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Rare booksellers are faced with increasing demands to have strong provenance on materials they buy

Provenance Symposium New York March 2019_Save the Date
International League of Antiquarian Booksellers Joins 1st International Provenance Research Day

On March 5, 2019, the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers held the symposium Who Owned this? Libraries and the Rare Book Trade Consider Issues Surrounding Provenance, Theft and Forgery at the renowned New York book collectors club, the Grolier Club, jointly organized with the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (ABAA).

The Grolier Club, New York

Rare booksellers are faced with increasing demands from institutions to have strong provenance on materials they buy. Booksellers need to know how to deal with this and have a good understanding of what libraries need. The symposium brought together a range of experts and scholars from the antiquarian book trade, libraries but also investigation, insurance, art law and IT. 

On March 5th, 2019, ILAB (the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers) brought together a range of experts and scholars from the antiquarian book trade, libraries and investigation officials to inform and give advice to those attending the symposium.

The event also marked the 1st International Provenance Research Day with more than 60 cultural institutions in Germany, Great Britain, Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland organizing large number of symposiums and workshops at museums, archives and libraries.

NY Video announcement presentation
A symposium held at the Grolier Club, Tuesday March 5, 2019. Organized by the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB), the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (ABAA) and co-sponsored by the Grolier Club.

Coinciding with this important initiative, ILAB launches the videos of the New York Provenance Symposium.

Please follow this link: https://vimeo.com/album/5874116 

As Sally Burdon, ILAB President said in her introduction on the day:

“The popular image of an old bookshop with a slightly eccentric bookseller selling books in a shop untidily crammed with books and a computer nowhere in sight, is not the modern reality. Antiquarian books, manuscripts, maps, prints etc. are constantly being traded across international borders. Because of this, identifying and keeping track of stolen items is ever more important and requires immediate response to prevent such items being on sold. The rules and regulations that govern this international market place are becoming ever more complex and difficult to keep up with for everyone involved from libraries, institutions, booksellers and collectors… Hence the need for this symposium”.

We must take steps. Today is one step along the way. There is more that needs to be and must be done. We need to protect these precious materials in public and private libraries and in the stock of antiquarian booksellers. Join us in this important fight!”

For more information about today’s International Provenance Research Day, please visit the website here: https://www.arbeitskreis-provenienzforschung.org/index.php?id=tag-derprovenienzforschung or follow the hashtag #TagderProvenienzforschung

The information for this article was derived from the website Fine books & Collections and you can view the original article here:
https://www.finebooksmagazine.com/press/2019/04/international-league-of-antiquarian-booksellers-joins-1st-international-provenance-research-day.phtml

You can view a summary of some of the main speakers who attended this New York Provenance Symposium here:
https://slam-livre.fr/fr/node/68878

 

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