The Asian Civilisations Museum (ACM) Singapore's Asian Civilisations Museum (ACM) said it was checking the origins of precious artworks in the national collection bought from disgraced Indian art dealer Subhash Kapoor.
The museum said it has been alerted through legal actions taken in the US courts to the possibility that two artefacts in that collection were sold illicitly by the gallery, the statement said.
US-based Kapoor is accused of smuggling antiquities worth more than USD 100 million from India into America, where he ran a now-defunct gallery in New York 'Art of the Past'.
"Singapore's state museums, including the Asian Civilisations Museum (ACM), are bound by international law and ethical standards to acquire objects and works of art legally and ethically. As members of the International Council of Museums, we follow its code of ethics on the acquisition and display of objects," the museum said in a statement.
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Over a 14-year period from 1997 to 2010, ACM purchased 30 objects from Art of the Past.
One is an Uma bronze sculpture acquired from the dealer in 2007 which may have been stolen from India. The second is a Virgin Mary and Christ altar acquired in 2009. The altar's provenance documents were allegedly forged by the dealer.
ACM followed its acquisition procedures strictly and all possible checks were done on provenance at the point of purchase for the two artefacts. ACM believed at the point of purchase that they were legally and ethically acquired. During our last check in 2011 on the Uma sculpture, there was also no indication that the work was stolen, the statement said.
Following the recent court proceedings in New York against Art of the Past, new evidence has emerged that various state and private museums - including ACM - were the target of fraud by the gallery owner.