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NEWS
Export ban for £15m Egyptian statue controversially sold to private buyer
POSTED 01 Apr 2015 . BY Tom Anstey
The 4,500-year-old statue cannot now leave the country
A statue, which caused a UK museum to be stripped of funding following its £15m (US$25m, €18.8m) sale, has had an export ban placed on it, stopping the piece leaving the country.

The 4,500-year-old Sekhemka sculpture, sold by Northampton Borough Council – operators of Northampton Museum – to on overseas buyer in July, raised ire among the heritage and museum community over the sale of cultural treasures by cash-strapped local authorities.

But the government’s Culture minister, Ed Vaizey, has placed a temporary export ban on the statue, while Arts Council England (ACE), which stripped Northampton Museum of its funding in July, has said it is “possible” that a new buyer could be found within the UK.

Northampton Borough Council reiterated that the temporary block had “no impact” on the statue’s sale, which is funding an extension of the museum and art gallery, with a spokesperson adding that it was “up to the current owner, ACE and the Department for Culture Media and Sport (DCMS) to resolve between them.”

The export ban was made following the recommendation of the ACE-administered Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA), which said that the statue was of "outstanding aesthetic importance" and was significant for the study of "the development of private statuary and funerary religion in Egypt and the history of human self-representation".

The Egyptian government has also opposed the sale, with Egyptian Ambassador Ahsraf Elkholy calling the move "an abuse to the Egyptian archaeology and the cultural property".

A final decision on the export licence application has now been deferred until 29 July. The buyer of the piece remains anonymous.

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Arts Council England has stripped Northampton Museum of its accreditation status, threatening the UK museum’s ability to raise funding after it sold an Egyptian statue in its permanent collection to a private buyer for £15m (US$25m, €18.8m).
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Uniting the world of spa & wellness
Get Spa Business and Spa Business insider digital magazines FREE
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News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
NEWS
Export ban for £15m Egyptian statue controversially sold to private buyer
POSTED 01 Apr 2015 . BY Tom Anstey
The 4,500-year-old statue cannot now leave the country
A statue, which caused a UK museum to be stripped of funding following its £15m (US$25m, €18.8m) sale, has had an export ban placed on it, stopping the piece leaving the country.

The 4,500-year-old Sekhemka sculpture, sold by Northampton Borough Council – operators of Northampton Museum – to on overseas buyer in July, raised ire among the heritage and museum community over the sale of cultural treasures by cash-strapped local authorities.

But the government’s Culture minister, Ed Vaizey, has placed a temporary export ban on the statue, while Arts Council England (ACE), which stripped Northampton Museum of its funding in July, has said it is “possible” that a new buyer could be found within the UK.

Northampton Borough Council reiterated that the temporary block had “no impact” on the statue’s sale, which is funding an extension of the museum and art gallery, with a spokesperson adding that it was “up to the current owner, ACE and the Department for Culture Media and Sport (DCMS) to resolve between them.”

The export ban was made following the recommendation of the ACE-administered Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA), which said that the statue was of "outstanding aesthetic importance" and was significant for the study of "the development of private statuary and funerary religion in Egypt and the history of human self-representation".

The Egyptian government has also opposed the sale, with Egyptian Ambassador Ahsraf Elkholy calling the move "an abuse to the Egyptian archaeology and the cultural property".

A final decision on the export licence application has now been deferred until 29 July. The buyer of the piece remains anonymous.

RELATED STORIES
Egypt banking on art and heritage to bring back prosperity


The Egyptian government is bidding to reinvigorate its art and heritage sector through heavy investment into the renovation and restoration of its historical cultural sites and institutions.
UK museum stripped of funding after selling Egyptian statue to private collector for £15m


Arts Council England has stripped Northampton Museum of its accreditation status, threatening the UK museum’s ability to raise funding after it sold an Egyptian statue in its permanent collection to a private buyer for £15m (US$25m, €18.8m).
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Eighty-four per cent of consumers now say wellness is a top priority in their lives, with this percentage increasing year on year, according to a preview presentation of McKinsey’s Future of Wellness 2026 research report.
Protests continue in Albania against US$1.6 billion luxury resort backed by Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump
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Barons Eden rebrands to Hiddenwell ahead of spa hotel portfolio expansion
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ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
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