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Sesostris: a seemingly unending dispute
01 September 2003



Cet article se compose de 5 pages.
1 2 3 4 5
Ziegler added in a note attached to his article that the statue of Queen Ouret had entered the Myer de Stadelhofen collection at the turn of the 20th Century and that it had been only shown to a few amateurs who had not been able to decipher the inscriptions it bore.

Such remark was in fact a pure invention since many specialists knew that the statue did not originate from the Stadelhofen collection, some egyptologists stressed.

What happened between 1997 and 1998 ?

Meanwhile, many egyptologists were invited at the inauguration of the new rooms of the Louvre Museum, including Farouk Hosni, the Egyptian Culture minister, who was rather astonished to discover the statue of Queen Ouret, which he knew quite well as he had seen it previously in a private Egyptian collection before 1997. The minister made some fuss before the officials of the Louvre Museum but the dispute did not go further for some obscure reasons.

A bit of history

This statue of Queen Ouret is probably one of the greatest masterpieces in terms of the representation of a royal female figure of the Middle Empire period. While the authenticity of such statue is unquestionable, it emanates from this piece a true power of representation with finely engraved texts and no anolamy regarding its style whereas the patina is superb making the Sesostris statue acquired by the Pinault couple look quite pale in comparison.

The sculpture representing Queen Ouret was reportedly kept in a famous Egyptian collection between 1940 and 1997, the year it was said to have been sold by the heirs of its owner to a trafficker before it was illegally exported from Egypt. It landed in Geneva where several French antique dealers went on to battle for it before one of them won the deal and offered the statue to the Louvre for about $ 2 million. The Museum needed fresh money to acquire the piece and Mr Fumaroli, head of the Society of the Friends of the Louvre turned to Mrs Pinault who eventually donated $ 850,000 to help the Museum buy it. The society reunited the rest of the money and offered the statue to the French institution.

An archaeological investigation

In his article written about Queen Ouret, Mr Ziegler somewhat dodged the question of the origin of Queen Ouret's statue whereas the inscriptions it bore clearly indicated that the queen was "loved by the Khoum god lord of Elephantine". Such piece was probably found on the Elephantine Island facing the town of Aswan especially as diggings conducted during the 1940s in this area led to the discovery of a sanctuary dedicated to a governor named Hekaib who had been deified. Sovereigns of the Middle Empire period had notably been accustomed to place statues representing their images in this sanctuary to obtain the protection of the god as well as the support of influential local families.

Generally, these statues were placed in pairs on both sides of the entrance of the temple (as an example two 60 cm-high statues of Sesostris III shown seated were found on this spot). An archaeological campaign led to the discovery of the inferior part of a statue shown seated, the two hands resting on the knees bearing the name of Queen Ouret (plate 193 published in "Elephantine IV, The Sanctuary of Hekaib", DAIK 1985) which is identical to the piece now in the Louvre Museum. It is therefore quite possible that the statue acquired by the museum was found clandestinely during the 1940s when official diggings were being conducted.

Finally Mr and Mrs Pinault might face themselves in a tricky position since they apparently contributed to the acquisition of a stolen statue in 1997 before buying a fake the following year. They surely did not know the controversial origin of the statue of Queen Ouret but if Egypt came to ask for its return the present court case might go beyond the frame of justice and become an embarrassing matter for the French government.

Meanwhile, the Egyptian police has been busy questioning Tareq al Soweissi, an influential politician suspected of being the chief of a ring of traffickers, and is now trying to locate his European correspondents, notably a dealer who is suspected of having sold many antique pieces illegally exported from Egypt.

Adrian Darmon

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