S Vijay KumarThe Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art’s decision to restitute bronzes from the Alattur and Veeracholapuram temples has closed one chapter on a long-running injustice. But it has opened another.By acting on archival evidence and acknowledging unlawful removal, the Smithsonian has set a clear and workable standard. The responsibility now lies with other museums and auction houses that continue to hold or trade bronzes from the same temple clusters. The bronzes returned by the Smithsonian were documented in situ by the Institut Français de Pondichéry (IFP) in the 1950s, photographed inside living temples in Tamil Nadu decades before they surfaced on the international art market. The photographs establish provenance with named idols, in named temples, in active worship. By accepting this evidence, the Smithsonian has confirmed what heritage researchers have long maintained — that these bronzes never ceased to belong to the temples. That conclusion cannot be selective. It applies equally to other bronzes taken from the same shrines and now dispersed across museum collections and auction catalogues. Once a temple is acknowledged as looted, every surviving icon from that shrine carries the same claim. What must follow now is coordinated, sustained action by India. The idol wing of Tamil Nadu police should consolidate all IFP archival matches, dealer pathways and accession timelines into dossiers for each ‘murthi’ from Alattur and Veeracholapuram, and reopen or expand criminal investigations. The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) must then escalate these cases, issuing diplomatic demarches to museums and US authorities, and seeking time-bound provenance reviews and restitution commitments. Simultaneously, the Union Ministry of Culture (MoC), working with the ASI and temple authorities, should publicly notify these claims, publish verified temple-to-museum object lists, and request voluntary returns before initiating civil recovery proceedings where required. The Alattur temple cluster in Tiruvarur district was systematically stripped in the mid-20th century. Its bronzes, photographed in situ by the IFP on June 15, 1959, did not vanish into obscurity; they entered the Western art market through a small number of repeat dealers and were absorbed into major institutions. Vishnu with Sridevi and Bhudevi entered the collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1970. A Standing Vishnu was acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1962. Yoganarasimha and Ganesha from the same temple cluster entered the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in 1963 and 1962. These accessions occurred years after the bronzes had been photographed in worship. What connects several of these acquisitions is the market. Multiple Alattur bronzes passed through the hands of William H Wolff, a New York dealer whose name recurs across US museum collections of South Indian sculpture. Wolff’s invoices and sales records show a steady pipeline of temple bronzes entering American institutions at precisely the time when such removals were going unchallenged. One of the Veeracholapuram bronzes returned by the Smithsonian, the figure of Paravai, was also acquired through a dealer pathway. The dealer involved has been described in press reports as part of antiquities smuggling networks. The lesson is clear: Provenance risk was ignored. The Veeracholapuram case is even more direct. Bronzes from the Nareeswara Sivan Temple, including Somaskanda, Nataraja, and Vinadhara Shiva, were photographed in situ by the IFP on Sept 1, 1956. Despite this, a Somaskanda from the temple entered the Cleveland Museum of Art in 1961. Decades later, a Nataraja and a Vinadhara Shiva from the same shrine appeared at Christie’s and were offered for sale in March 2013. With the Smithsonian having returned the figures of Sundarar and Paravai from this temple, the reality of looting is no longer contested. What remains unexplained is why other institutions continue to retain or market bronzes from a shrine whose violation has been acknowledged. The evidence does not change from object to object; only the willingness to act does. No further delay is defensible. Museums and auction houses can no longer plausibly cite uncertainty. The IFP archives existed long before these acquisitions. The accession dates are known. The dealer pathways are documented. The Smithsonian has demonstrated that this evidence is sufficient to justify restitution. Further delay cannot be attributed to caution. It can only be understood as reluctance. Institutions holding Alattur and Veeracholapuram bronzes must now act without postponement. Auction houses must withdraw objects linked to these temples from sale and museums need to initiate restitution. Every additional year of inaction compounds an injustice that has already been proven. Transparency, legal preparedness and diplomatic firmness must move together. The Smithsonian precedent has lowered the evidentiary threshold; India must now press that standard consistently, institution by institution, until every stolen ‘murthi’ from these temple clusters is identified, acknowledged and returned. The Smithsonian chapter is closed. The evidence is settled. What remains is a test of institutional integrity.(The writer is co-founder of India Pride Project, an NGO that helps track stolen idols)
