Dubner.
Matthew Bogdanos is a former Marine colonel who now runs the Antiquities Trafficking Unit in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office.
We met him in our previous episode.
We do not, under any circumstances, want to denude New York of its cultural treasures.
If it's legal, great, we should keep it.
But if it's illegal, then it should go back to the country of origin.
But how does that happen?
If a museum or a private collector on Fifth Avenue has a 3,000-year-old
treasure that is found to have been looted or otherwise stolen, the country of origin may not
even exist anymore. So how does Bogdanos manage that? Every country treats these differently,
but we have yet to have a country who hasn't just been over the top appreciative and extraordinarily
gracious. We've returned in antiquity to Iran. Wait a second. The U.S. doesn't have diplomatic
relations with Iran. What do I care? I'm not a politician. We returned a piece to the Palestinian
authority. Now move the map to Southeast Asia, India, Thailand, Cambodia, Afghanistan, Pakistan. For that area of the world, these antiquities are idols. They're worshipped. And the number of times I have gone into a temple in India, in Southern India particularly, and it's empty. And they're still worshipping the empty pedestal, or they have a photograph of an idol that was stolen,
or they have a wax or wooden model. And now this goes in someone's Fifth Avenue apartment? Get the
hell out of here. I mean, are you kidding me? So we never lose sight of the fact that at the other
end of our entire process, the prosecution, recovery, and repatriation. There's a community on the other
side. Bogdanos makes all this sound rather clear-cut, and that makes sense. He is a prosecutor.
He's guided by the law, and the law, while complicated, is also decisive. It declares
a winner and a loser, legal possession or illegal possession. But art is even more complicated than the law.
Art is a place where our deepest spiritual values meet the marketplace.
So that causes all kinds of questions.
I mean, how do you put a price on art?
People do.
It's a vast marketplace.
And strange things happen when you mix the most spiritual with the most commercial.
That is David Frum, a staff writer at The Atlantic. In 2022, he published a piece called
Who Benefits When Western Museums Return Looted Art?
It's one thing when, you know, there's a war in Ukraine and the Russian forces break into
a museum in a Ukrainian city and they take the artworks and they put them in crates
and they take them back to Russia.
And then the war ends five years later
and there's a peace treaty.
That art, we know where it came from.
It had a possessor.
The possessors are still alive.
They are institutions that still exist.
And we can arrange for the art to come back from Russia
to the museum in Ukraine from which it was taken.
But when we're talking about lapses of 100, 200, 500 years,
the whole concept of theft becomes kind of cracked. The second most famous Greek artwork in a European museum is the Pergamum
Altar in Berlin, which is unearthed by German archaeologists. Pergamum was a city on the west
coast of what is now Turkey. The artists who made the work were Greek. The king who commanded the work
was of mixed Greek and Macedonian origin.
And the taxpayers who paid for it
spoke all the mingled languages
of what was then Asia Minor, Anatolia,
and some of them were Semitic
and some of them were other vanished groups.
So who gets it?
Turkey, Greece, Macedon, Syria,
because that's probably the place
that is closest to the culture of the people who paid the taxes.
I mean, it's gone. That world is gone.
So there is no one to give it back to.
It's just an illusion.
I went back to Matthew Bogdanos, the prosecutor, with David Frum's argument. Now, there are those who would say that your position is noble but naive in that you are
putting a physical piece of property into the hands of someone who may be a generation
or 10 generations removed from the origin, from either the creator or the owner.
And there are a number of ways that could be problematic.
Those pieces might be sold into the black market, wind up in the palace of some Gulf state prince or a Chinese or American Iraq. So no, I'm not naive. I recognize
the world. And that's where I get to say to you, we're not the Acme Judgment Company. We don't get
to pick and choose. We have a burglary in the Upper East Side. This person has 19 televisions
and 18 of them are stolen. When we catch the guy, do we get to say, you have 19, you don't need them
back. We're going to keep them or we're going to give them to other people. That's not how that
works. And if our victim is a country whose political regime we don't particularly care for,
tough. We actually have a very good relationship with the countries that we operate
with on our level. So I'm talking about the Ministry of Culture or the Ministry of Antiquities.
We actually require that these countries sign a document at the repatriation ceremony
promising that they will maintain the antiquity that's being returned and
wait for it, publicly display it. And is that document enforceable? Is it legally enforceable?
Almost certainly not. But here's how it's enforceable. The next time you have an antiquity
from that country that's looted and you call me. Am I really the person you want to piss off?
Do you really want to say, I know we promised Colonel Bogdanovic and the Manhattan DA's
office that we're going to maintain this, and we're going to publicly display it.
But you know what?
Forget that.
Oops.
And the next time we have an Iranian antiquity, Mr. Minister, I'm so sorry.
Believe it or not, these countries really honor these
requests. In India particularly, it's really heartwarming. They will send us videos of the
community receiving their idol back. And I'm telling you, it's insane. Like 50 people screaming
and yelling and singing and chanting, and they're holding this, you know, 150 pound idol up over their heads
as they march it into the temple.
We've had these things in Cambodia.
We see these ceremonies in Egypt.
It's followed from the plane right to its resting place
in the museum in Cairo or in Lebanon.
We have ongoing relationships across the globe with all these
countries. It's in their best interest to honor their agreement with us. So we are not returning
stuff that is then getting put on the market or being put in storage rooms.
If you were looking for the single most interesting case of returning art or restituting or repatriating art, as various people call it, I wouldin, just west of Nigeria, the bronzes
came from the historic kingdom of Benin in what is now Edo State in southern Nigeria.
In any case, the Benin bronzes are a massive collection of art, artifacts, and religious
objects that have been displayed for years in more than 160 museums around the world, including the Smithsonian in the
U.S., the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, the Kelvin Grove in Glasgow, and especially the British
Museum in London, which is the motherlode of Benin bronzes and which plays a starring role in our
story. The British Museum is surely one of the world's great museums. Some people consider it
the greatest, especially for antiquities. But others consider it, how shall we say this,
a trophy case for the spoils of war. Here, putting it far better than I ever could,
is the English comedian James Acaster. A long time ago, everyone in Britain got in a big old boat
and we robbed, and this will sound far-fetched,
everyone in the world!
And we got all the swag, didn't we?
And we took it back to old Blighty, and we hid it,
this is the clever part, we hid it in a museum.
Now, a few of you are sitting there. I can see your angry faces.
Like, so what? Fighters, keepers,
shut up! Hey, man, a while ago,
a lot of your ancestors stole loads of stuff from my
ancestors? Yeah. I'm here to take
them home. Let's right this wrong. What do you
say? I don't
think so.
We're still looking at it.
How true to history is James Acaster's version?
Let's find out by doing what we usually do, which is calling up the academic experts.
Hi, so my name is Professor Dan Hicks.
I work at the University of Oxford as a curator at our anthropology museum, the Pitt Rivers Museum.
Okay, so where does this story begin?
Yeah. Okay. So if we wind back to 1884 and Berlin and the meeting of the European nations
in the Berlin Congress.
This is where they sit down with a map of Africa and say, you get this, I get that,
that kind of thing.
Exactly. Exactly. And so what is now Nigeria was part of the pink area for the British,
but not part of empire at that point,
not turning them into colonies at that point.
There are other entities.
There are protectorates.
There are areas controlled by the companies,
in this case, the Royal Niger Company.
The Royal Niger Company was a trading firm
that essentially served as an arm of the British
government.
So we have to imagine this as a corporate and militarist form of empire.
And really, this is all about the palm oil.
It's about the rubber industry.
In 1892, the Royal Niger Company signed a trade treaty with the Oba, or King of Benin.
Within just a few years, it was decided that the Oba wasn't as cooperative as Britain would
have liked, and they sent an expedition to Benin to work things out, headed up by one
James Phillips.
Things didn't work out at all.
The group was attacked, and Phillips and most of his men were killed.
The British response was what came to be known as a punitive expedition.
And of course, it's one of so many other expeditions that happened in these 1890s years.
This expedition to Benin involved 10 Royal Navy ships and 1,400 soldiers armed with the recently invented Maxim machine gun.
The Benin defenders had machetes, pistols, and muskets.
The British forces had no trouble taking the kingdom of Benin.
They massacred the population, burned the city.
They captured the Oba and sent him into exile.
The disruption of the attack on the kingdom cannot be overemphasized.
That is Victor Ihamenor.
I'm an artist and a writer from Nigeria.
Ihamenor is from Edo State, the historic location of the Kingdom of Benin.
He is one of the artists who represented Nigeria's debut in the Venice Biennale in 2017.
They kind of created a vacuum for us, you know, by removing an entire people's history.
This is what we will consider our library.
A visual library for that Magda was completely razed down.
And what they didn't burn, they looted.
That's right.
What the British didn't burn, they looted. That's right. What the British didn't burn, they looted thousands of objects
from the ceremonial halls of the Oba.
These included bronze and brass relief plaques
that told the story of hundreds of years worth
of Benin history,
commemorative brass heads
that had adorned the shrines of royal ancestors.
They took carved ivory tusks, coral beads, brass bells, figures, and gaming boards,
even household items like flasks, cups, bowls, spoons, salt shakers.
The Western colonizers were kleptomaniacs.
They stole hairpins.
They stole keys to the doors in the palace.
And where did all this loot go?
In the 19th and 20th century, there were four European countries accumulating African art.
It was France, the UK, Belgium, and Germany.
That is Bénédicte Savoie, a French professor of art history at the Technical University in Berlin.
As for the Benin plunder?
Most important pieces went directly to the British Museum,
but the rest has been sold on the art market and the art market around 1900.
It's the best time for the art market.
You know, Picasso is a very young guy. All these
avant-garde are interested in African art and the art market in Europe made a lot of money with all
these objects. And the richest museums at that time in Europe were the German museums, because
German was a Reich now. And if you are a Reich, an empire, you need a museum.
It was absolutely normal in Europe at that time to have huge museums in the capitals of empires like British Museum, etc.
So the Germans said, OK, we have only Cameroon, Tanzania, Togo and Namibia right now. And let's buy things from Benin City,
this very, very important, beautiful culture.
And they bought a lot of bronzes, 600 only in Berlin.
Within weeks of this attack,
the bronzes were on display in London, Oxford, Berlin, and elsewhere. And they were
displayed, if we go back to the British Museum, they were displayed in the Assyrian saloon
alongside objects from ancient Egypt, objects from the Bronze Age, from the ancient Near East.
So the narrative was absolutely obvious. We have blown your culture back into the Bronze Age. This is a dead culture.
I'm not sure the narrative is as absolutely obvious as Dan Hicks says. Still, the British Museum has been for a few centuries now, a physical archive of one nation's enthusiasm for conquest and empire building. That era,
as you know, is long gone. And yet the evidence, even the bloodiest evidence imaginable, like
the Benin bronzes, is still proudly on display. This is the Clebber Pop. We hid it in a museum.
After the break, who is in favor of returning the Benin bronzes to Nigeria and who is against it?
I'm Stephen Dubner.
This is Freakonomics Radio.
We'll be right back.
We've been speaking with Dan Hicks, a professor at Oxford.
So I think I'm the world's first, well, I am the world's first professor of contemporary archaeology.
And what is contemporary archaeology?
I mean, it's tautological in some ways, but I think it underlines something really important about all archaeology.
Archaeology in some ways is the inverse of history. So in this case, in terms of the thing that we're talking about, the idea that empire, you know, actually isn't over. It's here with us
in the present. It's here with us in locations that include our museums.
Hicks, remember, is also a curator at Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum.
As a part of my work there, we are responsible for one of the larger collections of the Benin Bronzers.
I know there was a tweet sent out in 2015 by a grassroots student movement.
It said the Pitt Rivers Museum is one of the most violent spaces in Oxford.
Yeah.
Tell me your response when you first saw that tweet.
You know, I heard at that point, I'd simply never seen it that way.
I mean, this is one of those,
you know, marmalade dropping moments of your career, right?
You're halfway through your breakfast.
And, oh, right, let's think this through.
So for me, it's all about learning from a new generation.
I mean, I'm now 50 years old
and it's the people who are in their 20s who are reading this material so differently and are showing us
things that have been sitting in plain sight for so long. As Hicks began to think things through,
as he puts it, his views shifted and hard. Today, he has a zeal that may remind you of a religious convert. Consider the book
he published in 2020. It's called The Brutish Museums, The Benin Bronze's Colonial Violence
and Cultural Restitution. Here is a typical sentence. The sacking of Benin City in February
1897 was an attack on human life, on culture, on belief, on art, and on sovereignty. In just a few years,
Hicks had become a flag bearer for the movement to repatriate the Benin bronzes to Nigeria.
Nigeria, by the way, had been trying to reclaim the bronzes since the 1930s. They began asking
more insistently after gaining independence from Britain in 1960,
but not much happened.
In 2010, a consortium of Western museums joined a few Nigerian institutions
to form the Benin Dialogue Group.
The idea was to establish a new museum in Benin City, Nigeria,
that would display the bronzes once the Western museums decided to return them. But once
again, not much happened until, as it turns out, the year 2020. As David Frum wrote in his Atlantic
article, the George Floyd protests of 2020 jolted the group into hyperactivity. It might seem strange that the murder of a black man by a
white police officer in America would trigger a global sentiment to return art looted from Nigeria
by Britain some 130 years earlier. Or maybe not. The parallels were, as Dan Hicks might say,
hidden in plain sight. Here again is Bénédicte Savoy.
Now, today, in the 21st century, France, the UK, Belgium and Germany are like Olympic Games for restitution.
They are fighting for, they are struggling in order to be the first to restitute important collections.
Savoie herself has played a significant role in this restitution drama.
In 2017, French President Emmanuel Macron visited several former French colonies in Africa.
Like the British, French colonizers had sacked and looted their way through sub-Saharan Africa
and sent home thousands of treasures that
are still on display in French museums. During a speech at a university in Burkina Faso, Macron
said, I cannot accept that a large part of cultural heritage from several African countries is in
France. Savoie, who was already sympathetic to returning African art, wrote an article calling
Macron's speech a revolution. And Macron promptly appointed Savoie, along with the Senegalese
economist Felwin Saar, to push the revolution along. Savoie and Saar visited museum directors
and government officials in four African countries, and they wrote a nearly
200-page report that Macron apparently found so persuasive that he immediately promised to
restitute thousands of objects to the country of Benin and to loan money to build a new museum
there. But returning a massive collection of art and artifacts so weighted with history is not simple. Critics said the report was too ambitious and too academic to be realistic. Furthermore, French law prohibits the removal of artwork from public collections, at least for the time being. British Parliament had similarly passed laws making it hard to de-accession works from their
public museums, although recent legislation has given museum trustees more leeway. At the moment,
several museums in several countries have at least begun the process of repatriating African art.
And I think the most competitive tandem is between Germany and France right now.
What's in it for them? What do they gain by restituting?
It's difficult to say, but it's obvious that the restitution has something to do with soft power, with soft diplomacy.
You are speaking about art, about beauty, about emotions but in the same time you are doing something like
I show you that I am confident in your ability to protect your own cultural heritage or let me
build a museum for you with my money or something like that It's not only about moving objects from A to B or from B to C,
etc. It's about a new art of relationship with these countries. And for France, France has
a very, very bad reputation in the former colonies in Senegal, in Mali, in Boc in Afazo, in Cameroon, etc. And I think Emmanuel Macron tried to do what he can
in order to repair this very bad reputation.
So, okay, in the restitution Olympics, as you put it,
France and Germany are fighting to be number one,
which, knowing those two countries and their complicated histories and their current
political situation, maybe doesn't surprise me so much. But the UK, well, I guess the UK is
variegated. There's some restitution going on. But from what I can tell, the British Museum
is not particularly interested in restituting and not even talking about restituting. It's very strange because in the 70s and 80s, the UK was the motor of the discussion with Ghana,
with Nigeria, and you had very important stakeholders in Oxford and Cambridge fighting
for restitutions and also very normal people writing letters to the Times saying we need to have better relations to Ghana, for example.
And now, I think you're right, the British museum, the state museums in the UK are very reluctant to speak about these topics, they are observing the situation very carefully, like, you know,
like an animal observing a very difficult situation before he knows what to do. And I
can understand it because, as you say, the British Museum is a trophy of war, like all museums, museums have a golden face and a very dark face.
And we are used to know only the shiny face, the sunny face.
And I think for a museum like the British Museum, if they will tell the truth about the history of collections,
it would be so disgusting that it would be the end of the British Museum.
Not the end because it would be empty,
but the end because it's so disgusting that nobody will be very comfortable with visiting such a museum.
The British Museum is a member of the Benin Dialogue Group,
and they've given a few million dollars toward a proposed museum in
Nigeria. But as for their plans to legally and or physically return their Benin bronzes,
that's hard to say. The British Museum declined our multiple requests for an interview,
which seems to be what they do when anyone asks them to discuss the situation. Oxford's Dan Hicks has become perhaps the
loudest voice of those scolding the British Museum to change their ways. This position
is possible in part because his museum, the Pitt Rivers, recently declared it will work to return
the nearly 100 Benin objects in its collection. And how many Benin objects does the British Museum own? That too is hard to say.
We still don't know how many objects are in the British Museum from 1897,
and all these other institutions don't have inventories because of years of underfunding
and lack of investment. So many of these are hidden away in the storerooms. This is a story
about what's in the storerooms, not about what's on display.
In Paris, we have 69,000 objects from Africa in the Musée du Quai Branly and only 1,000 on display.
So 68,000 are invisible.
That's a scandal.
And the question is, why?
Why? No museum in Europe is able to explain why it is so important to have all these accumulation of African art in their basements.
Since the British Museum isn't talking, I asked Dan Hicks to summarize the best argument they might make in favor of not repatriating their Benin bronzes.
It's the what if. You know, it's the what if. If you give back the Benin bronzes, they'll be sold on the open market. If you give back the Benin bronzes, there'll be a war and they'll be damaged by bombs. If you give back the Benin bronzes, they're not going to care for these objects well enough. There won't be inventories done.
In reality, all those things that those myths say might happen if they're given back,
every one of them has happened to the Benin bronzes here in the UK.
Even the British Museum has sold off objects that were taken in 1897.
Okay, there might be a war one day in Nigeria.
In the Second World War, Hull Museum and also Liverpool Museum were bombed in the Blitz,
and there were Benin bronzes that were burst into fragments by Nazi bombs. So, all those things that
the civil servants invented might happen if you return them actually did happen, but they happened here in the UK.
When you listen to people like Dan Hicks and Bénédicte Savoie and earlier Matthew Bogdanos,
you may get the sense that repatriating looted art is a fairly simple matter.
Until, that is, you ask a couple basic questions.
Like, to whom exactly are these pieces being returned?
And what exactly will become of them?
Here again is David Frum, author of the Atlantic article,
Who Benefits When Western Museums Return Looted Art?
When this issue really erupted in 2020, I was caught off guard by some of the
simplicities that were being propounded. And I went to Nigeria, a place I'd never visited,
in order to do some reporting to reveal some of the real complexities that people need to
think about if they're going to think about this issue as a serious issue.
Frum grew up in Toronto, where his parents were avid collectors of African
art. Much of their collection is now in the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto. And I've spent a
lot of my life in and around the collecting world, although I am myself not at all a collector.
And why does he think the repatriation of Benin bronzes is more complex than some people say?
They say, well, give it back to Nigeria.
And the problem is, what is Nigeria?
Because what I document in the article is that there are at least three major claimants
inside Nigeria to these artworks.
There are some minor ones too, but there are three big ones.
And you can't toss it into the middle and say, okay, go scramble.
Those major claimants are a proposed Museum of West African Art in Edo State, the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, and the current Oba of Benin City, Eware II, who is a descendant of the Oba, who was exiled by the British in 1897.
And so when you choose one of those three claimants, you are making a moral decision. descendant of the Oba, who was exiled by the British in 1897.
And so when you choose one of those three claimants, you are making a moral decision.
You have to accept it and you have to bear it. So the first claimant to the Nigerian pieces,
and this is the idea that got the most excitement and really revived this in the West, was this proposal for a public-private partnership of state-of-the-art modern museum with integrity
and an independent board that was proposed by
the governor of the state, although he himself would not be directly involved. Really impressive
people, Nigerian business leaders, some international people, and they would run the
museum. It's had a variety of names, but it would be an independent museum of West African art in
Edo State in what is now Benin City. This is the future museum that European donors have been contributing to.
It would be built on the historic site of the Kingdom of Benin.
If you've been following the story and you've seen pictures in the papers
drawing of a beautiful-looking modern building,
that's the project you've read about.
It's going to be just what a museum should be.
And one of the things I describe in the article is how that dream
met Nigerian reality and was destroyed by Nigerian reality.
That reality, says Frum, is a conflict between Edo state and the current Oba of Benin.
He doesn't have political power, but he has enormous spiritual and religious authority within his kingdom.
And he says, these pieces belong to my family and I want them returned to me.
And I have an idea for a royal museum, which I will own and control.
Frum writes of a longstanding feud between the Oba and the current governor of Edo State.
Their families are historic rivals dating back to around the time of the British punitive expedition.
So Frum thinks the museum project is doomed to fail.
I mean, I hope it does not fail because I think it's a beautiful thing and I really admire
the people who are involved in it. But major projects like this that are associated with
an individual governor in a Nigerian state tend not to outlast that governor. Governor Obeseke's
time is limited and there's no indication that a successor is going to be interested in this. And he also is fighting against the Oba of Benin. And everyone I spoke to, and I spoke to a wide
variety of people from many different walks of life in churches and political systems agreed,
if there's a contest between the governor and the Oba, the Oba is going to win.
As of now, the Edo Museum project is still moving forward. There is an archaeological dig underway to look for remnants of the Benin Kingdom.
And the museum's director, Aure Disu, told us by email that construction has begun on
a collections and research center that will provide, quote, grade A facilities to host
and care for artifacts and contemporary artworks. But just recently,
the Nigerian government, by way of a presidential decree, announced that all artifacts must be
delivered to the Oba of Benin. It has since been reported that 23 Benin objects that Germany had
repatriated to Nigeria have been transferred to the Oba's collection.
I personally don't believe that the artwork that is returned to Benin will be on public display
in our lifetimes, and maybe never. I don't think the Nigerians have any workable plan
to display the Benin art that comes back to them in the next years.
So where will it go?
I think they'll end up in the possession of the federal government of Nigeria.
The Nigerian state has chronic fiscal problems.
The Nigerian state remains as, you know, not maybe as corrupt as it was when oil prices
were higher, but still a pretty corrupt state.
I don't believe that museum is ever going to be built.
So I think what will tend to happen with art that has returned to Nigeria is that some
of it will end up as the private property of the Oba, especially some of the earlier,
more attention-getting pieces.
And then if the flows continue,
they will end up in crates
somewhere in a basement in Abuja,
and maybe they will be safe,
and maybe they won't be.
But I don't think they will ever be displayed.
From points to another complicating factor
that the European proponents of repatriation
don't talk about.
The Benin art is not innocent.
The Benin art is itself a monument to guilt.
We call it the Benin bronzes, but they're not actually made of bronze in most cases.
Almost all of them are made of brass.
So the way they got the brass was they traded for it.
What did they trade?
Well, Benin grew a particular form of pepper that was very popular with Europeans in the
1400s and 1500s, and they made textiles.
They exported some ivory, but they especially exported slaves that they had captured and that they used to build the wealth and power of their kingdom. They sold them to the Portuguese who then trafficked these people to giant sugar plantations. The Benin kings were slave sellers the modern age where we can substitute knowledge for human labor and can make wealth out of the air is one of tremendous oppression of most people.
And that's true for every powerholder who had the wherewithal to command art.
So we can't reinvent innocence.
We all have to accept history as it is.
And then we have to starting now make our moral decisions based on the choices that are actually available to us. And Frum thinks that in their rush to undo the
sins of the 19th century, today's repatriation advocates haven't thought through all the
implications. Look, I think a lot of people want to do good. That's a very laudable and wonderful impulse. The danger is, as you do good,
do you catch that little glimpse of yourself in the mirror
and think, boy, I look good when I'm doing good.
And the moment that thought enters your brain,
the whole enterprise becomes a little different.
That's what I worry about.
Look, if you possess valuable artifacts
or if you control valuable artifacts, you have a form of power.
And power can never be exercised with perfect innocence in this guilty world.
So you must use your power responsibly, knowing everything has a tragic story.
If you were advising the British Museum on this issue, what would you say?
I would advise them this is not a great moment to make this decision.
This may be a decision for your successor. When you have an object that is 500 years old,
I think one of the questions you need to ask yourself is, why do I need to make a decision
today? This object will be here 50 years, 100 years from now. If I don't see a good answer today,
I can have confidence that my children or grandchildren, they may see a good answer today, I can have confidence that my children or grandchildren,
they may see a good answer tomorrow. So you don't choose a bad answer because you have to hurry,
hurry, hurry to dispose of this 500-year-old object. Sometimes you say, let's just wait
until there is a good answer. Now to that argument, a counter-argument could be,
and I've heard this counter-argument from pro-repatriation people is that, so what? It doesn't matter. These are stolen
goods, and the very least you can do is return them to someone related to or someone affiliated
with the survivors of those from whom they were stolen. Yeah, I hear that argument a lot, too,
and it's associated with, above all, a curator named Daniel Hicks, who works at the Pitt Rivers
Museum in Oxford, England. It doesn't matter, as you say. Just give it back. Who cares what happens to it?
Well, then why not burn it? If the job is to purify yourself by getting rid of the art,
put it in a pit, melt it. Or why not sell it to a Russian oligarch and use the money to fund
British schools or British healthcare services? If the goal is deaccession, there are a lot of ways of deaccessioning it.
You cannot abdicate your response.
You inherited this thing, whatever its provenance.
Art lasts a long time.
The great pieces of Benin are mostly made between about 1450 and 1650.
They've outlived people, kingdoms, civilizations.
And they come with their own obligations of continuity
with whoever happens to own them in any given particular moment.
When the British took these works in 1897 and they brought them to Britain,
I don't think they right away knew exactly what they were going to do.
Victor I. Hamanor again.
This is 125 years of history that people want us to sort overnight. Victor I. Hamanor again. that history. I think there will be some, you know, elbowing and pushing. I don't particularly
see that as a problem. I mean, corruption in government is not peculiar to Nigerian government.
So I think that, yes, there have been like issues of where is the war going to go? Is it going to
go to the palace? Is it going to go to government of Nigeria? You have to realize when this thing
happened, there was no Nigeria. 1897, there was no Nigeria. It was just Benin Kingdom.
There was no Edo State.
It was just Benin Kingdom.
I think that the world or whoever the critics are need to give a little bit of room because we just started having these walks back.
We have been asking for walks to be restituted over decades now. And suddenly they woke up.
Some of the institutions woke up and they said, OK, we are ready.
Let's go.
Right.
And yes, now that they have agreed that they are going to return this work, I think that people
need to give us a little bit of space to decide how we want to structure these things on our own end.
After the break, what did Ihamanor think when he first saw the Benin bronzes in captivity in the British Museum?
And we go see the bronzes ourselves, or at least try to.
I'm Stephen Dubner. This is Freakonomics Radio. We'll be right back. I would say I started making art quite early, as far back as I was like four years old.
That, again, is the Nigerian artist Victor I. Hamanor.
I have good memory of drawing in sand and drawing on the walls in my grandfather's very expensive compound.
Also, I grew up in a home that has one of the earliest photographers
in that part of the country.
My uncle, who is 90 years old, is a photographer that studied
at the Institute of Photography in New York in the early 60s.
I realized that for you to create images and have people reflect
upon what they are seeing was quite powerful.
So I never stopped.
Today, Aikhamenor splits his time between Lagos, Nigeria, and the Washington, D.C. area.
I still remember that day very clearly when I first visited the British Museum, which was in 2017.
I was preparing for an exhibition, a solo exhibition in London,
called In the Kingdom of This World.
I got in there, you understand, now I was emotionally charged to see these works.
It's not like I've not seen some of the bronze heads before, maybe in books and stuff like that.
The British Museum's Benin bronzes are situated in a basement wing,
along with the rest of the African collection.
Many of the objects had a ceremonial or religious purpose.
Funerary masks, for instance.
A funerary mask is supposed to be buried with somebody that is dead.
Why are you having it in your museum?
Why would I go and preserve it if that is what it was made for?
Who told you it was supposed to be behind glasses and be treated?
It's a funerary mask.
There are also brass plaques that once adorned the pillars of the Oba's palace.
Because Benin had no written language,
the plaques were one of the chief repositories of the kingdom's history.
They told stories, like storybooks.
The way a graphic designer will illustrate a storybook
is the way a Benny Bruns maker would illustrate an entire story. Before the British raid, there
were over 1,000 plaques spanning hundreds of years of history. The British Museum owns nearly 200 of
them. So when you're looking at some of these plaques, they are disjointed because it's like taking William Shakespeare's Macbeth or Hamlet.
So you go to first act, you tear the page off.
Then you go to the last act of Hamlet and you tear it off.
Then you paste it on the wall and call it William Shakespeare.
So if somebody is reading it, yes, you can read one piece.
I mean, the sentences are nice.
The phrases are great.
You can quote from them, but it's not the entire story.
Until you put the entire Macbeth on a wall,
then you will understand the story and the magnitude of what has been done
to a book like Macbeth.
And, you know, after a while, I just got really emotional about looking at them
all strung up there, just like being art for art's sake, which they were not.
They have never been.
The plaques were also meant to memorialize how certain rituals were performed.
Recently, the Queen of England passed on and we saw the entire ceremony.
They are referencing a book for what we are seeing play out on TV.
Nothing was just like done at random, right?
Everything was documented so they can reference it.
The grandchildren will wear black on certain days.
People will visit.
So we had that documentation in our plaques on how things would be done in that same way.
Then some foreigners came and completely just yanked that whole history book
and all of those things off the walls
and then begin to string them together
like they are beads,
you know, bought in a cheap shop in Vegas.
Having learned what we had learned thus far
about the Benin bronzes,
their meaning, their history,
the punitive expedition that scattered
them around the globe, and the somewhat harried movement now to repair the past,
we thought it was time to go to the British Museum to visit them for ourselves. So we booked a flight
for London. Dan Hicks, author of The Brutish Museums, agreed to meet us there and give
a proper tour of the Benin Bronzes. It was a damp and chilly Sunday morning, and we queued up with
Hicks to go inside. I told Hicks that we had tried many times to interview a British museum official
about the controversy over the Benin bronzes and the
many other pieces in their collection that are considered contested objects.
It's absolutely one of the defining features of what the British Museum is in the eyes of
the public these days. You know, it's the jokes that won't go away. Why do they call it the
British Museum if everything in it is stolen from other countries. When are they going to give it all back?
It's really affecting the British Museum as a brand.
In any other sector, if your brand was being so dominated by one issue
that you were failing to address, you would want to do something about it
other than just keep your head in the sand.
That leads to, I guess, an obvious question. Why have they not?
The playbook from 30 years ago is still very much the one being used by
the press officers of our national museums. We're going to tough this one out. We're not going to
feed the media on this issue. We'll keep quiet., will occasionally say very small things that changes the subject.
We'll talk about the Parthenon marbles every time someone talks about the Benin bronzes.
We'll talk about Easter Island any time someone raises the Parthenon marbles and so on.
The queue moved quickly and we got up near the entrance.
As we were about to pass through the main gate, a security guard approached.
He did not like the look of
our microphones. Anything like this is an absolute flat no. So we really need to go to the press
office. Okay. We told him what we were doing, that we'd been trying for months to arrange a visit
and or an interview with the British Museum, but that we couldn't even get our calls returned.
So instead, we brought this nice professor with us to give a tour.
So are you recording me right now?
Yes.
Right, you didn't tell me that, sir.
I'm going to ask you to stop, please, okay?
All right, yeah.
Why are you doing that?
So, our recording equipment was taken from us.
We were allowed to enter the museum without it.
We would just have to record Dan Hicks' tour of the Benin Bronzes on a couple of iPhones.
We're going to go down into the Sanctuary Galleries,
into the basement, right?
I mean, they are not being displayed in the same way
as, let's say, objects from ancient Egypt are.
These African objects that we're going to be seeing
are really controversial, you know,
hidden away in the
basement. Oh my god, look at this. Gallery closed. They knew we were coming. They knew we were coming,
didn't they? Room 25, Africa. All of Africa is down there, is it not? It is. It is. Closed today.
But to be fair, the museum apologizes for any inconvenience.
We asked a guard why the African gallery was closed.
He said he didn't know.
There was a sign announcing that a tour of the gallery would be starting soon,
led by a volunteer.
So we waited outside the roped-off entrance.
We got to chatting with a visitor from Scotland
named Shirley Thompson,
who had come to the British Museum
with her husband Ian
specifically to see the Benin Bronzes.
I came on Friday and it was closed.
We came today and it's closed again.
So you came just to see the Benin Bronzes.
Why? I'm just curious.
Because I'd never heard of them
and I'd just started doing an open university course,
and Ben read about them.
The fact, I think, in Europe,
we've got more in storage in Europe than the people have back.
It blew my mind.
Yeah.
Now, what do you think of it being returned?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, of course.
I mean, I didn't even know I had it.
Oh.
I didn't.
I didn't know we stole it. In case you didn't even know I had it. I didn't, honestly.
I didn't know we stole it.
In case you didn't catch that, Ian said, even though we stole it.
As we were chatting with the Thompsons,
the sign announcing the upcoming tour of the African Gallery had been swapped out.
It turns out that the tour is cancelled.
When did that get changed?
Well, that was anticlimactic, wasn't it? We never were able to see the British Museum's massive collection of Benin bronzes. But next time on the show, we find another museum that's
a bit more cooperative. Let's just hope there's nobody from our comms team spying on me.
We'll also hear from the secretary of the Smithsonian, which has already returned
its Benin bronzes to Nigeria. And we still haven't given up on the British Museum.
Hello. How do you do?
Would love to go to Africa with you.
That's next time on the show. Until then, take care of yourself and if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
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where we also publish transcripts and show notes.
This episode was produced by Morgan Levy and mixed by Greg Rippin with help from Jeremy Johnston. We had help in London from
Rob Double and London Broadcast Studio and from Zach Lipinski. Our staff also includes Ryan Kelly,
Catherine Moncure, Alina Kullman, Rebecca Lee Douglas, Julie Canfor, Sarah Lilly, Eleanor Osborne,
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Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by the Hitchhikers.
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As always, thanks for listening.
I wonder if I could volunteer to lead the tour.
Once you've done the exams...
We better get you credentialed.
We only have 45 minutes for you to take the exam.
Yeah, that's true.
LAUGHTER work, the hidden side of everything. Stitcher.