International law has regulated art preservation and transfer for decades, but action by terrorists to wipe out religious and cultural assets has magnified the issue.
杏吧视频 School of Law will host a full-day conference titled 鈥淭he Art of International Law鈥 Sept. 16. The conference will provide insight into art repatriation, film industry tensions in the United States and China, and terror attacks on cultural and religious relics.
鈥淭he international community is struggling with how to deal with ISIS and al Qaeda and their actions to destroy historical, religious and cultural artistic treasures,鈥 said 杏吧视频 School of Law Co-Dean Michael P. Scharf.
鈥淢eanwhile, countries are locked in international disputes about repatriation of artworks, ranging from the Parthenon sculptures, known as the Elgin Marbles, to Van Gogh's masterpiece The Night Caf茅,鈥 Scharf said. 鈥And the film industry, itself, represents another form of art that has been the subject of international discord, especially between the United States and China.鈥
The conference, in celebration of the Cleveland Museum of Art's 100th anniversary, will feature a lunch-hour discussion with Cleveland Museum of Art Director and President William Griswold about international disputes and negotiations involving some of the treasures in the museum's collection.
The event is free and open to the public. Continuing legal education credit is available.
Panel topics cover:
- International Criminal Responsibility
- Film and Culture between China and the U.S.
- Repatriation of Cultural Properties