¶ Intro / Opening
is a co-production of ABC Australia and CBC Podcasts. Our sister was
¶ A Family Kidnapping and Ransom
Kidnapped in 1977. She was five years old. It was a big story in Geneva. It was the story. On October 3rd, 1977, in Switzerland, the Ortiz family changed forever. They lived in a chateau. That was really close to the center of Geneva. She was grabbed from our home. She was on her way to The chauffeur had driven up to the house. The driver was chlorophyll. by two Italians. Mafioso, so she was kidnapped.
I was nine. My brothers and I were at boarding school. We had a boarding school, a news blackout. Wouldn't find out from the news. And then uh mother came with our grandmother and told us what happened. What are the bits that stay with you? Um we had outside the house journalists lined up. With their cameras, their zooms in the trees, uh behind the fence, in the fence, in the garden. Uh they were everywhere and our father was had to go and make a press conference.
I know who can't you? You who have my daughter. Don't make her suffer too much. Calm her down. Tell her she'll see her mother and her father in a few days' time. Five years old. What is happening? the anguish of whether we would see her again. It was really, really harrowing. That was when the call came. The ransom for five year old Graziella Ortiz was to be two million US dollars. or paid in used bills. And the clock was ticking.
And so, Graziella's dad, George Ortiz, a well known art collector in Switzerland, made a panicked deal. Our father borrowed funds to pay the ransom. To pay back he had to sell his collection. He then had to auction a whole lot of his work. So this is how the auction came about at Sotherby's of George Ortiz's treasures.
Hidden in that collection of treasures at Sotherby's was a time bomb. Something smuggled from the other side of the world that would trigger a decades-long conflict. Even today I still get emotional. Yes, it was smuggled. No one knew where they were. What the hell was going on? Mark Funnel, and this is the story of not one. It was fairly notorious, but I'm not going to say any more. A secretive vault. One father's When you're attacked. Welcome to season two of Stuff the British Stole.
¶ The Motunui Epa's Maori Heritage
G'day I have to say when I said Mark I said to my kids, okay, hey this guy Mark Fanella, who's that? He's gonna come and he wants to hang out with me and they go, with you? Why? Like, who the hell are you? Who the hell is Dr. Rachel Buquet? She is a lot of things. She's a writer, archivist, historian, and she would like you to know a particularly proud owner of a mullet.
Just say something like And I noticed her hair and as soon as I saw that mummy mullet, I just thought Aaron Norton Western Bulldogs has been reborn in the body of a middle aged woman. That's my big thing, she can't See? Look. Don't listen to her. It is a luxurious mullet. That's bullshit, but it's a statement hairdo, that's for sure. But there is one part of Rachel that has come to define her over the last two decades, and that is her Maori heritage.
I'm a descendant of Tatanaki and uh for twenty-two years now I've been researching stories connected with my wakkapapa, which is genealogy, um, stories connected with Tatanaki and It's my um, you know, spiritual homeland for sure. It is also her literal homeland. Taranaki is on the west coast of Alteroa, New Zealand, and it has this dramatic coastline. This is where Rachel grew up.
The main thing about Tatanaki is the mountain, so I've got um. She's got this picture of a perfectly symmetrical mountain with green hills and crisp white peaks. Oh wow. Yeah. That is a beautiful mountain. It's like a stocked photo of the perfect mountain. Yeah, it's the second most perfect mountain in the world after Fuji. Um and in fact it did stand in for Fuji during one of Tom Cruise's lesser-known works, The Last of the Samurai.
I I don't think Australians understand just sort of how green somewhere can be when all the trees are green all the time and beaches are all black sand, so it's um iron sands. Oh yeah, it's the most beautiful place in the world. But 200 years ago, Taranaki was also a very dangerous place to be. It was pretty much a hundred years of terror that started in about late eighteen ten, eighteen twenty. So, you know
Probably a first act of colonization or pre-colonization was the arrival of weapons in New Zealand, muskets. These were the intertribal wars. Different Iwi, Maori nations jostling for land, fuelled by the trade of British-supplied muskets. Other northern tribes got hold of them first. I mean more power to them. Everyone was seeking what they could to try and survive. And there were big tawa or raiding parties coming down from the north.
into Taranaki and uh far out. You know, when I think back what it was like in Taranaki hearing a gun for the first time. You know, seeing what a gun could do to a human being as opposed to a spear or a a club. People were terrified, so there was, you know, many, many massacres during that period. Thousands of people fled Taranaki. A lot of my Maori relatives were forced to flee. People took what they could carry. But there were some things, incredibly valuable things.
They hid instead. Because one of the things that happened when um the invaders came from the north or when Tatunaki was doing their own invading was you'd desecrate people's buildings. That was how you dominated and the carvings would have been placed in a swamp for safekeeping. Those carvings that Rachel's talking about?
This whole saga is about them. Five thick, richly coloured panels of wood in the shape of a mountain, almost as tall as a human, carved with these undulating patterns, almost like writhing snakes. It's very deep into the woods, so the figures are very the word serpentine is used, but it felt like something alive. It was mesmerizing.
The harder you look, the more detail you see. On the left, the left panel is a little bit different, maybe like a darker wood. Looks like it's almost been designed by somebody else. And then on the far right, the far right panel has this odd square hole in it. Right in the middle of the artwork. It's almost like a handle. And as you keep looking, that's when you realize.
There's all these faces looking from different angles. Wide-eyed, carved right into the wood. It was as if the people depicted in the wood could just step out of the wood. These wooden carved panels are known as the Motonui Epa. Originally part of a storehouse and then buried in a conflict in the north of Taranaki, an area known as Motonui, and then
Forgotten in the maelstrom. I mean no one knew in eighteen twenty what was going to occur. Thousands of people arriving from the UK and that the Taranaki world would be turned on its head. That is. Until someone dug them up.
¶ Rediscovery and Mysterious Disappearance
It's a rainy day in New Plymouth, the biggest city in the Taranaki region. Yeah, come in. And the first thing you notice about Ron Lambert's house is that. It may as well be a museum. I've I've collected things since I was about knee high to a grasshopper. God only knows what. Ron Lambert is not the one who dug up the panels from the swamps of Montanui, but he plays a crucial role in this story.
Back in the 1970s, Ron was working at a museum, the Taranaki Museum, and he heard this rumor that something amazing had been pulled out of the swamps of Taranaki. And then he actually saw evidence of it. I found a couple of uh photographs that had five panels in someone's backyard and they'd been photographed. They were obviously dug out of the swamp.
And that's basically about when I realised that there was something floating around. This was one of the first times in centuries that anybody had laid eyes on the panels. They are absolutely bloody stunning. There's no question about that whatsoever. They are very deep, almost three-dimensional figures, which has serpentine bodies and twisted limbs and things like that.
So Ron now knows that somebody somewhere in this area has dug them up, these incredible pieces of work. But then they just disappear again. So it was it was very dicey sort of stuff. So the next time you saw the panels. Where was that? About six years after I saw those photographs. And a friend of mine rang up one evening and said, did you see the news um on the T V And he was watching late night TV and saw a little BBC item about this auction or for Tez treasures.
and saw an image of the Epa and heard the word Taranaki and was like, hang on, I don't know about that. And he could not believe his eyes. Five panels, Taranaki panels. and Sutherby's. That could only be the five panels that we had a photograph of in 1972. So, Ron immediately got on the phone to the director of New Zealand's National Museum. And um asked him if he had the photograph of the um panels that were on TV and he said yes, I've got the catalogue in front of me at the moment.
And I said, on the left is it a totally different style? And the other side on the right is there a square hole in it? And he went silent for a while. And then said, Yes, how did you know? And I said, Well they were in Taranaki in New Plymouth in nineteen seventy two. And he said, but that can't be because the catalogue says that they were bought in America in the nineteen thirties. How on earth did these five panels that were in a New Zealand backyard just a few years ago
suddenly end up eighteen thousand kilometers away with this paperwork, this Providence claiming to be from America in the nineteen thirties. It says um Provenance. Formerly the property of Mr Robert Riggs, Philadelphia. He had originally purchased them in an antique shop in New London, Connecticut, around nineteen thirty-five. It was obvious that it was not true. Completely made up, like absolute total bullshit.
That's amazing. When you dw were describing the panels to him on the phone, what was going through your head? Like how were you feeling at that moment? Quite euphoric, actually, to be quite honest, because I never thought I'd New Zealand was not going to let them go. junction to stop the sale. I mean I um work as a public servant now and I have deep For the public service. It is just unbelievable. I have pondered it mark and I'm like, what the hell was going on?
on fire This frenzy of activity defines. Hell has happened here? But what the New Zealand government didn't realise was that on the other side of the world, there was a very desperate family.
¶ George Ortiz: A Collector's Trauma
Could you introduce yourself and who you are? Um yes. Hello, um Nicholas Ortiz. I'm son of George Ortiz. My father was a collector of uh antiquities and I live in Lithuania, originally from Switzerland, I guess. Tell me about your dad. Like what was he like growing up? He was um Extremely strict. Uh very demanding. So he was all always around art and he talked about art at home. We had uh uh curators, archaeologists, uh uh art historians, uh different people, everything revolved around art.
George Ortiz, Nick's dad, was born into a life of incredible wealth. The descendant of a Bolivian mining magnate, he was raised in Paris. And like literally, the street he grew up in. It's the street that ends in the Arc de Triomphe, right? That's where he grew up. So the Arc de Triomphe was there. The Onassuses and the Rothschilds were their neighbours. This is a childhood of privilege beyond what
I can imagine. But I got the sense of someone who was a bit tormented and this collecting was a way that he could express himself and make his own name. This is the home of the George Ortis Collection. The finest collection of antiquities in private hands, with over a thousand works of art spanning thirty different cultures.
From ancient Greek and Roman sculptures through to South American deities, there is a millennia of history in the Ortiz collection. For him it wasn't just objects, it was much deeper, it was uh a way to soothe A certain maybe anxiety. I was looking for seeking after God, looking for the truth.
To be connected from the earth to the sky. And there I found my answer. And it was my birth, my spiritual birth. What George Ortiz may not have fully understood is that this collection painted a bullseye on his back. Which brings us back.
¶ New Zealand's Legal Challenge Begins
Switzerland. They would have been a target. The year is 1977. Two men snatched Graziella Ortiz, George's daughter. Next sister. She was five years old. She was uh grabbed from our home and sequestered for 11 days until our father found a way to settle the ransom. George managed to borrow the two million he needed. The money was handed over, and a few hours later, reportedly on the side of a highway between Geneva and Lausanne.
And Graziella was found alive. After that, it was our sister who was uh she had to sleep with a door open at night uh next to our parents. with her. How do you think it changed your dad? Um he couldn't talk about it for a long time. He just kept it inside himself. He d he didn't want us to feel the anguish from that.
But George Ortiz did have to pay for it quickly. So he picked 234 objects from his collection and sent them to London to be put under the hammer by the auction house Sotherby's. So imagine George Ortiz's shock were just three days. Days before the auction, a letter arrives out of the blue from the New Zealand government.
Shit, where is it? Um okay, here we go. The Attorney General of New Zealand, suing on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen and the right of the Government of New Zealand. We Odado's right refierce, he had to sell his collection. And here comes well we're gonna contest the sale.
You get to an emotional state well y you fight. If it hadn't been that, I think the whole thing would have been different. But here you had this whole emotional dimension which which made it supercharged, a supercharged issue. So George Ortiz has his daughter style. He desperately needs the money to cover the ransom. Out of left field, he finds he's being sued by New Zealand.
Then, at the same time, New Zealand have uncovered this long-lost Maori treasure that disappeared from right under their noses. You've got two sides here that could not be more opposed at this point. And yet, everyone has one big question. How on earth did this centuries-old artwork end up in George Ortiz's collection? And to answer that, we need to go back to 1971.
¶ Illegal Sale and Smuggling Story
Swamps in Motonui. Just off State Highway 3, in the north of Taranaki, this is where you find Motonui. And in 1971, there was a lot of construction going on. Decided they wanted to do it. Some land clearing. Ditch digging, draining swamps, big waste of space the swamps.
Get rid of them. But in the last few years, with all the construction happening in the area, Maori artifacts have been dug up here. So the two landowners, they reached out to a local band by the name of Melville Manu Konga, who owned a souvenir shop in in the main drag of New Plymouth.
and see if he wanted to come and have a look and see if there'd be any artifacts. He was walking through the ditch and saw one face looking at him. And then as he kept going, there were more and more faces looking at him. Those wide-eyed, carved faces. Imagine them protruding out of the soil. And he excavated those carvings. That's how they came out of the swamp and took them back to his house in New Plymouth. And at that time he then made a decision, so he said, that he would sell them.
the carvings to the highest bidder. It turns out by chance. A bit of was in town. The dealer was in New Zealand. And he found out there were some panels in a g that some guy had found and they were and they were in a gas station. A British art dealer in his late twenties by the name of Lance Entwistle. Was traveling with his American girlfriend. Yeah. This couple turned up. A an English man and an American woman. They fell down on their knees in awe and longing at the sight of these.
carvings. He s he realized how important they were and he gave the guy a bunch of money. They were masterpieces. The guy who sold it in New Zealand was a Maori. You know, the sale was illegal, really, you look m Melville did not have the mandate to do that, but he did do it. What Melville said is that it was six thousand dollars and that's in all the legal documents, and at that time, I mean I I looked it up, that was more than an
average year's income in New Zealand. So it was a substantial sum of money for um someone running a small shop in a small town in New Zealand. So that's the choice he made. Alright. Let's just say that despite the name of this show, this particular British art dealer, Lance Anto Assault, to be very clear, he did not steal the Motonui Epapan. But then there is the issue of how he got it out of New Zealand. And there's a story here that Lance himself has told multiple people that I've spoken to.
And that story goes like this. He said that they put the carvings uh in a crate and shipped them out labelled furniture. He bought some big cupboards or whatever. And he wrapped it and put it inside the furniture and exported the furniture. And the dealer told you that. Yeah, yeah, he told me how he did it, yeah. Now here's the problem.
And would that have been illegal at the time? Yes. Yes, it was smuggled. How so? Well it would have been contrary to the uh New Zealand legislation. The New Zealand legislation said that uh in order to export an object like this you needed a permit. And he didn't have a permit. Really? It was fairly notorious. But I'm not going to say any more.
¶ The Art Dealer's Secretive Deal
Said like a proper lawyer. Once the lawsuit between George Ortiz and the New Zealand government kicked into gear, suddenly all of these curious details started tumbling out into the open. My name is Patrick. Patrick Joseph O'Keefe. Patrick Joseph O'Keefe is these days a retired law professor in Australia. But back in the 1970s, he and his wife were like. Crack team of legal experts hired to work on New Zealand's case. And it was a wild one.
Uh Antwistle took it to New York, then contacted Ortiz in Geneva. Ortiz, by this point, was well known in the arts community for his love of Pacific art. So Lance contacted him and said we've got something great here. This is how George Ortiz came to meet those fateful panels that would cause him so much strife. And George flew from Geneva to New York in nineteen seventy-three and they met in this apartment near Central Park and George agreed to pay sixty-five thousand dollars.
That's what occurred. So Lance Antwistle, British art dealer, buys these panels for$6,000 New Zealand dollars from Anuconga and then sold them to Ortiz for$65,000. That is a huge profit margin. But the most interesting part of this transaction is that as part of the sale, Lance made Ortiz sign a document about the panel. Which said that he wasn't to disclose them to any uh in I think it was a New Zealand archaeologist or anthropologist.
to talk about them or photograph them or let anyone see them for at least two years. Two years. You would have thought George with all his experience would have realised alarm bells, perhaps that there was something odd about it. So why do you think Lance made Ortiz sign that Covering his own back. Lance entwistle here. Please leave me a message after the tone. Thanks.
It's probably fair to say that a number of the details of this transaction, at least as they exist in court documents, they don't paint Lance and Twistle in a wonderful light. So for the past few weeks. We have sent emails, left messages. I call his very friendly office in Paris and use the one sad bit of French that I know.
A bourgeois palagou anglais. All to see if he was willing to have a chat about his career and if he wanted to add anything at all to all of this stuff that's on the public record. Then wonder.
¶ Legal Loss and Colonial Critique
He picked up. I'm all I'm all yours. Ah, fantastic. No problem. You don't mind if I record? Is that okay? No problem. Uh the line is clear. Fantastic yep. The line is clear. Yep, the line is super clear. You can hear me? Fantastic. All right. Well can I just get you to start by by by introducing yourself and and what you do for a living. Um, well my name is Lance Entwissel. Uh I began dealing shortly after leaving university.
Lance still remembers the moment he first saw the writhing figures of the Motonui EpiPanels staring at him in Manakonga's garage. My impression of them when I first saw them was that they that they were marked for I um um I was dumb dumbstruck. Um I think we knew we were in the presence of A of great art. I do believe that the dispersion of art which is been a a factor of human commerce and experience since uh the ancient world continues to be uh a very important that
art not be confined by nation state borders if you like. Lance, if you had your time over, do you think you would have acquired it the same way or would you have done it slightly differently? Um I think it's quite difficult to project oneself back to what one did when one uh late twenties. One's in one's mid seventies. I think I could I don't think I could answer that question. I mean I could talk about their intrinsic quality.
Look, back then, Mark, I think I think most things were acquired in pretty dodgy ways. That's that's what was happening. Both dealers, collectors and institutions. all operated by ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies. I think that it was just a sort of nudge nudge wink wink scenario and everyone just pretended that this was all legit. No one would dig deep. So this was I really see this as just a huge blowing apart.
of all these little agreements that existed between privileged people. So with all of this now out in the open. The Mortonui Epitopanels are sitting in Britain at Sotheby's, at the centre of a court case between a desperate George Ortiz and an enraged New Zealand. It was this real sense that New Zealand had been robbed. I think there was a lot of
Anger on both sides? I think that they got really pissed off that Sotheby's was like trumpeting it. I think what might have been at play was a sense of colonial fight back. You think we're nothing in New Zealand, but we've got our own culture and how dare you Poms think you can sell our stuff. and they shouldn't get away with it. The case made it all the way to the highest court in the UK. They went to the House of Lords.
And so, what happens when a distant island nation takes on a stunningly wealthy art collector? They lost. And George Ortiz won the right to keep the Motonui Epa panels. Over the years, New Zealand tried a range of different arguments, but I think the most telling one is this. So when they tried to argue that the export itself broke New Zealand law,
But this export law cannot be applied in England, so you can't apply your country's law in another country, right? This has always bothered Rachel. You couldn't have the law of New Zealand applying in in the UK. 'Cause that would be an exercise of extra territorial sovereignty.
And all I could think, Mark, was he's describing what colonization actually was. Like a massive exercise of extraterritorial sovereignty imposed upon Tatanaki and everywhere else. I mean, hello The answer to the stuff the British stole is The British stole Tatanaki. All of our ancestral land was taken by British law. And it was by British law that those panels were now bound. Ortiz eventually completed the Sotherby sale, without the panels.
They were now too controversial to sell, and so he locked them away.
¶ The Panels' Journey Home
I mean it was huge. You could hear the stillness if you like of the air but turning the handles and opening this huge door. I just thought, oh my god, what's this? Ortiz locked them in a vault. One of the most secretive vaults on the planet. Yeah, look, I've I've never experienced something like this before. Uh they did say that while this is like a fort nock. Very much like a a bank vault. The emotion was really um really intense.
In the doors around you sits about a hundred billion dollars in art and antiques. This is the Geneva Freeport. Which is a big tax-free haven where people keep artwork. Gold, cigars, cars, you name it. So it's a huge I've heard it described as the world's biggest museum you'll never see. Where theoretically you haven't arrived in a country because it's like a dead zone. About seven years ago, this guy you're hearing here, Doctor Arapata Hakiwai from New Zealand's National Museum, Tepapa Tongriwa.
Well, the Ortiz family invited him here to this mysterious vault. A lot of people thought that would never happen. George Ortiz died in 2013. And there, in this vault, his son, Nick. Turned on the lights. The power was immense. You know, went right through me. It's a real it's just the sheer power of it. Of concrete. For the first time in decades, the Mortonui panels saw its people, and Nick Ortiz, whose father had fought so hard to keep these.
Nick opens his mouth. Nikolai spoke in Tiril Mari, in the Māori language. We all felt that special energy. Yeah. And so it was, you know, w I it was we were moved to tears. They had a great To me the sense this so he had taken the time his pronunciation and what he said to be quite honest his Mori was far better than many Mori in Aotearoa New Zealand. And so how does it end?
Okay, so when you walk into the museum you will go in the front door up a set of stairs. It ends in Taranaki. And then you walk into this gallery here. In the Puke Araki Museum in New Plymouth. At the entrance, we have the panels right there. It ends with its people. My name is Tōmairangi Marsh. I'm a descendant of the Ngāti Rahiri tribe of Mutunui, so north Taranaki.
Tuma Rangi Maash is a guardian of the Motonui upper panels as they sit here today. Even today I still get emotional bringing people up or just standing here with them. What do you think the story of the panels tells you about the history of this land?
I think they are a very good example of resilience and and hope. I never thought in my lifetime I would be standing here in front of these panels because I thought it was something it was always a pipe dream for us and our history But we're still here. There is a curious and strange justice to this story. In the end, the Ortiz family actually sold the panels to the New Zealand government.
About four million dollars, which would make it one of, if not the most expensive artifacts in the history of New Zealand. But it was done on this understanding that the New Zealand government, the Crown, was paying for something specifically so it could go back to the people of Taranaki.
The British stole Tatanaki and now the Crown has acted for us and we've got these carvings back. So to me it's a it's an evening up. It's it's a really rare example of the Crown using its enormous resources to act in the favour. And that for whatever reason it did happen. The days of the British Empire, as it once was, are now over. And yet it's built into the very DNA of how we live our lives, right down to our law. Laws which held the Motonui Epa panels hostage for decades.
So it's kind of fitting that the case of the Motonui Epo would completely change laws all around the world as to how art and artifacts could be treated. It was a it was a landmark case They led to the UNESCO Convention on Illegal Export Theft. Yes. Heavily influenced by this case in the mid nineties.
UNESCO set up a new convention to solve the problem of different national laws and make sure that stuff that was stolen had a pathway to coming home. I don't think anyone living in New Plymouth would have thought of ourselves as coming. from a place where New Zealand's most valuable work of art was about to overturn. what they did. Stuff the British Stole is produced by Zoe Ferguson, with help from Leah Simone Bowen at CBC Podcast.
Mixing by Hamish Kamaliri. The executive producer is Amrutha Slee, and the head of Society and Culture is Julie Browning. Very special thank you to Robin Martin and Cassandra Saunders at RNZ, Richard Gervin and Anthea Moody too. Just a heads up, Rachel Buchanan is writing a book about all this, which will be probably amazing and it's out next year.
This is a production of ABC RN in partnership with CBC Podcasts. It was created and written by me, I'm Mark Fennell, and his hint for the next episode. light turns pink.
