The museum also officially outlined its new guidelines for repatriating art.

A 12th- or 13th-century stone sculpture depicting the goddess Durga slaying a buffalo demon. Courtesy of the NGA.
Today, the National Gallery of Australia (NGA) announced that it will repatriate 14 works of Asian art and antiquities to the Indian Government. All but one of the pieces came from Subhash Kapoor, the disgraced art dealer believed to be behind an elaborate smuggling operation.
The soon-to-be deaccessioned objects include six bronze or stone sculptures, most of which date back to the 11th or 12th century; six photographs; a painted scroll from 1835; and a brass processional standard, or alam, created in 1851.
Additionally, another three objects acquired through Kapoor’s Art of the Past gallery in New York have been removed from view and will be returned once the museum can identify their respective places of origin. Once these artworks have been repatriated, the institution’s collection will no longer contain any items connected to Kapoor.
With today’s announcement, the museum also introduced its new system for assessing the provenance of artworks. “If, on the balance of probability, it is considered likely that an item was stolen, illegally excavated, exported in contravention of the law of a foreign country, or unethically acquired, the National Gallery will take steps to deaccession and repatriate,” the museum explained.
“With these developments, provenance decision-making at the National Gallery will be determined by an evidence-based approach evaluated on the balance of probabilities, anchored in robust legal and ethical decision-making principles and considerations,” Mitzevich added.

A bronze processional standard, or alam, from 1851. Courtesy of the NGA.
This marks the fourth time the NGA has deaccessioned to the Indian government works purchased through Kapoor and others connected to him, per the Guardian.
One of the most prominent antiquities smugglers in the world, Kapoor allegedly dealt hundreds of millions of dollars worth of looted artworks over the course of three decades. Many went to the world’s biggest museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in California.

Shanti C. Shah, Hiralal A Gandhi memorial portrait (1941). Purchased 2009. Courtesy National Gallery of Australia, Canberra.
In 2019, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office filed criminal charges against Kapoor and seven co-conspirators, charging them with operating a $145 million smuggling ring over the course of three decades.
The full list of the returned works, as provided by the museum, is below:
- Chola dynasty (9th-13th centuries), The child-saint Sambandar, 12th century, purchased 1989
- Chola dynasty (9th-13th centuries), The dancing child-saint Sambandar, 12th century, purchased 2005
- Hyderabad, Telangana, India, Processional standard , 1851, purchased 2008
- Mount Abu region, Rajasthan, India, Arch for a Jain shrine, 11th-12th century, purchased 2003
- Mount Abu region, Rajasthan, India, Seated Jina, 1163, purchased 2003
- Rajasthan or Uttar Pradesh, India, The divine couple Lakshmi and Vishnu
, 10th-11th century, purchased 2006 - Gujarat, India, Goddess Durga slaying the buffalo demon
, 12th/13th century, purchased 2002 - Rajasthan, India, Letter of invitation to Jain monks; picture scroll
, c. 1835, purchased 2009 - Lala D. Dayal, India, Maharaja Sir Kishen Pershad Yamin, 1903, purchased 2010
- Udaipur, Rajasthan, India, not titled , unknown date, purchased 2009
- Guru Das Studio, not titled
, purchased 2009 - Shanti C. Shah, Hiralal A Gandhi memorial portrait, 1941, purchased 2009
- Venus Studio, India, not titled
, 1954, purchased 2009 - Udaipur, Rajasthan, India, not titled
, unknown date, purchased 2009