On October 31, 2018, Christie’s Auction House sold an ancient Assyrian relief for $31 million!
Originally part of the Assyrian king Assurbanipal II’s palace in Nimrud (in modern Iraq), this relief stands 7 feet tall and dates to the ninth century B.C.E. It depicts an apkallu (a minor deity with wings).
How the piece ended up at Christie’s Auction House is an interesting story. Sir Austen Henry Layard uncovered it during his excavations of Nimrud’s royal palace. In 1859, Dr. Henri Byron Haskell, who was in Iraq as an American missionary, acquired this relief and two others directly from Layard for $75 each, most of which simply covered the cost of shipping. Having acquired the reliefs on behalf of his friend Joseph Packard, Haskell shipped them to Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia, where Packard was a professor. There they remained for more than 150 years.
Then, in 2017, the annual insurance premium for these pieces increased to $70,000. Faced with this enormous cost, the seminary decided to sell one of the reliefs to fund the research and preservation of the other two as well as to contribute to a scholarship fund. This led to the auction this past fall.
Although the relief’s worth had been estimated at $10 million–$15 million, it sold for $30,968,750. This set a new world record for Assyrian art.
Some scholars worry that this profitable sale may encourage looting throughout the Middle East. Others argue that the vast destruction of archaeological and cultural heritage sites by ISIS and the recent wars to combat them are responsible for the increased value of this well-preserved relief, which has a clear provenance (ownership history). Only time will tell its impact.
No one can ever truly put a price tag on history, but based on this recent auction, it would be exorbitant!
On October 31, 2018, Christie’s Auction House sold an ancient Assyrian relief for $31 million!
Originally part of the Assyrian king Assurbanipal II’s palace in Nimrud (in modern Iraq), this relief stands 7 feet tall and dates to the ninth century B.C.E. It depicts an apkallu (a minor deity with wings).
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