Introduction: Cultural imperialism and Nefertiti
The bust of Nefertiti and its restitution is the best example to discuss decolonization and its ethical implications on museum practice in the twenty-first century and Egyptology as an area study. Reflected in Edward Said’s Orientalism, heritage today is entangled with cultural appropriation and imperialism, and its academic training relates to how archaeologists and Egyptologists shy away from engaging with the politics of Egypt or the region and the politics of their nation-states and their museum’s institutions.Footnote 1 Edward Said writes that “[p]rofessionalisation leads to the obedient figure of the academic or scholar who is ready to serve any power (always holding the highest of professional standards), but never questioning the agendas to which his or her work is put, nor the broader dynamic of power in which that work is inscribed.”Footnote 2 It is impossible to discuss the decolonization of Egyptian archaeology and its associated world museum collections without reflecting on the current politics between Egypt and Europe, how it still interacts in archaeology, and how it sets the agenda for restitution negotiations and repatriation. In this article, I take the chance to explore the intricacies of the entanglement of cultural property with heritage politics projected on the famous bust of Nefertiti. My first argument is the illegal and unethical export of the bust of Nefertiti according to the de jure legal terms of Egyptian law in 1913, the negotiations that continued until 1933, and how the veto for the restitution by Adolph Hitler was something that other Western powers were also in support of, albeit not officially. My second argument is that the refusal of the restitution of the bust of Nefertiti, which was found after World War II in Wiesbaden by the quadripartite army, was not because of legal official matters, as they responded officially to the Egyptian government, but, rather, because of an accumulation of Western fear that the repatriation of the Nefertiti bust would become a precedent that would pave the road for the return of many different objects taken under colonialism in the nineteenth century, regardless of the de-Nazification of the collections that the “Monuments Men” had claimed. My third argument is how the bust of Nefertiti and its restitution provide the legal and ethical implications of the cultural property laws and reparations for historical injustices that interact with museum ethics, the digital world, democratization, accessibility, and neocolonialism. My concluding argument is how and whether the repatriation of the bust of Nefertiti and other similar objects is the end goal or the beginning in restituting the agency for Egyptians to produce knowledge about their past.
The fox guarding the hen house: How did the bust of Nefertiti leave Egypt?
In April 1905, the German Ludwig Borchardt was appointed as part of the Egyptology CommitteeFootnote 3 that managed the Antiquities Service in EgyptFootnote 4 under the French Egyptologist Gaston Maspero.Footnote 5 Having studied architecture in Berlin, Borchardt convinced the Jewish German James Simon – a cotton-rich trader and philanthropist – to fund his excavations in Egypt to acquire objects for the Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft. While he was in Egypt, he also founded the Deutsches Archaeologiches Insitute in Cairo. In December 1906, Borchardt got his first license to excavate in Tell Amarna,Footnote 6 which was renewed annually until 1912, while keeping all these positions, a conflict of interest well noted by the French Pierre Lacau, the director of the Antiquities Service after Maspero.Footnote 7 According to Egyptian law at that time, the excavation license provided the specific terms that regulated the relationship between the excavator and the Egyptian state: Articles 4 and 5 gave the government of Egypt the right to retain any objects they saw of value for the Museum in Egypt despite the partage agreements that were in exchange for paying the excavator the expenses he incurred.Footnote 8 The de jure practice was in place from 1891 until the official law was put forward in 1912. The licenses approved by the minister of public works to be given to the excavators regulated how antiquities left Egypt and supported national interests in keeping the essential objects. The regulation of the excavation licenses de jure and de facto was well known to Borchardt because he had served as a member of the Egyptology Committee for seven years before the partage.Footnote 9 The regulation was as follows:
Art 2.
Tous les objets trouves dans les fouilles appartiennent de droit a l’état, et doivent être déposés au musée de Gizeh.
Art 3.
Toutefois, en considération des dépenses faits par le fouilleur, le gouvernement lui cédera une partie des antiquités trouvées en se conformant aux régler suivantes
Art 4.
L’administration du service des antiquités et le fouilleur procèdent ensemble au partage de ces objets en deux lots d’égale valeur. Les deux lots formes sous, tirés au soit par l’administration et le fouilleur, si coup-ci ne préfèrent une attribution a l’amiable.
Art 5.
Est réserve a l’administration le droit de racheter toute pièce du lot échu au fouilleur.
L’administration fera son offre. Si le fouiller la refuse, il indiquera son prix. L’administration aura alors la faculté soit de prendre l’objet au prix indique par le fouilleur, soit d’abandonner cet objet au fouilleur en recevant de lui le prix que l’administration avait offerts.
Dans tous les cas l’administration pourra s’approprier les objets qu’elle désire racheter en dédommageant le fouilleur par une somme qui ne pourra jamais dépasser les frais de fouille faits pour leur découverte.
In 1912, Borchardt found the bust of Nefertiti in Tell Amarna at the workshop of Tuthmosis, south of the temple of the Aten. Dubiously, he hid its value intentionally in the partage process. He did not accurately describe the bust in the division of finds report that was weighed against a tryptic; the division of finds report was signed by the French Egyptologist Gustave Lefebvre and rectified by Maspero in January 1913. He knew the regulation that had been in place since 1891 and the law in 1912; in later negotiations, Pierre Lacau, with Heinrich Schafer, insisted that what Borchardt did was an unintentional error.Footnote 10 However, given Borchardt’s position in the committee and his license of excavations, this could never have been an error but, rather, was an intentional breach of the de facto and the de jure law of antiquities; it was fraud, as later described by the Egyptian politicians working on the repatriation negotiations in 1946.
Borchardt described Nefertiti as “a painted royal princess” in the partage, knowing that the bust belonged to Queen Nefertiti. In contrast, he described her in his notebook as the most beautiful object ever foundFootnote 11 with clear identification that it was a head of a queen and not a princess. According to the Egyptian law that Borchardt was a guardian of due to his position on the Egyptology Committee, a unique object such as the bust of Nefertiti should have never been part of the partage. Later, in 1913, Borchardt, trying to conceal his act to keep his concession in Tell Amarna, published a tiny article on the bust with a faint photographFootnote 12 and succeeded in hiding the bust until the discovery of Tutankhamun. James Simon owned the bust of Nefertiti after the partage.Footnote 13 When it arrived in Germany in February 1913, it was displayed in his private residence, where Emperor Wilhelm II saw it.Footnote 14 Simon further loaned the whole collection from the Tell Amarna excavation to the Egyptian Museum in Berlin in 1913, and, in 1920, he donated the complete collection to the museum as a gift on the condition that, if Egypt ever requested the bust of Nefertiti back, the German National Museums should repatriate it.Footnote 15
With the Tutankhamun discovery in 1922, the Museum of Berlin felt the pressure of imperialistic jealousy toward the British and was compelled to put the bust on display. In 1923, Borchardt showed reproductions of Nefertiti’s bust at a Leipzig conference and declared that it was Nefertiti rather than an Amarna princess.Footnote 16 His international colleagues alerted the Egyptian antiquities service, and a series of negotiations began, headed by Pierre Lacau with the Egyptology Committee.Footnote 17 The approval by the Ministry of Public Works placed an immediate ban on the renewal of Borchardt’s excavation permit and ensured that the German Archaeological Institute would have a stronger position in the negotiations of the restitution of the bust going forward in 1925. The Egyptology Committee (half-British/half-French) gave the concession of Tell Amarna to the British Egypt Exploration Society, which still holds it today.
Borchardt protested many times over this decision and contested it by writing several official letters to the Egyptian foreign minister, blaming Lacau and his German French rivalries. By 1927, the negotiations between Lacau and Heinrich Schäfer from the Museum of Berlin began. Both the Egyptian and German sides feared this would escalate into a political struggle between both countries. In a letter dated 10 May 1927, SeifAllah Yusri Pasha, the head of the Egyptian Royal Legation in Berlin, and his successor Hassan Nashaat Pasha, in another letter dated 29 November 1929, both made it clear that there was an unspoken policy that the negotiations should remain within expert circles only for fear that this case could be used against the fragile government in Egypt and affect German-Egyptian relations.Footnote 18
This truce was seriously ruffled by al-Ahram,Footnote 19 which published a report in January 1928 that publicly accused Borchardt of stealing the bust, an accusation that the Germans thought Lacau was behind. Such disregard for Egyptian sentiments about the bust of Nefertiti characterized the negotiations, and both sides continuously tried to suppress any Egyptian voices in the negotiation process in the late 1920s. Lacau wrote the Egyptian prime minister and minister of public works to ban articles similar to the one in al-Ahram because Borchardt had threatened to sue and stop the Berlin museums from stopping negotiations.Footnote 20 This was not the case in Germany, for several articles against the restitution of the Nefertiti bust were allowed to be printedFootnote 21 in order to maintain public opinion as a card against the restitution of the bust for fear of German national sentiments.Footnote 22
Early negotiations in 1927 for the restitution wanted to resort to international arbitration processes. The legal time for that had yet to pass, but Lacau convinced the minister of public works to supply two other statues in exchange: the statue of Ranofer of the Old Kingdom and Amenhotep, Son of Hapu, of the New Kingdom. Despite the historical imperialist jealousy between the British and the French, several letters between the British Museum’s Egyptian Department and their British ambassador in Berlin shared the idea of stopping the restitution of the bust of Nefertiti at all costs because it would open the doors for the restitution of the Rosetta Stone and the Elgin Marbles.Footnote 23 After exceedingly long meetings and many attempts to reach an agreement, the “expert” negotiations failed in June 1930.Footnote 24 However, the negotiations afterwards, headed by Egypt’s Royal Legation in Berlin in 1933, convinced the Prussian government to repatriate the bust.
The Prussian government owned the bust after Simon. Still, they never disclosed that it was Simon’s wish that the bust would be repatriated if Egypt asked for it, and, at many times, they misled the Egyptians during the negotiations by saying they were trying to find the original benefactor to get his permission.Footnote 25 On 28 June 1930, Simon wrote the German minister of science, art and education in support of the restitution of the bust to the Egyptians, just as he had conditioned when he donated the bust: “On the other hand, even after giving away the colourful bust of Nefertiti, the Berlin Museum would still be far superior to all other collections, including that in Cairo, as regards the number and artistic value of the artworks from the Amarna period. And among our stock are many pieces that are of higher artistic rank than the elegant bust of the colourful queen.”Footnote 26 The Royal Egyptian Legation, based on the efforts of the earlier committee of experts, had convinced the Prussian government to repatriate the bust to celebrate King Fuad I’s birthday. However, at the last minute, Hitler’s Reich government vetoed its repatriation in October 1933 because “Hitler was in love with Nefertiti.”Footnote 27
The “Monuments Men,” the Metropolitan Museum, and the quadripartite army
In March 1945, the bust was rediscovered with the rest of the looted Nazi art in a salt mine in Wiesbaden. Around February 1946, the Egyptology Committee, part of the Antiquities Service, which had now moved from the Ministry of Public Works to the Ministry of Public Instruction, issued an official letter to the prime minister, instructing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to restitute the bust of Nefertiti back to Egypt.Footnote 28 On 10 February 1946, Mahmoud Fahmy al-Nokrashy Pasha, the Egyptian prime minister, wrote the US State Department an official letter based on the draft from the Ministry of Public Instruction, where he eloquently explained the discovery of the bust of Nefertiti:
Now that Hitler is no more and his will is no longer law, there is no obstacle to putting an end to a spoliation based on fraud and maintained by force. This masterpiece of ancient Egyptian art must return to Egypt, which it should never have left. It must be returned to the Cairo Museum, into its most appropriate setting, where it could be studied by scholars as are other masterpieces of the same period which are collected there. This will also repair an injustice; it will have a high moral significance for all and will be welcomed with joy, as much by the world of science and art as by the public opinion of all countries.Footnote 29
Other letters exchanged between personnel in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the archival box that discuss the restitution and repatriation of the bust and how the United States, as an ally to Egypt that believed in freedom and justice, would have supported the restitution show a great naïveté for the Egyptian politicians on this matter.Footnote 30
In comparison to the Egyptian naïveté was the sentiment that lay within the inner circles of the “Monuments Men,”Footnote 31 the National Gallery of Art, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where, in a letter exchange to Hunington Cairns, the executive officer of the National Gallery of Art, Lamont Moore, one of the heroes of the “Monuments Men,” wrote about the bust of Nefertiti:
The piece is to the Berlin Museum What the Winged Victory and Elgin Marbles are to their respective institutions. It has been associated for over a generation with the Berlin Museum by tourists and scholars and it would seem that its return to Egypt at this late date would be principally to satisfy the “amour propre” of the Egyptians in a Nationalist sense. To return this item to Egypt now would be to follow the Nazi principle of confiscating works of art by pretence or force to enlarge their own collections. From a personal point of view, I should like to follow your recommendation that we consider no immediate action and yet I feel that if the Egyptian authorities succeed in their plan, we might be faced with similar problem which might not be easily solved once the Nefertiti precedent has been established.Footnote 32
The Metropolitan Museum also wanted to have the bust of Nefertiti housed for two months by the “Monuments Men” until it was repatriated to Egypt, similar to other art rescued by the army that was to stay at the Metropolitan for some time before it was repatriated.Footnote 33 The State Department wrote back that Egypt should write to all the governments of the quadripartite army, out of which only the Soviet Union responded favorably for the repatriation of the bust of Nefertiti.Footnote 34 On 8 March 1947, Egypt received a telegram from the allied control authority for Germany stating:
Insofar as restitution is concerned, it has acted only in regard to the restitution of art looted by the Germans looted during the war, in accordance with the United Nations Declaration of 5 January 1943, or as trustee for artistic property in the possession of the Germans at the beginning of the war. The Allied Control Authority appreciates the wishes of the Egyptian Government, but feels obliged, after careful consideration, to state that the present quadripartite Military Government for Germany necessarily an agent concerned with specific objectives growing out of the total defeat of Germany, does not appear to be the appropriate authority dealing with cases of disputed transfers of cultural objects which antedate the war.Footnote 35
Nefertiti: Time, materials, and affect
The normalization of past imperialist and colonialist crimes is rooted in the Western discourse of museum collections. This can be attested in the many statements by the current Berlin Museum director(s)Footnote 36 that the ordinary place for the bust of Nefertiti is a museum in Berlin, and any discussion of repatriation is just nationalist propaganda.Footnote 37 In other words, as Said observed, the firm rejection of repatriation or creating a negotiation space is entangled in the manipulation of the culture of the Indigenous communities or the subaltern favoring imperial cultural hegemony.Footnote 38 A critical inquiry of Egyptian archaeology and museology needs to be developed that is politically conscious of the interrelations of time, materials, and affect to counter the effects of the apolitical pseudo-objective writing of a specially selected past that is only ancient and Western.Footnote 39 An adequate critically sensitive account of the past must include the sensoriality of the bust of Nefertiti, where interactions between materiality and temporality need to be written where it would become the social history of the object.Footnote 40 An approach to the sensoriality of the bust of Nefertiti needs to go beyond the linear biographical narrative as a tool for the resistance against Western cultural hegemony.Footnote 41
The digital Nefertiti and “democracy”
Since its discovery and its forced displacement to Berlin, the bust of Nefertiti has become a fetish; its reception in Western circles made the statue at once an icon featured in magazines and beauty salons. This is in opposition to how the bust first arrived in Berlin; the bust of Nefertiti was initially hidden after its “discovery” in 1913 because Borchardt was worried that Egypt would stop his excavation in Amarna if the bust went on display. Similarly, its three-dimensional (3D) data was later concealed from the public.Footnote 42 Historical artifacts in museums gain their identities from contemporary artistic expression and the dangerous or unethical circumstances of their excavation and export outside their countries.Footnote 43
Nora al-Badri and Jan Nikolai have focused on recreating a new sensorial and affective experience for the bust of Nefertiti by leaking its 3D scanning data.Footnote 44 They smuggled a small 3D scanner into the Neues Museum and scanned the bust. They then spread the data on the Internet and printed a second bust that they hid in the sand to pretend that the original bust was no longer a unique object. It was a response to the Ägyptisches Museum and Papyrussammlung’s rejection of releasing the data of their 3D scan to the public, citing commercial rights.Footnote 45 By imagining that other copies of the bust were found and inspiring different reactions to the other busts that render the one in Berlin less unique, the project tried to create a multi-dimensional persona to the bust, making it more accessible and less impressive.
Many Western scholars audaciously express how Ancient and Modern Egypt are two hermetically sealed entities,Footnote 46 where the modern does not identify with the ancient. The museum ought to strive for authenticity and representativeness in the space and temporality of the object’s context, Footnote 47 yet none of these are part of the bust display today. The reality of imperialistic museums is that they permanently store decontextualized things of one culture in a museum of anotherFootnote 48 without clear links between both.Footnote 49 The experience of the bust of Nefertiti has always been limited to those who could visit her in her confinement in Berlin, decontextualized from the materiality of her background of discovery in the mudbrick workshop of Tuthmosis, the sculptor at Amarna,Footnote 50 and disconnected from the sensoriality of her Indigenous community. The Neues Museum today is what Michel Foucault defined as “heterotopias” of space, expressing a single individual interpretation of the past through the Western cultural lens of the world.Footnote 51
The heterotopia of the display space of the museums in Berlin restricts the experience of Nefertiti’s bust. The bust does not only relate to the past but also to how it interacts with contemporary understandings of the past, which is sometimes defined as “heritage” – how the past relates to the present and affects the future.Footnote 52 The bust also represents how the decontextualized objects are recontextualized with contested narratives in museums, limiting the object’s social agency in its Indigenous communities or subaltern. Footnote 53 Museum entities, such as Nefertiti, are social agents that represent human action and negotiate phenomenological meaning relating to human interaction with ideas inspired by the past.Footnote 54
Some cultural rights are more equal than others
In 2002, as part of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Preußicher Kulturbesitz), the Neues Museum signed the Declaration on the Importance and Value of Universal Museums. The nineteen museums involved are institutions of previous imperialist and colonialist powers, without a single source country.Footnote 55 Magnus Fiskesjö justly wrote that this declaration is a “rich-club defence of holding onto objects amassed on the principle that colonial and imperial might is right.”Footnote 56 The declaration entailed that resituating objects would narrow the collections of Western museums. It also claimed that this would be a “disservice to all visitors,” disregarding the inequality of world travel; Indigenous communities cannot fly to the Schengen area because they cannot obtain a visa or simply cannot afford it.Footnote 57
The outcome of the declaration is that Western hegemony over cultural heritage must continue to be an unfair privilege, where “the West” continues to see itself as the protector of cultures whose history it exhibits. Yet, at the same time, “the global north” represents the future in the twenty-first century.Footnote 58 This declaration is an example of how Eurocentric modernity clashes with the idea of the universality of heritage, where Europe is always seen as the center of the world with cultural hegemony.Footnote 59 Almost 18 years after the declaration, French President Emmanuel Macron publicly advocated for the restitution of African heritage to align with post-modernist ethics of museums and cultural heritage; however, the results are still intangible.Footnote 60 The position of many museum curators in the Neues Museum or the British MuseumFootnote 61 has not changed from those found in the archives a century ago; they all fear that if the bust of Nefertiti is repatriated, it will be a precedent for much more of their museum loot to be restituted.
The reception of Nefertiti’s bust in Egypt
In my senior year as an Egyptology student, I had a fascinating conversation with my grandmother Amira. She was born in Beni Suef and lived most of her adult life between Heliopolis in Cairo and Matai in Minya. During the encounter, she showed me an old photograph of my mother during her university years and asked me: “Who does your mother look like?” I gazed at my mother’s long neck and chiseled chin and shouted: “Nefertiti!” My grandmother replied: “Yes, she does, and you, too, look a little like your mother.” My grandmother, who was never interested in archaeology, realized that Nefertiti stands for our benchmark of beauty as Egyptian women. No other figure is more of an “icon of Egyptian Beauty” to any Egyptian layperson.Footnote 62 Despite attempts at separating Ancient from Modern Egypt, Nefertiti in Egypt is a huge icon. In the 1980s, the Egyptian national carrier EgyptAir even used Nefertiti’s bust as their symbol.
In the movie Isha’at Hub (A Rumour of Love, 1960) by Fatin Abdelwahab and starring ‘Omar Sharif and Su’ad Hosny, the protagonist Hussein shops for images of women to pretend that he has a relationship with one of them and allure the young Samiha. In a moment of high comedy, Hussein returns to his father-in-law, his ally in the plot, with three photographs: Queen Elizabeth II, the bust of Nefertiti, and the famous cinema star Hind Rustum. The choice of the screenwriter ‘Ali al-Zurkany to put Nefertiti as the greatest image of Egyptian femininity, despite her being dead for more than 3,000 years, shows the relationship between the ancient Egyptian queen and the Egyptians, who would recognize her at once, 48 years after her bust had left Egypt with Borchardt. In the film al-Harb al- ‘Alamiya al-Thaltha (World War Three, 2014),Footnote 63 a comedy directed by Ahmed al-Gindy, statues in an imaginary Egyptian wax museum interact. The statues are animated only from 5 p.m. to 5 a.m. and are ruled by the unexperienced Tutankhamun, helped by Mehmet ‘Ali Pasha, after the corrupt museum curator Huwaida, aided by a wax statue of Hitler, melted the statue of Nefertiti and ended her reign. The Egyptian queen is never seen in the movie, effectively symbolizing the lost bust, without whom the museum is at a loss for meaning. The villains in the film, besides Huwaida and Hitler, are wax statues of Napoleon, Richard the Lionheart, and Hulagu Khan. It shows how, in the popular account, Egyptians view Napoleon as a villain rather than a hero. In contrast, the West perpetuates a different history of his Egyptian campaign (1798–1801), especially about antiquities and the discovery of Ancient Egypt. Despite Egyptian popularity at the time, it is significant that the main villain in the movie is Hitler, surely the archetypal worldwide contemporary scoundrel, but, here specifically, the enemy of Nefertiti and her dynasty. The public might not have overlooked the subtle reference to Nefertiti’s captivity in Berlin. Heritage becomes sensible when it is entrenched in the narrative linking identities to the senses.Footnote 64 In both films, Nefertiti, a bust and a persona, is central to the identity discourse of modern Egyptian women.
The famous novel by Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz, Al-’aish fil-Haqiqa (Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth, 1985), shows Nefertiti as a strong, powerful woman within Akhenaten’s royal circle.Footnote 65 She was also recently the subject of numerous art paintings by Egyptian artist Hossam Dirar.Footnote 66 Recently, through a visit to the community of Amarna, the reception of the bust among the different women was engaging. Many of these villages have formed a campaign for restitution, which they announced through a video in English and German (Figure 1).Footnote 67
The reception of Nefertiti’s bust in the West
Shortly after the French Revolution and the fall of the ancien régime throughout Europe, the concept of “royalty” started to migrate from the political realm to the imaginary.Footnote 68 This imaginary realm was affected by gender and ethnicity, and much of it was shaped by ethnography, archaeology, and even Egyptology.Footnote 69 This further developed into the ideas of “retro Orient” and “modern West.” The former started in the nineteenth century to focus on the myths and marvels of biblical Egypt and, with the advancement of Egyptology, produced complicated knowledge about a distant past that was not Eurocentric; in fact, the late nineteenth-century excavation by the Egypt Exploration Fund (now Egypt Exploration Society) was centered on biblical narratives of Egypt.Footnote 70
The influence of Egyptology had a complex effect on the concept of European modernity.Footnote 71 Egypt was then envisioned as part of the “Orient,” which was easily appropriated and colonized culturally, politically, and figuratively. European colonialism has always taken a patriarchal tendency, constantly feminizing others’ cultures. The Androcentrism,Footnote 72 coupled with imperialist hegemony, failed miserably with Egyptian material culture, particularly the iconography of female rulers.Footnote 73 This reflection on gender and colonialism relates to what Foucault has tried to address in his Archeologie de Savoir – namely, how fragmentary evidence is used to construct and deconstruct identities.Footnote 74 Archaeology in the past 200 years has added to the imperialist and colonialist narrative more than it has added to Indigenous identity construction. Western cultural institutions have appropriated the metonymic past of the different countriesFootnote 75 and played on the belief that the religions of modern nations (that is, Christianity and Islam) in the Middle East add to the gap with their past.
When King Fouad visited Germany in 1929, the fear that he would ask for the return of the bust to Egypt engulfed the nation. A famous cartoon featured him exclaiming “Kommen Sie doch wieder mit nach Ägypten, schöne Nefretete, ich mache Sie zu meiner Lieblingsfrau im Harem!” and the response “Ausgeschlossen, Fuadchen, lieber in Berlin im Glaskasten, als in Kairo. Schein-königin von Englands Gnaden.”Footnote 76 This metonymic assimilation of the gendered colored image of Nefertiti continues until today in most of the writing of Egyptologists and art historians who highly sexualize her as an act of imperialistic androcentrism. For example, Jan Assmann writes that Nefertiti is a “love poem in stone” and that her “very refined sensuousness and almost erotic grace and radiance” represent the art of the Amarna Period.Footnote 77 Claudia Breger has also criticized Assmann’s work as explicitly appropriating imperialist fantasies.Footnote 78 This echoes Gustave Flaubert’s description of his encounter with Kuchuk Hanem, a gipsy belly dancer from Esna, celebrated from a Western patriarchal perspective, stereotyping all other Egyptian women.Footnote 79 Flaubert and Assman replicated their fictional image of women from the Nile Valley, albeit thousands of years apart, in a sexist androcentric discourse.
Europe was, in the course of identity formation, engaged in the process of understanding the concept of the “foreign” and the “past”; objects such as the bust of Nefertiti have contributed to this notion of identity construction as well as “imperialist fantasies.”Footnote 80 Europeans have also created a valuation of objects through the significance of acquisition as a form of sociality.Footnote 81 These “imperialist fantasies,” as Claudia Breger describes them, are the paradigms of the imperialist ideology toward non-Western cultures, putting the “other or the subaltern” under Western hegemony, both politically and culturally, to shape the Western sense of imperialistic identity.Footnote 82 The Western invention of a primitive traditional society helped Europeans define and validate their “enlightened modernity.”Footnote 83 Again, it has not stopped today, albeit attempts to establish an Indigenous Egyptology.Footnote 84 Western scholars defend their imperialistic discourse with the argument that the scholarship they built on is why the world knows ancient Egypt, claiming that they have the authority to identify with it.Footnote 85 The Western narrative of “ancient” Egypt continues today through the objects housed in Western museums, saved from oblivion and feeding their self-righteous narrative and “imperialistic fantasies”Footnote 86 with the perfect example relating to the bust of Nefertiti. Medieval Arabic writings on ancient Egypt, such as al-Baghdadi, al-Maqrizi, al-Idrisi, al-Muqadasi, and al-Mas’udi, are left out of the writing of Ancient Egyptian history because of Western scholars’ imperial gaze or, perhaps, their inability to read the Arabic language.
The appropriation of the image of Nefertiti through her bust started even before World War II when she was received as a star – a symbol of success in the “women world” of the 1920s – for German women to identify with,Footnote 87 and she still is as such in Berlin. The bust was used to form the post-imperial German national identity after the 1918–19 German Revolution, assimilating the museum to an analogue of the Prussian-German state, and the bust of Nefertiti was used as a symbol of national identity to substitute for the lost monarchy.Footnote 88 In the 1920s and 1930s, Nefertiti was featured in many fashion magazines and assimilated as a “Western” beauty; those were the roaring years of Art Deco aesthetics, and many women dressed to imitate her.Footnote 89 The Nazi appropriation of the bust, relating Nefertiti to her “Aryan” linkage, brought Nefertiti and Akhenaten to the heart of European Fascism before World War II.Footnote 90 The Western appropriation of the bust puts Nefertiti in the halo of a sublime universal image of the “other” woman that the West appreciates. Nefertiti stands alone in this big decontextualized room designed to inspire awe, and magic, to be seen as an entity of a modern cultFootnote 91 in a bulletproof case in the disembodied dead space of the Neues Museum with a contested social biography.Footnote 92
Nefertiti: The inspiration to modern women
Nefertiti is not only the symbol of Egyptian feminine beauty but also that of power. Despite her non-royal lineage, Akhenaten welcomed her as the Great Royal Wife, the equivalent of “queen” in a language that did not have a word for this title and where a king could marry more than a woman. In several instances, toward the end of his reign, he had her portrayed holding a more prominent position.Footnote 93 This is not unusual after the power of her predecessors Ahhotep,Footnote 94 Ahmose Nefertari,Footnote 95 and Tiye.Footnote 96 Early in her husband’s reign, Nefertiti is featured on the talatat blocks recovered from Akhenaten’s constructions at Karnak. In some edifices, her image appears more often than the king himself.Footnote 97 She sometimes performs ritual offerings to the Aten disk on her own. Scholars have argued about Nefertiti’s exact role beside Akhenaten as she constantly accompanied him in his solar liturgies and court appearances.
Nefertiti is also seen in the Nubian wig, mostly male attire, creating more speculation on her progressive role. This was traditionally an item of clothing for Nubian soldiers, and Nefertiti’s appropriation of the male wig must have caused a stir in the society in Ancient Egypt.Footnote 98 Perhaps Nefertiti was trying to create a new image for Egyptian women who had a more prominent role next to their male counterparts. Nefertiti also followed her predecessor Tiye in wearing the khat head cloth, a round-sack headdress usually worn by men or the female goddesses Nephthys and Isis.Footnote 99 A further example of Nefertiti’s position of power, as shown in iconography, is that she is seen wearing the khat head cloth and an atef crown in the tomb of Panehesy in Amarna.Footnote 100 Furthermore, the most significant substantiation for Nefertiti’s role comes from a group of blocks showing the decoration of the cabin of a royal barge, where she is performing the ritual smiting of the enemies, an activity solely attributed to kings since the Narmer palette.Footnote 101 These scenes confirm her possible, solid political role in the governance of Egypt. In his Ancient Egypt: A Very Short Introduction, Ian Shaw quotes Camille Paglia in that Nefertiti’s bust gives an impression of “a vampire of political will.”Footnote 102 The quotation tells of (un)conscious sexism in Western thought; when a woman rules, she must be bloodthirsty for power.
Her extraordinary power, mixed with unmatched beauty and grace, encouraged women to employ Nefertiti as a patron figure for feminist movements. For example, in the 1999 election campaign in Berlin, the bust of Nefertiti was used for a poster by the Greens/Bundnis 90 to propagate an image of strong, powerful women. The Greens/Bundnis 90 movement used the slogan “Strong women for Berlin!”Footnote 103 Similarly, in the post-2011 Egyptian uprising, women who were sexually harassed and attacked by mobs in Cairo used the image of Nefertiti wearing a gas mask as a response. The iconic bust represented feminism and women’s rights against radicalism and gender bullying. Not only was the graffiti sprayed on Cairo’s streets and some other cities, but posters featuring it were made in Berlin. Advocates of women’s rights in Germany joined the protests in front of the Egyptian embassy in solidarity with their Egyptian counterparts.Footnote 104 As a historic Egyptian woman, Nefertiti’s role did not stop in the year 16 of Akhenaten’s reign. Instead, it continued to inspire her contemporary descendants of how a woman of power ought to be.
Why can the most beautiful immigrant in Berlin not go home?
“Nefertiti is the ambassador of Egypt in Berlin,” was the radical political translation of why the bust should stay in Berlin.Footnote 105 There must be a diplomatic exchange to have an ambassador in a country. With the negotiations of sending royal insignia in exchange for the bust, no German object has ever arrived in Cairo or Amarna. Nefertiti’s bust has become the symbol of the transformation of Egyptian heritage where the “Empire” as a symbol of Western imperialism has turned a historical ruler into a controlled ambassador in an imperial capital.Footnote 106 Questioning the ethical repercussions of colonially acquired heritage is far from these museum discourses. Colonialism has been entrenched in materiality, where imperial centers have been linked to museum objects that were sensorially delimited and defined.Footnote 107
The conflict over the right to have a say in curating and representing Egyptian culture was evident in “The Body of Nefertiti” in 2002, where Polish artists called Little Warsaw curated a display for the Hungarian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, putting the bust on a bronze nude figure with the blessing of the then director of the Altes Museum Dietrich Wildung. The Egyptians felt their queen humiliated and her cultural context disrespected. Farouk Hosni, then minister of culture, protested publicly at the German Museum, not because the bust was part of an art installation but, rather, because it was considered insensitive to the cultural history of Egypt. A queen in Ancient Egypt would never be shown naked; rather, she could be shown wearing a transparent garment. The Egyptian public also expressed their discontent at what was perceived as an act of insensitivity by the artists and the denial of any cultural rights by the museum management. Proponents of keeping the bust in Berlin cite this incident: if the bust was returned, such artistic insensitive expressions would no longer be possible.Footnote 108
Nefertiti’s bust, with its imperialist, nationalist identities, is also a symbol of the social disease of nostalgia and longing widespread today in Egypt and Germany. The nationalists in Egypt long for the glorious past of Ancient Egypt, and the Western neo-imperialists long for the time when it was possible to populate museums with objects of other cultures. The keeping of the bust of Nefertiti, regardless of all Egyptian attempts at repatriation since it was put on display, shows how German imperialism has attempted to relive its own lost victory over the culture of other nations.Footnote 109 Jean Baudrillard explains how modern is “cold,” while the ancient is usually “warm” because things in the museum allow the visitor to usurp and thereby “tame the cultural other.”Footnote 110 With the controlled keeping of the bust and the refusal to even loan it to Egypt,Footnote 111 the Neues Museum has kept the “cultural other” – metonymically Egypt – under German control as a token of neocolonialism today. This might also relate to why the Altes Museum agreed to the artistic display by Little Warsaw as part of German diplomacy toward the occupation of Poland during World War II. Controlling power using the past is an everyday political play, whether by national agendas, governments, or museums.Footnote 112 The past has usually been created by white supremacism that tries to dominate the future of the “Other’s” history.Footnote 113
The bust of Nefertiti is at the heart of how Germany, Poland, and other countries gathered under the West’s attempt to continue the domination of the memories of the present by riding the waves of globalization through the “universal” museums.Footnote 114 Offering training and scholarship for the young inspectors of the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities (MoTA) through the Deutsches Archaeologiches Insitute in Egypt that Borchardt created, German Egyptology has tried to provide a niche for itself in the neocolonialist discourse of providing cultural and political assistance to the once culturally colonized states to ensure that no new claims to the stolen heritage would be made. There is still a politically motivated imagination that the West is the benchmark for creativity and innovation, making the “Other” invisibly feed on the visibility of Western cultural identity.Footnote 115 The “scholarly” publications on the history of collecting Egyptian “objects” that radically deny the social history of the objects and their archaeological context show how the museums are still locked in imperial fantasies or the colonialist perception of material culture.Footnote 116 Unfortunately, how archaeological research has been shaped and controlled concomitates how particular nation-states interact economically, culturally, and politically.Footnote 117 Both Germany and Egypt have turned to archaeology to imagine national confidence in which Nefertiti’s bust continues to play a fundamental role.Footnote 118 Imperialist archaeology has always been at work, making Indigenous communities or the subaltern invisible only to appropriate their pasts. The West has hence become the rightful heir of Ancient Egypt through a system of knowledge production that controls Egyptian heritage.Footnote 119
The books about the Egyptian past are usually written in European languages and seldom translated into other languages, also causing a radical barrier of accessibility between the communities and the knowledge produced about their cultural heritage. This lack of access to knowledge is the case with Egyptian archaeology and Egyptians. Modern Egyptians are ridiculed for their lack of interest (or inability to access the knowledge written in a foreign language) in archaeology that is then translated to justify why Western museums should not repatriate Egyptian heritage, basing their dubious rationale on the discontinuity pretext.Footnote 120 The campaign to repatriate objects led by Mubarak’s regime before it was toppled in 2011 was silenced.Footnote 121 Western voices used looting and illicit digging in Egypt to produce Egypt as a risk zone, unable to keep its museums and archaeological sites safe.Footnote 122 In the 1980s, several critics in Germany felt that the bust belonged to Egypt and should be repatriated. A movement under the title “Nefertiti Wants to Go Home” was started by Herbert Ganslmayr and Gerd von Paczensky.Footnote 123 When Egypt has asked for the repatriation of the bust or its loan in the past decade, Dietrich Wildung has cited that the bust was too fragile to travel. Yet it was fit enough for the artistic experiment by Little Warsaw, and claims that the bust is safer in Berlin than anywhere else become unsubstantiated with the recent heist of Saxon royal jewelry,Footnote 124 the fire in the Berlin Science Museum,Footnote 125 the theft of the “Big Maple Leaf” gold coin,Footnote 126 and the looting of the medals at the Stasi museum.Footnote 127 Even the Neues Museum was also a victim of attacks in 2020.Footnote 128 Conservation and preservation of material culture is primarily a Western notion that is highly problematized when examined closely. It usually masks an exercise of power and political domination that serves cultural hegemony under the pretext of “stewardship of the record.”Footnote 129
Finally, the contested heritage represented in Nefertiti’s bust is not entirely legal or a matter of restitution only. The bust of Nefertiti is an example of how the West has usurped and appropriated the past of other cultures and is forcing through neocolonialist endeavors the acceptance not only of the status quo but also of the Western stance as a noble, selfless act of salvaging these objects from uneducated and unappreciative people. The role of archaeologists and heritage specialists is evolving from producers of publications for academic consumption to facilitators whose responsibility is to enable local stakeholders.Footnote 130 This should be extended to museum curators of contested objects, who must start questioning the ethical position of their collections. It is contemptuous to see how Western governments call for repatriating refugees who risk their lives and families as asylum seekers in Europe. Still, they never call for the repatriation of the objects associated with these peoples’ cultural histories or heritage.
The bust of Nefertiti’s restitution should not be the end goal but, rather, the beginning of the reparation of the cultural violence produced by Borchardt through the fraud he committed in 1913, further supported by Hitler and the Nazi regime and endorsed additionally by other Western institutions such as the British Museum and the “Monuments Men.” The restitution of the bust is also an invitation to reposition the universalist museum institutions to help them move from the nineteenth century to the twenty-first century – from institutions that house loot and stories of violence to institutions that promote democracy and equality. Nefertiti’s bust has proved to be a social agent both in Germany and Egypt; she has finished her “diplomatic term” in Berlin’s society and should be safely repatriated to al-Minya, where its donator James Simon had conditioned in 1920 and argued for her return in 1930. The reparation of more than 100 years of cultural colonialism lies not only in the repatriation of objects symbolic of power but also in restituting the agency of producing knowledge about the Egyptian past through repatriated objects. Perhaps “the most beautiful immigrant” in Berlin could get a chance to come home.Footnote 131
Acknowledgments
I want to thank Khaled Fahmy, Edward Keller Professor of North Africa and Middle East Studies at the University of Tufts, for his unmatched support and unconditional mentorship in navigating the National Archives of Egypt (Dār al-Wathāʾiq al-Qawmiyya); without his help, many of the primary sources that helped me form the arguments would not have been accessible. I would also like to thank Patty Gerstenblith, Distinguished Research Professor of Law, Faculty Director, Center for Art, Museum and Cultural Heritage Law at the University of De Paul. Without her hours of instruction, support, and discussion, I would not have been able to understand the legal frameworks of restitution and repatriation. This article has been a long-term project. Heinz Felber at the Institute of African Studies and Egyptology at the University of Cologne and Daniele Salvoldi at the American University in Cairo have helped me with discussions, readings, translations, and argument formation. Finally, I am thankful to my research team at Action Restitution Africa at the College of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage at the Arab Academy for Science, Technology, and Maritime Transport, who have helped with much of the archival research.