On December 11, the Nationwide Museum of Asian Artwork, an artwork museum of the Smithsonian Establishment in Washington, D.C., introduced it was returning three Khmer interval sculptures in its assortment to the Kingdom of Cambodia. The return was made after analysis, undertaken in collaboration with Cambodian authorities, decided that the works have been probably looted throughout Cambodia’s civil conflict (1967–1975).
Every of the three sculptures—two from the tenth century depicting the Hindu deities Uma and Harihara respectively, and one from round 1200 CE of the Buddhist deity Prajnaparamita—was donated to the museum with out documentation of export from Cambodia; all have been additionally related to artwork sellers now recognized to have trafficked in looted antiquities. Based mostly on these findings, in addition to on the items’ relationship to recognized websites and the timing of their look on the worldwide market, the museum’s provenance group decided that they need to be returned to Cambodia.
The return would be the museum’s first below the Smithsonian’s Shared Stewardship and Moral Returns coverage. Underneath this coverage, adopted in 2022, Smithsonian museums could voluntarily return possession of looted artifacts to their nation of origin with out requiring a proper restitution declare. In accordance with the museum, now that possession has been established, the three sculptures have already been deaccessioned. On the identical time, the Cambodian Ministry of Tradition and Nice Arts has agreed in precept to a long-term mortgage of the objects to the NMAA.
Notably, as with a number of agreements made by museums in America and Europe lately, the association proactively returns the sculptures to their nation of origin as a means for the museum to satisfy its moral obligations whereas avoiding authorized publicity. The NMAA is amongst numerous museums, together with the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork, that which have preemptively expanded their provenance departments and performed inside evaluations of their collections, typically in partnership with stakeholders, to determine probably looted objects.
In a press release, the NMAA mentioned, “[The Shared Stewardship and Ethical Returns Policy] acknowledges that moral norms {and professional} greatest practices in gathering have modified. The Smithsonian has objects that it might not have acquired below present-day requirements. Though the Smithsonian has authorized title or custody of its collections, continued retention or sole stewardship could trigger hurt to descendants or communities and be essentially inconsistent with the Smithsonian’s moral requirements and values. In these circumstances, shared stewardship or moral return could also be applicable.”

