Reposted from BBC News
A bronze version of Les Bourgeois de Calais is on display outside the
Houses of Parliament in London
*Museum bosses are unable to locate a sculpture by world famous artist
Auguste Rodin, said to be worth £3m.*
Officials at Glasgow Museums said a plaster version of Les Bourgeois de
Calais was purchased in 1901.
However, the sculpture is among almost 1,750 items currently listed as
missing or stolen.
The charity that runs the city's museums said it was known to have been
damaged after it was put on public display after World War Two.
Glasgow Life confirmed the sculpture is currently listed as "unlocated".
Rodin - who later became famous for his "Thinker" sculpture - was allowed
by French law to manufacture different versions of "Les Bourgeois" in
plaster and bronze.
A life-size bronze version of the sculpture takes pride of place in the
gardens of the Houses of Parliament in London.
The plaster version is known to have been displayed in Kelvingrove Park in
1949 for the Sculpture in the Open Air exhibition along with another Rodin
work, Saint jean de Baptiste.
Officials said Les Bourgeois is known to have been damaged during this
exhibition and its whereabouts are currently unknown. The other sculpture
is in storage at the Glasgow Museums Resource Centre.
The loss was described as '"utterly shameful" by the Paris-based Comite
Rodin, which publicises and catalogues Rodin's work.
Jerome Le Blay, the Comite's director, said: "We lose a bit of humanity
when we lose a work of art.
"Museums may have 100,000 items, so occasionally things get dropped or get
lost in shipping. Art is often destroyed in acts of war - that's life - but
when it goes missing as a result of mishandling or mismanagement by people
it is utterly shameful.
"It really is deeply disappointing to discover Glasgow has lost art of this
significance and importance."
Improved cataloguing
A spokesperson for Glasgow Life told BBC Scotland News it had spent 20
years "conducting an inventory" of items in its collection which has
included finding objects previously listed as lost.
"The process of recording, cataloguing and caring for the Glasgow Museums
Collection has improved significantly since it was founded in the 1860s,"
the spokesperson said.
"For 30 years, the cataloguing of the collection has been increasingly
centralised using the Museum's Collection Management System.
"As part of the major museums capital projects in Glasgow over the last 20
years, the storage of the collection has also been improved."
Les Bourgeois de Calais depicts the plight of the French port's residents
during an 11-month siege by the English during the Hundred Years War in the
late Middle Ages.
The burghers (Les Bourgeois) offered up their lives if their town could be
spared.
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