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  • October 31, 2023 8:45 AM | Rob Layne (Administrator)

    insurancetimes.co.uk/news/insurer-issues-plea-as-heritage-organisations-warned-of-increased-smash-and-grab-attacks/1445960.article

    By Chantal Kapani - 30 October 2023

    ’Museums need to be aware of the risk when it comes to smash and grab attacks,’ says customer segment director

    Heritage organisations have been urged to check their risk management strategies as cost of living pressures could drive more smash and grab attacks in the new year.

    Speaking to Insurance Times, Faith Kitchen, customer segment director at Ecclesiastical Insurance, said such firms needed to be aware of the crime and that now was a “good window of opportunity” to look at how they can best protect irreplaceable items.

    smash and grab raid is carried out at speed, using extreme force to break through physical barriers to gain access to a property.

    In instances involving heritage organisations, such as museums, theatres and galleries, burglaries are often pre-planned to target high value items.

    Kitchen warned that such firms were “an attractive target for these crimes”.

    “We have been raising the awareness [of these attacks] because of the speed it is carried out and the extreme force the thieves use to overcome physical barriers to gain access,” she said.

    “Museums need to be aware of the risk when it comes to smash and grab attacks as they have been increasing over the past few years.

    “Now is a good window of opportunity for [heritage organisations] to consider their risk management strategies and look how they can best protect the irreplaceable items.”

    Damage

    This came after the cost of living crisis was listed as the top concern for UK heritage organisations in Ecclesiastical’s Heritage Risk Barometer 2022.

    Published earlier this year (23 January 2023), the barometer explored the top risks and key concerns faced in the heritage sector – these concerns included attracting local visitors, the recruitment crisis, responding to climate change and crime.

    Kitchen revealed that another concern for these firms had been protecting artworks and artefacts from damage.

    “We have seen protests against some iconic artworks, which [can] cause significant damage,” she said.

    For example, climate change protesters from Just Stop Oil threw two cans of Heinz tomato soup over Vincent van Gogh’s Sunflowers painting at London’s National Gallery last year (14 October 2022).

    Kitchen explained that organisations can protect themselves by implementing measures such as inspecting bags, working behind glazed panels and installing proximity alarm systems.

    She added that staff can be trained to recognise and report unusual visitor behaviours.

  • October 30, 2023 6:54 PM | Anonymous

    The International Foundation for Cultural Property Protection's 25th Annual Conference, Seminar & Exhibits will take place in the architecturally and culturally rich city of Chicago, IL, June 15-19, 2024!

    The Foundation's 2024 conference will be held at the InterContinental Hotel Chicago Magnificent Mile, with additional programming at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Field Museum of Natural History. 

    This not-to-be missed in-person gathering will include all-new conference sessions presented by industry leaders,  pre-conference educational offerings, excursions to several world-renowned cultural institutions, group meals, industry exhibits, out-of-the-classroom educational events at host institutions, and our traditional lineup of outstanding presenters, timely topics, and networking activities.

    We hope that you can join us - you won’t believe what we have in store!

    DISCOUNTED LODGING:

    InterContinental Chicago Magnificent Mile - $279/night plus tax when booked through IFCPP

    CONFERENCE REGISTRATION:

    ·         $645 - Attendee/Delegate Registration (early bird registration through Nov. 22)

    ·         $695 - Attendee/Delegate Registration (second tier early registration Nov. 23 - Jan. 31)

    ·         $775 - Attendee/Delegate Registration (regular, non-discounted registration Feb. 1 - May 17)

     

    SCHEDULE-AT-A-GLANCE:

     

    Saturday, June 15

    Pre-conference cultural property excursions

     

    Sunday, June 16

    Pre-conference workshops

    Group lunch

    Welcome reception & exhibits

     

    Monday, June 17

    Conference welcome

    Keynote address

    Exhibits

    Art Institute of Chicago Excursion – Presentations, Tours, Group Lunch

    Optional group dinner

     

    Tuesday, June 18

    Conference sessions

    Group lunch

    Optional group dinner

     

    Wednesday, June 19

    Conference sessions

    Field Museum Excursion – Presentations, Tours, Group Lunch

    Optional group dinner

     

    Note: Discounted hotels rooms available the nights of June 14-19

     

    Register for the conference and discounted lodging here - IFCPP - IFCPP 2024 Conference, Seminar & Exhibits

     

    Registration deadline: May 17, 2024



  • October 30, 2023 6:47 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from BBC

    There are tens of millions of items in the collections of Scotland's galleries and museums, but the whereabouts of thousands of them is unknown.

    BBC Scotland News asked some of the country's most popular galleries and museums for records of items lost, stolen and missing.

    The responses show that a wide range of objects, from ancient relics to expensive artwork, are unaccounted for.

    It comes after 2,000 items went missing from the British Museum in London.

    A member of staff has been dismissed, the Met Police have launched an investigation, and the museum has appealed for help from the public to recover the artefacts.

    Many of the Scottish institutions contacted by the BBC suggested most of their missing items were the victims of poor record-keeping, rather than any criminal endeavours.

    To misplace one life-size figure of a Japanese man in native costume is perhaps careless, but to do it twice is exactly what happened at Glasgow's Museum of Transport stores in 2018.

    Glasgow Life, the body which runs the city's museums and galleries, lists both items as "unlocated to date".

    Elsewhere in Glasgow, the Hunterian Zoology Museum had a dolphin skull stolen sometime between 2010 and 2021, while the city's "no mean city" reputation perhaps explains why a set of iron knuckle dusters went missing from the People's Palace in 2005.

    Meanwhile, South Ayrshire museums reports that a "large bottle marked Poison" is missing from Rozelle House in Ayr.

    In Edinburgh, Bute House, the official residence of the first minister, reported that a brass lamp was "missing" in 2016, while in 2020 a Georgian mahogany armchair was marked as "not found".

    More than 4,000 items are reported as lost, stolen or missing at the National Library of Scotland, which includes book titles such as Among ThievesTo Catch a ThiefPlunder Squad and A Burglar's Life Story.

    Other riskier titles, such as The Irish Kama Sutra and Sexual Anomalies and Perversions are also missing.

    The National Museum of Scotland reports that a flying suit, goggles and flight jacket were stolen in November 1986 - a robbery perhaps influenced by the fact the first Top Gun film came out just weeks before.

    Possibly the most valuable item currently missing from Scotland's museums and galleries is a £3m sculpture by world-famous artist Auguste Rodin.

    Officials at Glasgow Museums said a plaster version of Les Bourgeois de Calais was purchased in 1901 but they are currently unable to locate it.

    Among the other famous artworks "unlocated" in Glasgow is part of a painting of Sir Billy Connolly's banjo by artist John Byrne.

    The 1974 work features Sir Billy's instrument propped up against a wall with a shadow over it.

    It went missing in 2005, but John Byrne recreated the missing section and gifted it to the city in 2017.

    Works by Thomas Gainsborough, Carlo Maratti, Sebastien Vrancx and Cornelis Vroom are all "unlocated" from Glasgow's collections.

    In Aberdeen, a total of 1,330 artefacts and artworks worth almost £200,000 are missing from the council collection, including old coins, books, clothing, photographs and drawings.

    See Original Post
  • October 30, 2023 6:43 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from Global News

    A jellyfish-shaped sculpture was stolen in September during the Beakerhead event and Calgary police are still looking for it.

    Police say the artist finished installing the sculpture around 1 a.m., on Sept. 16, at Millennium Park, located at 1220 Ninth Ave. S.W.

    The work of art was completed with anchors welded to the overall sculpture and it was bolted into the ground.

    Around 10 a.m., someone reported to police that the middle piece of the sculpture was missing, but the anchor that was welded to the sculpture was still screwed into the ground.

    Police invite anyone with information, video or photos related to the theft of the sculpture.

    See Original Post


  • October 30, 2023 6:36 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from Caribbean Life

    Thieves have broken into the Barbados’ parliament and have stolen several historical artefacts including the suit jacket then Prime Minister Errol Barrow wore at independence ceremonies in 1966 but the trouble is no one has a clue when these items were carted away.

    Police and parliamentary officials say the burglary was discovered this week during a tour by school students of the building’s west wing where artefacts in the parliamentary museum and the national hero's gallery are usually stored.

    The problem is that the building had been condemned as unfit for use at the time, so it had been basically left neglected, meaning that detectives are unsure whether the items were carted away a week ago or way back in 2020 when it was deemed unfit for use until repairs the Nation newspaper reported this week.

    Other items that are no longer in the building include shoes worn by Barrow, Barbados’ first prime minister and the man who led them to independence back in November 1966. Artwork and a musket gun belonging to Barrow are also missing. Other items listed as belonging to late Prime Minister Tom Adams and his father Sir Grantley Adams have also disappeared and no one knows when.

    The items had been on display in two separate glass cases that staff and police discovered had been shattered. Parliamentary Clerk Pedro Eastmond said the investigations are continuing but for now “I am getting all the facts to give a report to the speaker. Until that is done, I prefer not to make any comment.”

    Officials are now arguing that the items should have been returned to the national museum for safekeeping and public display once that area of the parliamentary building had been condemned. Officials think that vagrants who frequent the area on Broad Street might be the ones to blame. If this is the case, there can be little hope for retrieving these valuable and historical artefacts.

    “This is a real shame. The west wing has literally been abandoned. It is the building where the opposition office was housed, and I understand it is in a deplorable state. It is a shame that you can have the artefacts of former prime ministers and our national heroes stolen from parliament which is supposed to be one of the most secure places in Barbados,” said General Secretary of the opposition Democratic Labor Party (DLP), Steve Blackett.

    Blackett said that the situation is worsened by the fact that the Labor Party (BLP) had won all 30 parliamentary seats in general elections last year. “It speaks to the total abandonment and worse, yet they have not paid attention to that section because there is no leader of the opposition,” Blackett said.

    See Original Post



  • October 30, 2023 5:59 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from Denver News

    The thousand-year-old Indian statue sat in the Denver Art Museum’s Asian art collection for six decades, a gift from prominent New York art dealer Robert Ellsworth.

    Sculpted around the 10th century, the 38-inch sandstone piece depicts a celestial woman beneath a mango tree. It was once part of the Ghatesvara Temple in northern India, built as a shrine to the Hindu god Shiva.

    Indian archaeologists, for years, said this priceless work was stolen. Four years ago, the museum quietly handed the statue to U.S. law enforcement to be repatriated to India.

    Denver Art Museum officials did not issue a press release. The artifact has been scrubbed from the institution’s website as if it was never there. Aside from saved webpages on Internet archives, there’s no public-facing evidence that the statue was once a part of the museum’s collection.

    For years, the Denver Museum has carefully curated which repatriations and deaccessions — pieces removed from its collection — it chooses to publicly announce, a practice that goes against industry recommendations. Unlike some other institutions, it’s impossible in Denver to see which pieces, and how many, the museum has returned after foreign governments or U.S. authorities provided evidence that they were stolen or illegally trafficked.

    Other institutions, including Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and the San Antonio Museum of Art, provide detailed information for all works they choose to remove from their collections — though that practice still represents the exception, not the rule.

    Art experts say this should be the gold standard, an important tool for transparency and accountability as a public institution with an educational mission.

    “Museums should be telling these stories not just for the sake of transparency but because they are intrinsically important stories that tell us really deep and meaningful things about how we understand other peoples’ cultural belongings,” said Elizabeth Marlowe, a professor of art and director of Colgate University’s Museum studies program. “That’s central to any universal museum.”

    A Denver Art Museum spokesperson, Andy Sinclair, said the institution follows all field guidelines, practices and policies for collections and deaccessions. The museum is focused, she said in an email, on adding to its online collection database. Information on deaccessions will be made available “upon request,” she said.

    When the celestial goddess remained part of the Denver Art Museum’s collection, anyone could find its photo, description and provenance information on the institution’s website.

    But at least as far back as September 2019, museum officials scrubbed the antiquity from the site. The link to its entry now says, “the requested page could not be found.” An archived version of the webpage can still be accessed through the Internet Archive’s Way Back Machine.

    The same is true for other artworks the museum has deaccessioned in recent years. A host of Southeast Asian relics donated to the museum by Bunker in 2016 also have vanished from the website amid the federal investigation.

    Further ommissions include dozens of pieces donated or sold to the museum by indicted or convicted art dealers, such as Latchford and former New York gallery owners Nancy Wiener and Subhash Kapoor.

    Latchford sold, loaned and gifted at least 14 works to the Denver Art Museum between 1999 and 2011. But his name no longer appears in any provenance section on the museum’s searchable collection database.

    Museum leadership sometimes puts out press releases when it gives up artworks to U.S. authorities for repatriation to source countries. Those announcements include multiple objects returned to Cambodia since 2016, a collection of Indian works given back last year and older repatriations to Guatemala and a Native American tribe.

    But pieces such as the celestial goddess garnered no public announcement. And the press releases for these repatriated pieces do not include accession numbers, provenance information or object descriptions — all key for academics, law enforcement and members of the public interested in researching a museum’s collection.

    The Association of Art Museum Directors, an organization of museum leaders from the United States, Canada and Mexico, in 2010 issued a recommendation that member museums “publish on its website within a reasonable period of time works that have been deaccessioned and disposed of.”

    The guidance is simply a recommendation, though, not a requirement.

    Still, after the association published the policy, a growing body of museums have adopted the practice of maintaining a database with deaccessioned works.

    The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston allows the public to see information about all 2,289 objects the institution has removed from its collection.

    The museum includes extensive information about the items and their ownership histories. The institution deaccessioned a 7th-century Italian vessel, for instance, after New York authorities supplied evidence, it had been looted.

    The object page outlines how the piece was illicitly excavated and sold to a New York collector before making its way into the museum’s collection in the 1990s. Museum officials note that the vessel was one of nine that came from a site that had been heavily looted and was later trafficked by a known illicit antiquities dealer.

    “We feel transparency is important,” said Victoria Reed, the Boston museum’s curator for provenance. “We have a particular responsibility to our audience. We’re a public institution. If we decide to deaccession something, to remove it from public view, then we are accountable to our audience. We have a responsibility to share our thinking and information that led us to conclude what we did.”

    The San Antonio Art Museum also faced this question in 2021 while repatriating objects to Italy. The simplest solution, museum leadership decided, was to keep the items on the institution’s website with updated details.

    Researchers who want to study them will still be able to get information this way, since the museum can’t provide access to items no longer in its collection, said Lynley J. McAlpine, the San Antonio museum’s associate curator of provenance research.

    “We hope that doing so will make information easy for people to find,” she said.

    The Dallas Museum of Art and Cleveland Museum of Art also provide details of deaccessioned works on their websites. The Met in New York this month pledged to soon do the same for restituted objects.

    Former museum directors and other industry experts say the Denver Art Museum should adopt these best practices as it continues to probe its collection for problematic works.

    In recent years, the museum’s past questionable dealings with suspected or convicted illicit antiquity dealers have put a spotlight on the Mile High City’s preeminent art institution. In response, the museum last year hired a full-time senior provenance researcher, calling the work an “essential component of our commitment to ethical collecting practices.”

    But the public, industry watchers say, continues to be left in the dark.

    “It’s embarrassing,” said David Gill, a professor of archaeological heritage at the University of Kent in England. “It shows your curators have been recommending dodgy things for the museum. It shows the trustees haven’t really engaged in due diligence. It shows museums are actors closing a blind eye to the problem.”

    The selective press releases, Gill said, seem to serve more as controlling the publicity.

    “It’s all about, ‘We’ve done the right thing,’” he said, “rather than saying, ‘How did you get into this position in the first place?’”

    While repatriations can be seen as bad press for a museum, they’re not antithetical to an institution’s mission, said Marlowe, the Colgate University professor.

    “The Denver Art Museum could have a really powerful, honest display in which they say, ‘When we accepted these objects 30 years ago, we understood them differently,’” she said. “Telling that story of that broad shift in cultural values is a way to admit mistakes, show they’ve learned and bring audiences into the story.”

    See Original Post

  • October 30, 2023 7:35 AM | Anonymous

    Reposted from The Art Newspaper

    Environmental activists defaced the Louvre pyramid on 27 October, covering the landmark glass monument with orange paint. Protestors from the Dernière Rénovation group threw balloons at the famous glass structure while one of the demonstrators climbed up the edge of the pyramid; according to the Telegraph, a dozen people were arrested following the incident.

    A Louvre spokesperson confirmed to The Art Newspaper that the activists attempted to cover the pyramid, the museum’s main entrance, with an orange liquid. “One of them climbed onto the pyramid's outer glass roof using climbing equipment. The liquid was sprayed onto the glass; traces are visible on the [structure]. No damage to the pyramid has been reported at this stage. Visitor access to the museum was maintained throughout the operation,” the spokesperson adds.

    The website of Dernière Rénovation says that humanity has just “513 days left” until societal collapse (referring to the carbon emissions peak predicted for 2025), adding that: “It is now up to us, ordinary citizens, to enforce the commitments to which our government refuses to comply. It is up to us to enter into civil resistance.” The group is demanding that the French government implements a nationwide plan for the thermal insulation of buildings.

    The glass pyramid, designed by the Chinese-American architect I.M. Pei, was inaugurated by the then French president François Mitterrand on 4 March 1989 after years of vitriolic debate—unheard in Paris since the early days of the “useless and monstrous” Eiffel Tower. Supported by a 200-ton steel and aluminum structure, the pyramid is surrounded by water basins and three smaller pyramids.

    See Original Post
  • October 29, 2023 12:56 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from AMM

    Save the Date! We're heading to Columbus, OH in 2024!

    Join us in one of the fastest growing cities in the Midwest in 2024 - Columbus, Ohio!

    With its diverse neighborhoods, thriving food scene, and 30+ museums and galleries, we can't wait to explore Columbus, Ohio, with you next summer. 

    We'll kick off the conference with a virtual day on Wednesday, July 24, hosted in collaboration with the Ohio Museums Association. Then, we'll gather together in-person at the Hilton Columbus at Easton from July 31-August 3 for sessions and many opportunities to connect with our peers. Of course, we'll also get out and experience Columbus museums!

    In the coming weeks, we'll announce this year's conference theme, provide instructions for booking your room at the conference hotel, and open the Call for Proposals. Stay tuned!

    See Original Post
  • October 29, 2023 12:49 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from CISA

    Today, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the National Security Agency (NSA) and the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) published “Phishing Guidance, Stopping the Attack Cycle at Phase One” to help organizations reduce likelihood and impact of successful phishing attacks. It provides detailed insight into malicious actor techniques, as well as technical mitigations and best practices to help prevent successful phishing attempts.  

    A form of social engineering, malicious actors commonly use phishing with the intent to get their targeted victims to visit an illegitimate website or to download malware. To help organizations better understand this activity, this guide categorizes phishing into two common tactics: phishing to obtain login credentials and phishing to deploy malware. It expands upon the two tactics by detailing the techniques frequently used by these actors, such as impersonating supervisors/trusted colleagues, using voice over internet protocol to spoof caller identification, and using publicly available tools to facilitate spear phishing campaigns. 

    With our NSA, FBI, and MS-ISAC partners, CISA produced this guide to provide practical, actionable steps to reduce the effectiveness of phishing as an initial access vector. Many of the controls described in this guide can be implemented by technology vendors, reducing burden and increasing security at scale.  

    This guide also recommends software manufacturers incorporate secure by design principals and tactics into their software development practices. The authoring agencies provide several recommendations to mitigate the success of phishing emails reaching users and users interacting with the email.   

    In addition to the joint guide, CISA published a blog with more information on phishing and this joint guide.  

    All organizations, from small and medium-sized businesses to software manufacturers, are encouraged to review this joint guide and blog to better understand evolving phishing techniques and implement tailored cybersecurity controls and best practices to reduce the risk of compromise.

    See Original Post
  • October 29, 2023 12:37 PM | Anonymous

    Reposted from CISA

    The Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is pleased to formally announce next steps of an important effort to update the National Cyber Incident Response Plan (NCIRP). As directed by the White House, in the 2023 National Cybersecurity Strategy, CISA will lead the process to update the NCIRP.  

     

    As set forth in the National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan, CISA, in coordination with the Office of the National Cyber Director (ONCD), will gather input from public and private sector partners– including the federal interagency, Sector Risk Management Agencies, and regulators to incorporate appropriate changes to the NCIRP to make it more modern, agile, and flexible. The updated NCIRP will strengthen existing processes, procedures, and systems to more fully reflect that a “call to one is a call to all.” 

     

    First published in 2016, the NCIRP is the Nation’s framework for coordinated response to significant cyber incidents. Since that time, much has changed to both the threat landscape and the cyber defense ecosystem. Through the Joint Cyber Defense Collaborative (JCDC), CISA will work to ensure that the updated NCIRP addresses significant changes in policy and cyber operations since the initial NCIRP was released. 

    In leading the development of NCIRP 2024, CISA will ensure the work is grounded in the following principles:  

     

    1. Collaboration. National cyber incident response requires deep commitment to partnerships across all levels of government, industry and with our international partners. The NCIRP 2024 will reflect this commitment to the vast community of diverse stakeholders and promote collaboration. 
    2. Shared Responsibility. Cybersecurity is a collaborative effort with entities across the cybersecurity ecosystem uniquely contributing to a national cyber incident response. The NCIRP 2024 will challenge traditional methods of working with our partners, and move toward more forward-leaning, action-oriented collaboration to deploy the full potential of each party’s authorities, capabilities, and expertise.  
    3. Learning from the Past. The past eight years have seen cyber incidents of unprecedented scale, impact, and sophistication. The NCIRP 2024 will incorporate lessons learned from past cybersecurity incidents to and further enhance incident response coordination efforts.  
    4. Keeping Pace with Innovation. The cybersecurity landscape is a complex ever-evolving environment. The NCIRP 2024 will integrate processes capable of maneuvering its dynamic nature. This approach reflects a shift to greater proactivity for achieving clearly defined and intended outcomes. This change demonstrates our commitment to the sophisticated cybersecurity landscape by remaining vigilant and acting quickly whenever needed.   

    The NCIRP 2024 planning initiative is part of the JCDC Planning Agenda, bringing together government and the private sector to execute cyber defense plans that achieve specific risk reduction goals and enable more focused collaboration.  

    We are committed to remaining transparent about the work being performed throughout this process over the next year and a half and invite the public to follow its progress by visiting The National Cyber Incident Response Plan (NCIRP) or reviewing the fact sheet.

    We look forward to the work ahead and are grateful for the willingness of our colleagues across all levels of government, the private sector and civil society to participate in this important process.

    See Original Post
  
 

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