ATADA Press Releases Page
Press Release Index
ATADA Announces Lifetime Achievement Awards 2012
Art Theft Symposium in Santa Fe, August 15, 2011
ATADA-Sponsored Talks at Whitehawk, Santa Fe, August, 2011
ATADA Releases New Collector's Guide to the Law, 08-16-10
ATADA Panel Reports FBI Informant Engaged in Trickery and Deceptive Practices, 08-16-10
ATADA Announces Lifetime Achievement Awards 2012
For February release
Contact: Alice Kaufman acek33@aol.com (415) 927-3717
The Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association – ATADA – presents its Lifetime Achievement Awards in February
ATADA is giving out three Lifetime Achievement Awards in February, 2012. The recipients are physicist and Pueblo pottery collector, scholar, and author Francis H. Harlow; Southwest Indian art dealers and collectors Lauris and Jim Phillips; and art dealer and American Indian art collector, patron, and benefactor Eugene V. Thaw.
These awards honor individuals who have devoted a significant part of their lives to the field of tribal arts. This is the second time these awards have been given; the first was in 2007.
Because none of the honorees is able to travel to San Rafael to accept an award, in lieu of an awards dinner, ATADA will devote a special portion of the Winter 2012 issue of the ATADA News to the winners. ATADA’s booth at Kim Martindale’s 2012 Art of the Americas show in San Rafael, CA, February 24-26, will be decorated with pictures of and information about the award winners. A donation will be made in each honoree’s name to a Native American and/or Tribal art-related entity of his/her choosing.
The winners were chosen from a list of nominees generated by the membership and the board of directors; honorees were chosen from that list by the board.
ATADA was formed in 1988 to promote and further interest in the field of tribal arts. ATADA’s membership of dealers, collectors and curators is a Who’s Who of the American Indian and Tribal Art worlds.
ATADA board member Bob Bauver, who is an American Indian art dealer, collector, and author, was the first to propose honoring individuals who have made long-term contributions to studying and collecting American Indian and Tribal art. Former ATADA president/tribal art dealer Tom Murray believes these awards are “the equivalent in our field to the MacArthur Genius Award or the Nobel Prize.”
For more information, please see ATADA News Winter 2012 issue or contact ATADA at (415) 927-3717.
Contact: Arch Thiessen (505) 984-3216 webmaster@atada.org
Venue Changed to Accomodate a Larger Audience
The Art and Law Event of the Season!
An Art Theft Symposium
Featuring the head of the FBI Art Crime Department,
Bonnie Magness-Gardner and two F.B.I. specialists,
Monday, August 15, at 7 PM
St. Johns United Methodist Church
1200 Old Pecos Trail (at Cordova Road)
Santa Fe
The speakers:
Dr. Bonnie Magness-Gardner, Program Manager,
FBI Art Theft Program
David Hall, F.B.I. Art Theft Trial Attorney
David Kice, F.B.I. Art Theft Special Agent
A panel discussion will follow the talks
The panel:
The three FBI Art Theft specialists
Kate Fitz Gibbon, ATADA board member, Santa Fe attorney
Wilbur Norman, ATADA board member,
Santa Fe Tribal art dealer
Roger Fry, ATADA board member, attorney
Moderator:
Arch Thiessen Ph.D., ATADA President
Sponsored by ATADA, The New Mexico Lawyers for the Arts
and the Cultural Policy Research Institute
Free admission The public is invited
Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association atada.org
For Immediate Release
Contact: Arch Thiessen (505) 984-3216 webmaster@atada.org
ATADA at Whitehawk
Friday, August 12 8 AM-10 AM
Santa Fe Convention Center
U.S. Fish and Game agent Dan Brooks will speak to our members about what he and other federal agents are looking out for at Tribal and American Indian art shows. Brooks will be attending both Whitehawk shows, and requested specifically that he speak to ATADA members before the shows open, as the information in his talk may inform show exhibitors what not to exhibit and sell.
Saturday, August 13 8 AM-10 AM
Santa Fe Convention Center
Attorneys/collectors/ATADA members Roger Fry and Len Weakley present a 2011 Update of Laws Affecting the Sales and
Collecting of American Indian and Tribal Art
Monday, August 15 8 AM – 10 AM
Santa Fe Convention Center
A round table discussion led by attorney/ATADA Associate Jim Owens on archaeological resources laws and their use by the Federal government in the 2009 raids; the ensuing court cases; and the aftermath: the results of the cases.
Tuesday, August 16 8 AM -10 AM
Santa Fe Convention Center
Annual ATADA General Meeting
Members and friends welcome
Free admission The public is invited
Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association atada.org
PRESS RELEASE 08-16-10
Santa Fe, August 16, 2010
ATADA RELEASES NEW COLLECTOR’S GUIDE TO THE LAW
The ATADA Foundation today announced publication of a new 32-page booklet, Native American Art and the Law: A Collector’s Guide.
The booklet contains the fundamental legal information that traders and collectors need to navigate the maze of federal laws affecting in Native American art and artifacts. It outlines the laws and penalties and describes the range of materials that are legal to own and trade.
The booklet gives historical and policy background on the law and is written in user-friendly, non-technical language. It covers the history of collecting Native American artifacts in the U.S. and basic U.S. laws, including ARPA and NAGPRA, that concern arrowheads and points, feathers, ceramics and other materials. It is illustrated with antique photographic details from public and private sources. The text is by New Mexico attorney and author Kate Fitz Gibbon with design by Karen Riley.
The booklet is available for a non-taxable donation $10 plus shipping to the ATADA Foundation, 82 Madrone Ave., Larkspur, CA 94939. (Electronic orders accepted at http://www.ATADA.org/publications.html#collectorsguide).
The ATADA Foundation is a non-profit corporation dedicated to advancing education on tribal art from around the world. The Foundation is largely supported by the Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association (ATADA), a professional organization established in 1988 to set ethical and professional standards for the Native American and international tribal art trade.
The ATADA Foundation’s projects promote recognition of the cultural, historical and aesthetic importance of tribal art by providing grants. These have ranged from small tribal arts projects to grants to major U.S. museums. The Foundation works with community organizations to stop the flow of fakes into U.S. markets. The Foundation also promotes responsible stewardship, transparency, access, and the sharing of information. Another goal is to foster an open dialog between tribal members, archaeologists, collectors, legislators and museums.
ATADA’s website provides a member directory, articles, links, and detailed information on laws and other issues affecting museums, collectors and the trade in tribal art. Visit our website, www.atada.org to find out more about ATADA, view our online resources, or contribute to The ATADA Foundation.
PRESS RELEASE 08-16-10
ATADA PANEL REPORTS FBI INFORMANT ENGAGED IN TRICKERY AND DECEPTIVE PRACTICES
Santa Fe, August 16, 2010
In a dramatic presentation at the Whitehawk Antiques Show in Santa Fe, a panel of art traders and collectors today described federal informant Ted Gardiner’s attempts to snare honest dealers as well as criminals during federal investigations in Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico in 2009.
The program was the latest in a series of Art and the Law programs hosted by the Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association (ATADA) and the ATADA Foundation, an educational nonprofit organization. Panelists Robert Gallegos, a tribal art dealer, collector Jim Owens, and restorer Dace Hyatt expressed concerns over how the government handled the investigations and changing interpretations of federal laws protecting archaeological sites and cultural heritage. They also reported that fears caused by aggressive tactics threaten to disrupt both the legal antique and contemporary Indian art and crafts market, key components of the Southwest economy.
A friend of Gardiner’s for almost 20 years, Hyatt said federal authorities should not have relied on a person who had serious financial problems which may have added pressure for Gardiner to create cases. Hyatt explained that Gardiner had reached a low point in his life before agreeing to work as an informant.
"In my opinion, he stooped to levels of misrepresenting the truth, embellishing and lying and that's unfortunate because you would think there would be more checks and balances within the [federal] departments to credit or discredit his statements before they orchestrated an entire two-and-a-half-year sting operation that cost the taxpayers — I would be willing to speculate millions of dollars — to only come up with 26 indictments. That's the travesty," Hyatt said.
Gardiner made more than $335,000 in purchases over two years from people later accused of digging, collecting, selling or trafficking in artifacts taken from federal and tribal lands.
However, Hyatt alleged Gardiner also tried to bait honest collectors by attempting to trick people about the items he was offering to sell. Hyatt said Gardiner offered to sell him artifacts that came from an area known as “the Arizona Strip.” Hyatt declined the offer because he knew the area included parcels of federal land.
Attorney Jim Owens showed a receipt signed by Gardiner stating that the items he was selling to a collector were legally obtained from private land. According to Owens, Gardiner later returned and showed the buyer a map on which he pinpointed the location where they were found. The buyer recognized the land as belonging to the Bureau of Land Management and demanded that Gardiner take the items back. The receipt was marked “returned.” Owens noted that an allegation against another individual claimed material was taken from a cave on “federal land.” Owens then showed an archaeological publication identifying that same cave as being on private property.
Owens said that the rights of honest collectors are trampled when federal agents attempt to trick buyers into purchasing illegal material. Gallegos, a past president of ATADA, said some dealers and collectors don't know the laws and could easily fall into traps like those described by Hyatt and Owens.
Gallegos noted that because federal law allows for the collection of artifacts on private land, some criminals claim their items are legitimate. Enforcing the law has become very difficult. "We have to become partners with the government in helping them impart these laws," he said. "We all have the same goals, we all want to preserve our cultural sites, our cultural resources, but we can no longer have these win-lose situations."
Jim Owens also pointed to contradictions in the laws: the Archeological Resources Protection Act (ARPA) specifically permits arrowhead collecting on the surface of federal lands but a general statute prohibiting theft of federal property is now used to charge collectors who do so with breaking the law. Owens noted a statement by Judge Sherri Hutt (now manager of the National NAGPRA program) in a National Park Service Technology Brief, stating that “as a practical matter, “arrowhead” includes any object that would appear to the common person to be an arrowhead even if it is actually a spear point or a scraper.”
The panel discussed the proper interpretation of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). Gallegos expressed the ATADA organization position as fully supportive of NAGPRA, recalling his participation as a witness at the original Congressional hearings on the proposed law. Owens read from a statement made by [then] Judge Sherri Hutt before the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on April 20, 1999:
“There is no provision in NAGPRA which would require the repatriation of an item for which the possessor holds lawful title. The law expressly avoids creating a “taking: of private property to effectuate a public purpose in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Sacred objects may be individually owned and be subject to alienation pursuant to the property laws of a tribe. Items which are now considered to be cultural patrimony may not have been imbued with such distinction at the time they were separated from the group and are not subject to the requirements of NAGPRA.”
Several panelists expressed concern over the December 2009 Report No. C-IN-MOA-0010-2008 to the Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of the Interior, Museum Collections: Accountability and Preservation. The report notes that 78 million items out of 148 million items have not been cataloged and found deficiencies in 38 of the 39 museums visited, from storing items in buildings with broken windows to failure to monitor humidity and temperature in sites where Indian artifacts were stored.
The panel also announced publication of a new guide, Native American Art and the Law: A Collector’s Guide, text by Kate Fitz Gibbon, design by Karen Riley. The booklet is free. We request that you send a donation of $10 per copy to The ATADA Foundation, 215 Sierra SE, Albuquerque, NM 87108 or phone (505)262-0620 with credit card information.