Museums are not ‘secret vaults’, say world’s museum leaders

This article was first published by the Museums Association.

Directors and curators at leading cultural institutions around the world have signed a letter in solidarity with the Musée du Louvre after it was robbed of some of its most precious artefacts on Sunday 19 October.

British Museum director Nicholas Cullinan, Victoria & Albert Museum head Tristram Hunt, Tate director Maria Balshaw and the National Gallery’s Gabriele Finaldi are among 57 signatories to the open letter, which was published in Le Monde this week.

The audacious daylight raid has put the Louvre’s security arrangements under intense scrutiny, highlighting major weaknesses including ageing technology, low staffing levels and inadequate surveillance equipment.  

The open letter defended the Paris museum, saying the world’s cultural institutions were under threat from “unprecedented attacks”.

“This act has shaken us to the core,” said the letter. “Our institutions are not shielded from the world’s brutality. Today, they face unprecedented attacks.

“The event that occurred last Sunday is what all museum professionals dread: The robbery of the common heritage we strive to preserve and share as widely as possible. For some of us, it recalls painful memories. Such risks threaten every institution. They weigh upon every artwork from the moment it is publicly displayed.”