
Gorgocutie says:
This is the duality of “separate the art from the artist” — a moral philosophy that asks us to judge creative work independently of its creator’s personal conduct. It’s a conversation we have about problematic musicians, directors, and authors all the time.
And then you have the British Empire, which took “separate the art from the artist” so literally that they built an entire museum out of it.
The British Museum holds over 8 million artifacts. Among its most famous pieces: the Parthenon Marbles (taken from Greece by Lord Elgin in 1801), the Rosetta Stone (seized from the French, who took it from Egypt), the Benin Bronzes (looted from Nigeria in 1897), and the Easter Island head (given as a gift, then taken… it’s complicated).
The museum has been called “the world’s largest collection of stuff other people made.” And whenever anyone asks for something back, the response is essentially: “We are the artist now.”
The punchline of the meme — getting blocked by @britishmuseum — captures the real-life energy of an institution that has literally blocked people on Twitter for asking about repatriation. The museum’s official stance is that they “preserve artifacts for all humanity,” which is a noble way of saying “finders keepers” in Latin.
📜 The moral of the story: Some people separate art from the artist. The British Museum separates the art from the continent.
#britishmuseum #history #meme #repatriation #elginmarbles #britishempire
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