12 September Symposium on The Future of Restitution - Cultural objects WWII
Activities data
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- Artis, Plantage Kerklaan 38-40, 1018 CZ Amsterdam
On September 12th, 2024, the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE) is organizing an international symposium on the future of WWII Restitution Policies, in the Netherlands and abroad. Various contributors will look ahead: what does the future look like? Is an end date to WWII Restitution Policies conceivable? Or a supranational policy? What are the opportunities and challenges in the field of provenance research? And how do we want to deal with “heirless” art with a WWII background? The symposium concludes a year in which the RCE commemorated the 25th anniversary of the Dutch Restitution Policy with various activities. Please join us in September!
All presentations will be held in English.
Book your ticket(s) here
A limited number of discount tickets is available for students. Coffee/tea, lunch and drinks are included in the ticket price. A written retrospective will be published afterwards.
Program
Time | Part |
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9.30 | Registration, coffee and tea |
10.00 | Opening statement by the Minister of Education, Culture and Science of the Netherlands |
10.15 | Endless restitution: is consensus possible on when justice is done? Provenance research and restitution have become a priority in several countries which endorsed The Washington Principles more than twenty-five years ago. The generation of victims of the Holocaust is passing and new generations are looking for their lost heritage. What will the future twenty-five years from now look like? What can be expected from new methods of research or new attitudes towards the topic of restitution? The end of restitution has been announced before, but is it endless? A conversation between two senior forces in the field of provenance research and restitution:
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11.00 | Musical intermezzo by The Klezmer Society |
11.20 | “Heirless” art: the restitution of unclaimed objects to the Jewish community If original owners of looted art or their heirs passed away or cannot be identified through provenance research, what fair and just solution can be offered? The Dutch government has proposed the following: looted Jewish art which cannot be restituted to its rightful owner should be given to and taken care by the Jewish community. Eventually, formal ownership will even be transferred. How would such practice work? What does the Jewish community wish to do with these objects? A panel discussion between:
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12.15 | Lunch (vegetarian) and option for an ‘Artis during the Second World War’ tour |
13.45 | Loot: can we prevent it? The concept of war is still a present and vivid reality for many. And where there is war, there is looting. What can be learned from the painstaking work of recuperation, provenance research and restitution after World War II? How can loot possibly be prevented or the route to restitution be enhanced? How should today’s Monuments Men and Women act? Two presentations by and a conversation between:
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14.30 | Borderless restitution: towards a supranational restitution committee? The Second World War dispersed looted art all over the continent and beyond. Yet restitution is a state-based practice, a practice that differs between states in many ways. This could lead to inequality of rights. Could a supranational approach be a solution for fair practice? And is it sensible? A lecture by:
A reflection on the lecture will be given by:
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15.15 | Musical intermezzo by the Klezmer Society |
15.35 | Screening of filmed address Avraham Roet, Holocaust survivor |
15.45 |
The future of provenance research: practice meets theory A presentation on the issue, from the perspectives of the art market and the academic world:
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16.20 | Closing remarks A reflection on the topic and the day by:
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16.50 | Closing by Siebe Weide |
17.00 | Drinks |
We would also like to attend you on the symposium 'Looted' (Beroofd) at the Rijksmuseum on 9 and 10 September 2024 in collaboration with the Arbeitskreis Provenienzforschung e.V. (International Professional Association for Provenance Research), the Jewish Cultural Quarter and Sotheby's. Information on the symposium can be found on their website.