Hartwig Fischer
British Museum Director Resigns After Worker
Fired for Theft
Hartwig Fischer, who had led the museum since 2016,
said that the museum’s failure to respond to earlier warnings “must ultimately
rest with the director.”
Alex
Marshall
By Alex
Marshall
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/25/arts/design/british-museum-director-resigns.html
Aug. 25,
2023
Updated
12:45 p.m. ET
Just days
after the British Museum announced that it had fired an employee who was
suspected of looting its storerooms and selling items on eBay, the museum’s
director announced Friday that he was resigning, effective immediately.
Hartwig
Fischer, a German art historian who had led the world renowned institution
since 2016, said in a news release that he was leaving the post at a time “of
the utmost seriousness.”
Mr. Fischer
said that it was “evident” that under his leadership the museum did not
adequately respond to warnings that a curator may be stealing items. “The
responsibility for that failure must ultimately rest with the director,” Mr.
Fischer said.
The crisis
became public when the British Museum announced last week that items had been
stolen from its collection. The museum did not say how many items were taken,
but said that the missing, stolen or damaged pieces included “gold jewelry and
“gems of semiprecious stones and glass” dating from as far back as the 15th
century B.C.
Ever since,
a stream of revelations around the museum’s handling of the thefts undermined
Mr. Fischer’s position. On Tuesday, The New York Times and the BBC published
emails showing that he had downplayed concerns raised by Ithai Gradel, a
Denmark-based antiquities dealer, about potential thefts.
Mr.
Fischer, in an email to a trustee in October 2022, said “the case has been
thoroughly investigated” adding “there is no evidence to substantiate the
allegations.”
Mr. Fischer
initially defended his response, saying in a statement Wednesday that his
handling of the allegations had been robust and that the museum had taken the
warnings “incredibly seriously.” The extent of the problem only became clear
later, after the museum undertook “a full audit” of its collections, he added.
His defense
did little to quell criticism in Britain. On Wednesday, The Times of London
wrote that the thefts were “a national disgrace, calling into question the
museum’s own claims for its stewardship of cultural treasures, and for which it
needs to give a full accounting.”
In
announcing his resignation, Mr. Fischer said that it was clear that “the
British Museum did not respond as comprehensively as it should have in response
to the warnings in 2021, and to the problem that has now fully emerged.”
He was
already planning to leave the institution. In July Mr. Fischer announced he
would leave the British Museum in 2024, after eight years in the role as
director. But the crisis has brought that date far closer.
The museum
would “come through this moment and emerge stronger,” Mr. Fischer said, “but
sadly I have come to the conclusion that my presence is proving a distraction.
That is the last thing I would want."
George
Osborne, the museum chair, said in the release that the board had accepted Mr.
Fischer’s decision. “I am clear about this: we are going to fix what has gone
wrong,” Mr. Osborne said. “The museum has a mission that lasts across
generations. We will learn, restore confidence and deserve to be admired once
again.”
Alex
Marshall is a European culture reporter, based in London. More about Alex
Marshall
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