Readers in Bangkok may be interested in this upcoming talk by Dr Lia Genovese on the infamous exploits of Andre Malraux on 25 January 2024.
On 24 December 1923, André Malraux was detained in Phnom Penh, accused of stealing statues from Cambodia’s 10th century temple of Banteay Srei. Although his wife Clara Goldschmidt participated in the looting and was complicit in planning the operation from their Paris apartment, she was never in the dock. In July 1924, as André prepared to face justice in Indochina, Clara emerged a free woman and returned to France, through a combination of patriarchal mores and feminine wiles.
Aside from Clara, two other characters played pivotal roles in the aftermath of the incident. Cambodia-born George Groslier, Director of Cambodian Arts and Conservator of the museum at Phnom Penh, instigated Malraux’s prosecution, while Henri Parmentier, Parisian architect and chief of the Archaeological Service of the Hanoi-based École Française d’Extrême-Orient (EFEO), tried to suppress news of the theft. André was lionised by Parmentier as a promising art historian but for Groslier he was another thief posing as a tourist to steal the treasures of his beloved Cambodia.
To date, the involvement of Goldschmidt, Groslier and Parmentier, in the planning or in the aftermath of the Banteay Srei theft, has escaped in-depth analysis, due to an embargo on documents requested by Groslier’s descendants. A large cache of documents from the period was made available to select researchers only in recent years. My presentation will rely on primary sources from archives in France (through privileged access), Cambodia and Vietnam, to shed light on the activities and motivations of these three individuals.