Mexico Loses Bid To Stop Auction Of Pre-Hispanic Artifacts
Mexico Loses Bid To Stop Auction Of Pre-Hispanic Artifacts
A Christies auction of preHispanic artifacts went ahead Wednesday despite the Mexican governments appeals to stop it, the latest round in Mexicos losing battle to stop such sales.

MEXICO CITY: A Christies auction of pre-Hispanic artifacts went ahead Wednesday despite the Mexican governments appeals to stop it, the latest round in Mexicos losing battle to stop such sales.

Christies Paris branch auctioned off 72 sculptures and figurines from the Maya and Olmec cultures despite Mexicos claim that the pieces were national treasures and part of its national heritage. Fifteen other items failed to sell.

One stone Maya carving, traditionally known as an Axe because of its shape, went for almost $800,000 (692,000 euros). The Christie’s catalogue described the piece as a sculpturally-carved with a bearded dignitary with his head dramatically thrown back and struggling with a sinuous, mythical rattle snake.

The Mexican government said a dozen of the artifacts put up for sale were fake, but most of those sold anyway.

Mexican officials had demanded Christie’s stop the sale, which included other artifacts from the Taino and other cultures, and launched a social media campaign under the slogan #my heritage is not for sale.

Mexicos Foreign Relations Department said that the majority of items in the auction reached the market by illegal acts and that this type of actions represent an attack against culture, not only that of the peoples to who it belong, but against the understanding of the history of humanity and its cultures.

Leonardo Lpez Lujn, who has overseen the excavations in Mexico City’s Templo Mayor, wrote on his Twitter account that this is a never-ending story.

It’s proven that the old, recurring method of sending letters and demands does not have any effect, other than pretending that something is being done, Lpez Lujan wrote. Complex problems are solved with complex strategies.

Mexico has failed to stop several auctions, including a sale of pre-Hispanic sculptures and other artifacts by Christies Paris earlier this year.

The Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History protested the Christies Paris sale in February. The collection included a 1,500-year-old stone mask from the ancient city of Teotihuacan and an ancient statue of the fertility goddess Cihuateotl, apparently from the Totonac culture. The auction brought in more than $3 million.

Paris auction houses often sell Indigenous artifacts that are already on the art market, despite protests from activists who say they should be returned to their native lands. Christie’s said the Mayan sculpture, for example, had been bought by a European collector from on in the United State around 1970.

That appears to pre-date a 1972 Mexican law that forbids export or sale of archeological or significant cultural artifacts.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Read all the Latest News here

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://kapitoshka.info/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!