These revelations have shaken the staid museum world and raised important questions about security, record keeping and funding priorities.
The British Museum must use this scandal as an opportunity to update the dusty notion of the so-called universal museum — rethinking how these institutions can exist in a 21st-century world where the sharing and blending of cultures has never been more crucial.
Rather than resisting calls to repatriate contested objects in their collections, museums should be transparent about their holdings and how they were acquired.
They should embark on a campaign of generous, long-term loans that allows objects to circulate freely across borders.
This is an opportunity to radically reimagine the mission and purpose of the universal museum — places like the Metropolitan Museum, the Louvre, the Prado and the British Museum — and what they owe to the world.
Persons:
Prado
Organizations:
British, Metropolitan Museum, British Museum —