Saturday, December 07, 2013

The Hamilton Collection

A terrible tragedy during the Napoleonic Wars


Sir William Hamilton and the wreck of the HMS Colossus
Ian Jenkins, curator, British Museumhttp://blog.britishmuseum.org/2013/12/


Sir William Hamilton (1730-1803), if remembered at all, is primarily known as the person who shared his second wife Emma with Admiral Lord Nelson in the late eighteenth century. Their ménage a trois was a notorious target for British satirists of the time. It ended with the death of Sir William in 1803, and two years later in 1805 the tragic death of Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar.
Jasper ware portrait plaque of Sir William Hamilton, by Josiah Wedgwood I and Thomas Bentley, Etruria factory, Staffordshire, England, AD 1779
Jasper ware portrait plaque of Sir William Hamilton, by Josiah Wedgwood I and Thomas Bentley, Etruria factory, Staffordshire, England, AD 1779
Hamilton is celebrated in the British Museum for his collection of Greek and Roman artefacts, which acquired by the Museum in 1772, changed its course from its origins as a rather old-fashioned cabinet of curiosities to starting it on the way to becoming the great collection of world cultures it is today. The founding collection of Sir Hans Sloane had very few ancient objects of merit, but Sir William’s vision for the Museum would change that and for this reason he has his own showcase in the Enlightenment Gallery.
The story of the wreck of the HMS Colossus and the loss of its cargo occurred in the dramatic last years of Sir William’s life. He had been British Ambassador to the court of the king of Naples and Sicily for 34 years. However, when Napoleon’s army occupied Rome in 1796, Sir William was forced to evacuate Naples and return home with Emma to Britain.
One of his last acts was to oversee the packing of his vase collection. But back in England, Sir William not only had to suffer the wrench of his sudden departure from his beloved Italy, but also had the appalling news that his vase collection was lost at sea. It had been packed in an unfit vessel, which grounded off the Scilly Isles where it broke up, and the packing cases washed overboard.
Red-figured wine bowl (volute-krater), attributed to the Baltimore Painter, Greek, around 325 BC
Red-figured wine bowl (volute-krater), attributed to the Baltimore Painter, Greek, around 325 BC
But fortune smiled on the old knight as by accident his finest vases were not on the HMS Colossus. When another vessel arrived laden with Sir William’s property, he discovered the collection he thought he’d lost, and he delighted in preparing them for sale.
Sir William died in 1803 with Emma and Nelson at his bedside.

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COMMENTARY
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Admiral Nelson, the most outstanding naval commander in the history of the British Empire, survived Sir William Hamilton by two years before he was killed in the Battle of Trafalgar, which ended Napoleon's hopes for a military conquest of Britain supported by successful unison of the French and Spanish navies.

Hamilton was one of the greatest antiquities collectors in recorded history. The love affair between Lady Hamilton and Admiral Nelson was one of the most intriguing and interesting affairs of the times, extending its effects even to royal disapproval.

Sir William Hamilton's Greek vase collection originated in the first excavations of Pompeii, and while loss of the HMS Colossus cargo remains tragic, the survival of his finest specimens did much to enrich our knowledge of Greek ceramic art.


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Monday, December 02, 2013

Righting a Wrong

Prominent Israeli Antiquities Dealer Sues IAA

http://culturalpropertyobserver.blogspot.com/2013/12/prominent-israeli-antiquities-dealer.html
by Peter Tompa

A prominent Israeli antiquities dealer has filed suit against the Israeli Antiquities Authority.   He alleges that the IAA damaged his reputation in prosecuting a lawsuit charging him with forgery of ancient artifacts.  The IAA's lawsuit subsequently fell apart in spectacular fashion before an Israeli court.  The antiquities dealer, Robert Deutsch, says he is entitle to some $3 million in damages.   American collectors, Museums and dealers may find some of the allegations on how he was treated sound familiar.  It will be interesting to see how this matter progresses in court.


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COMMENTARY
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This observer received significant correspondence input from Robert Deutsch from the beginning of this controversy up until the collapse of the IAA's lawsuit. That correspondence is of course privileged, however it can ethically be said that Deutsch from the very beginning consistently and convincingly maintained that the IAA's allegations were without any factual basis.

The IAA clearly engaged in disgraceful, out of control conduct in its attempt to destroy the reputation of Robert Deutsch and the owner of the artifact(s) whose authenticity was challenged in their suit.

This is one example of the evils that government agencies which are not effectively supervised and overseen by legislatures can produce.

In the USA, antiquities collectors and dealers just as honorable and blameless as Robert Deutsch are presently struggling to prevent a sinister anticollecting bureaucracy from destroying the time-honored right of American citizens to collect and study common antiquities such as ancient coins.

The defeat of the IAA's unjustifiable assault upon Deutsch et al. offers hope to American citizens whose rights are being trampled on in a similarly unscrupulous and unethical manner.

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