January 29, 2006
Should the British Museum ‘share’ the Elgin Marbles?
Another response to the previous letter in The Times.
If anything, this contains a proposal for an alternative solution even more ridiculous than that put forward in the previous letter. I cannot quite understand how the author believes that a rotating shared ownership of one third of the sculptures exchanged with replicas would help anything – or indeed do anything other than lead to considerable confusion.
From:
The Times
Letters to the Editor
The Times
January 28, 2006Elgin Marbles
Sir, The British Museum needs to adopt a more constructive approach to the future of the Elgin Marbles (letters, Jan 21 and 25).Let the New Acropolis Museum commission replicas of the Marbles, and there then be a formal arrangement with the British Museum for perhaps a third of the original main fragments to be exchanged on a revolving basis for their replicas.
There need be no change of “ownership” by the BM, nor would the majority of visitors be concerned that a minority of the Marbles on display were replicas. But for the Greeks there would be the joy of seeing, over a period of time, all the major fragments of their Parthenon Frieze in their own museum in the shadow of the Parthenon itself.ANTHONY EASTWOOD
Much Hadham, Herts
- Should the marbles be put back on the Parthenon? : January 25, 2006
- Possible solution to problems with New Acropolis Musem : July 15, 2005
- Elginism is five years old : March 26, 2010
- Future of Elgin Marbles is not cast in stone : October 20, 2005
- Will the British Museum ever back down from its claims to legal ownership of the Elgin Marbles? : April 7, 2008
- Greece’s tactics on the Elgin Marbles : June 23, 2009
- Heidelberg fragment of Parthenon to be returned : February 22, 2006
- Greece in sensitive discussions over frieze fragments : January 19, 2006