The Princeton College Artwork Museum’s (PUAM) provenance analysis has recognized 16 antiquities in its assortment which can be linked to the alleged artwork smuggler Edoardo Almagià, a 1973 graduate of the college.
That is the second report of ties between Almagià and the museum’s assortment; in April 2023, 5 artefacts donated by the alumnus have been seized by authorities amid suspicions that the gadgets have been stolen. Objects within the newest group of probably ill-gotten antiquities originated from across the Mediterranean, in response to The Every day Princetonian, and embody an Etruscan funeral urn , a painted Athenian amphora, and 6 fragments from a Roman lead sarcophagus.
Almagià offered six of the artefacts to the museum between 1987 and 2001. The remaining ten have been items, some bequeathed by outstanding artwork world benefactors like Joyce von Bothmer, the spouse of late Metropolitan Museum of Artwork curator Dietrich von Bothmer.
Almagià first got here to the eye of authorities in 1992, when his connection to Pietro Casasanta, a well-knowned tombarolo or “tomb robber”, got here to gentle. Whereas the unique provenance of the PUAM objects don’t point out Almagià, a 2021 New York grand jury report particulars rampant and continuous smuggling exercise from 1987 onward. In 2006, Almagià was arrested in Italy for unlawful trafficking and exports, however the prosecution was dropped resulting from a statute of limitations expiration.
Final September, in an interview with the Princeton Alumni Weekly, Almagià maintained his innocence and appeared to attribute the issue to altering provenance requirements for the sale and acquisiton of antiquities. “What is completely a illness is that you simply begin making use of issues which have come up in the present day to a market of 20, 30, 40 years in the past,” he stated.

Tyrrhenian amphora, 560BCE-550BCE, Greek, Attic, attributed to the Guglielmi Painter Princeton College Artwork Museum. Museum buy, Carl Otto von Kienbusch Jr., Memorial Assortment Fund
The PUAM’s curator of historical and Mediterranean artwork, Carolyn Laferriere, informed The Every day Princetonian: “Broadly within the area, there’s an essential corrective occurring the place we’re completely dedicated to sustaining these authorized, and likewise, moral issues when it comes to our assortment.” In keeping with Lafrerriere, the museum can be within the strategy of hiring a provenance researcher.
She added: “As caretakers of those objects, it’s our duty to learn about their histories, as a result of that may decide how we take care of it, what kind of conservation interventions we might do, or what sorts of tales we are able to inform about them.”
The PUAM’s supervisor of promoting, Morgan Gengo, informed The Every day Princetonian that the museum has added provenance information for almost 17,000 objects since August 2023. “As and once we make new discoveries in regards to the objects in our care, or new data is delivered to our consideration, we act accordingly and proactively to make sure that objects are within the arms of their rightful homeowners, whether or not Princeton or one other social gathering,” Gengo stated.
Among the objects have been returned to Italy, in some situations by way of the Manhattan District Legal professional’s workplace. In September, authorities introduced the return of ten Princeton artefacts that had been seized due to a search warrant, together with six on mortgage from Almagià.
Matthew Bogdanos, the top of the Manhattan District Legal professional’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit, informed the Princeton Alumni Weekly: “If Almagià is the primary title in your provenance, it’s stolen.”
In keeping with the grand jury report, citing letters Almagià wrote to consumers by which he outlined unlawful excavation and transportation actions, “it seems from the entire proof that Almagià was surprisingly candid along with his clientele about his black-market provide of looted antiquities”.
The PUAM’s important constructing is at present closed whereas the establishment pursues a significant redevelopment and growth, designed by Adjaye Associates, which is predicted to open in spring of 2025.