Even restituted items need export licences says UK arts minister

This article was first published by the art newspaper.

The restitution of Benin bronzes by British institutions to Nigeria will require UK export licences. Stephen Parkinson, the arts minister, tells The Art Newspaper that items returned must go through the same procedure as any other works.

“It is important that the export process is followed properly,” he says, referring to any restitution by UK museums or private owners. Although the Benin bronzes represent the most pressing African restitution issue, objects were also looted in other military raids during the colonial period, including from Ethiopia and from what is now Ghana.

In the case of Benin, only valuable examples of bronzes would be considered for deferral by the government’s advisory Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art. Although in practice it is extremely unlikely that a UK buyer would step forward to make a matching offer and prevent repatriation, the normal procedures would still need to be followed. If a licence were deferred, in order to allow a UK buyer to match the sum, this would require a valuation.

The finest Benin bronzes have sold for considerable sums, with one auctioned by Sotheby’s in 2007 for $4.7m. However, because of restitution claims and growing international concern about how they were acquired, important Benin items are now rarely openly sold. With the slump in demand, it would be difficult to fix valuations for any destined for export.