British Museum Chair Backs Cultural Exchange Deal on Parthenon Sculptures

George Osborne, the current chair of the British Museum and former UK chancellor, has framed the Parthenon Sculptures dispute as the British Museum’s toughest challenge in two centuries. Nonetheless, speaking with the British newspaper “The Times,” he said that he believes a negotiated compromise with Greece is achievable through cultural exchange instead of a simple handover adding the need for humility regarding any claim to “solve” it.
Osborne told the “Times” he remains “quite optimistic” that, if both sides come with an open mind, they can find a “landing zone” that respects Greek demands while staying within UK legal limits on deaccessioning objects.
Greece’s stance ”understandable”
The chairman of the British Museum has gone out of his way to say that the Greek government’s stance is “absolutely understandable”, which is a notably sympathetic statement from a British Museum chair.
Successive Greek governments have argued since the 1980s for the permanent return of all the Parthenon sculptures held in London to Athens, framing it as a matter of cultural reunification and historical justice.
Rather than a one-way, permanent restitution, Osborne has sketched a model based on long-term loans and broader cultural partnerships between the British Museum and Greece. He has indicated that any agreement would likely involve major Greek antiquities being shown in London as part of a reciprocal exchange, aiming for what he has previously called a “win-win” cooperative arrangement.
He also acknowledged that this debate comes as the British Museum tries to recover from the pandemic and a damaging theft scandal. An independent review found around 2,000 items missing, stolen, or damaged, many unregistered gems and jewellery, which led to security overhauls and calls to tighten documentation and collection management.
Currently, the British Museum is pursuing a large architectural masterplan for its Bloomsbury site, including a major redevelopment of the Western Range where the Greek and Roman galleries sit.
Osborne has suggested that this renewal programme, combined with improved governance and security, is part of rebuilding trust and redefining the museum’s global role, while the Parthenon question remains unresolved but, in his view, not beyond solution.
Business Wire




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