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Prof. Emma “Emmy” Cadwalader Bunker

Birth
Haverford, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
21 Feb 2021 (aged 90)
Denver, City and County of Denver, Colorado, USA
Burial
Wheatland, Platte County, Wyoming, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source

Possible cenotaph

Please note: a pre-need memorial was created in this cemetery before Mrs Bunker's death. Obviously she had not been interred as of that date. Further as of early 2024 it has not been determined with any certainty if her ashes were eventually interred here or if her name on her husband's marker remains a cenotaph.

Interestingly, above her name is an engraved representation of what appears to be the Hindu god Ganesh. Whether that is indicative of future disposition plans is unknown.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Emma Cadwalader Bunker died peacefully in her home in Denver Colorado on February 21st, at the age of 90.

She was born in Haverford, Pennsylvania on June 19, 1930.

She earned a B.A. from Bryn Mawr College and a M.A. from New York University Institute of Fine Arts.

She was a world renowned research scholar, archeologist, professor and author of Asian Art History, specializing in Eurasia, China and Cambodia.

She published over 50 works of scholarly research that expanded and deepened the world's knowledge of the ancient world.

She taught Art History at the Colorado College and mentored many aspiring scholars and artists.

She served on numerous boards and committees of art museums and cultural institutions including; Denver Art Museum, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Freer and Sackler Gallery, Center for Khmer Studies and Institute for the Study of the Ancient World.

She was preceded in death by her husband John B. Bunker and son, John C. Bunker.

She is survived by her children; Emmy, Jeanie, Harriet, and Lambert along with adopted Chinese children Dongning Wang and David Shu.

She is also survived by 19 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.

A memorial event to honor her life and contributions to the field of Art History will be held at a date to be announced in the future.

Information from Horan & McConaty Funeral Service and Cremation


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Emma Cadwalader Bunker (19 June 1930, Haverford, Pennsylvania - 21 Feb. 2021, Denver, Colorado, USA) was an American scholar, archeologist, professor and author specializing in Eurasia, China and Cambodia and Asian art, whose reputation was posthumously questioned for her association with art dealer Douglas Latchford, and her implication in looted Khmer artifacts illegal trading.

According to the laudatory obituary The Denver Post published after her death, "she taught Art History at the Colorado College and mentored many aspiring scholars and artists. She served on numerous boards and committees of art museums and cultural institutions including Denver Art Museum, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Freer and Sackler Gallery, Center for Khmer Studies and Institute for the Study of the Ancient World." One year later, however, that same newspaper ran a scathing reportaccusing her of using the Denver Art Museum -- where an entire gallery still beared her name -- as a "laundromat" for stolen Khmer sculptures. In a subsequent editorial, the newspaper's editorial board stated: "We are dismayed that Christoph Heinrich, the director of the Denver Art Museum, has not publicly responded to the scandal. We worry the institution is hoping the storm will blow over without having to address the fact that not only is the museum housing artwork that was likely smuggled into the U.S. by art dealer Douglas Latchford and then legitimized by The Scholar Emma C. Bunker, but the Denver Art Museum's complicity also helped give these two people legitimacy in the eyes of other buyers."

This is a rare instance of an internationally-recognized researcher being named as an active accomplice in art trafficking. Emma "Emmy" Bunker's husband, John Bunker, a wealthy businessman and the son of businessman and diplomat Ellsworth F. Bunker (1894-1984) -- appointed US Ambassador to South Vietnam by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967–1973 and a staunch supporter of US incursions into Laos and Cambodia -- was also a donator to the Denver Museum and liked to give lectures on "business ethics". John Bunker worked for National Sugar Refining, a company founded by his grand-father and headed by his father.

Among her more than 50 published works, she co-authored with Latchford Adoration and Glory: The Golden Age of Khmer Art (Art Media Resources, 2004, ISBN-13: ‎978-1588860705), a book often quoted by art historians.

Published in the Angkor Database | A Social Responsibility Project by Templation Angkor Resort, Siem Reap

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Denver Art Museum (DAM), eager to purge traces of institutional deference to colonialism, last year removed all references to Christopher Columbus from its collections.

This spring, after a scathing exposé in its local newspaper, the museum excised the name of its late benefactor Emma C. Bunker from its Arts of Asia gallery, for which Bunker's family had raised money. The museum also closed down an acquisition fund in her name. But Bunker would be a hard presence to expunge entirely in Denver, if the museum wanted to. Her memory is still a presence in other departments where she donated objects.

A veteran author on Asian art and a longtime donor to the museum, Bunker died in 2021 at the age of 90. Her father-in-law, Ellsworth Bunker, had been US ambassador to Vietnam from 1967 to 1973, when Richard Nixon ordered the bombing of Cambodia.

The reason the museum removed Emma Bunker's name was because of her work with Douglas Latchford (1931-2020), a dealer based in Bangkok and a notorious smuggler of art who sold sculptures looted from temples in Cambodia and Thailand. She co-wrote books with Latchford on Cambodian art that experts now say were filled with false provenances.

Bunker was associated with the museum for decades, during which time she brought works purchased from Latchford into the collection. Four of those works have been returned to Cambodia. There could be more. The US Department of Homeland Security is said to be investigating sculptures (including one now in Denver) from a site in Thailand near the Cambodian border.

The veteran writer was herself known to law enforcement. In a 2021 complaint in US District Court targeting Latchford, and detailing Bunker's own efforts to mislead investigators, federal prosecutors in New York called her "The Scholar" and, without naming her, identified her as a volunteer research consultant who "facilitated the sale and donation" of looted objects, "including by vouching for their provenance."

Bunker was also called "The Scholar" and identified by name in earlier US efforts to recover looted objects from Sotheby's in 2012, and from the dealer Nancy Wiener in 2011. In the latter case, Bunker provided a false provenance for a stolen bronze Buddha that Latchford sold to Wiener for $500,000.

A detailed series on her double life, published by Sam Tabachnik in the DenverPost last December, brought this long-running cultural saga to a wider audience. His tale of Emma Bunker's adventures with Latchford also brought the Denver Art Museum more attention than it has had since 2006, when it opened a steel building with shiny spikes designed by the architect Daniel Libeskind.

So has the museum now entered a post-Bunker era? Not if transparency is the standard. The institution turned down a request from The Art Newspaper to interview its director, but a press representative noted by email that "the museum's collecting policies are in alignment with AAM and AAMD best practices, and have evolved in lockstep with the museum field… The Denver Art Museum is committed to ethical collecting practices, and has a track record of working proactively and collaboratively with US and foreign governments to return artworks proven to belong to another nation or individual."

The museum also declined to talk to Tabachnik of the Denver Post over the year that he spent writing his series on Bunker and art smuggling. "There was no conversation. They never spoke to me. They never gave me an interview," he said. Nor would members of the Denver Art Museum board talk to Tabachnik.

The Cambodian government is also seeking a greater level of transparency from the Denver Art Museum, noted Bradley J. Gordon, a lawyer for the Kingdom of Cambodia. Speaking by phone from that country, he said that his client is eager to know about any other objects that left Cambodia and passed under Bunker's eye. Gordon says Bunker helped make the DAM "a laundromat for looted objects," which then passed into museums and private collections.

"For us, the disappointing situation at the moment is that Denver has still not handed over any provenance documents," he said. "For our research, it's important to have as many documents as we can."

"Any sort of documentation that they have relating to Cambodian artifacts is helpful to us. But they've been silent," Gordon noted. "We're not getting any information from them at all."

The museum countered in a statement that it has worked directly with the US Justice Department: "The museum has done so, including providing all records to the DOJ regarding the returned pieces."

For the Cambodians, that's not enough. "The DAM had stolen antiquities, and now they've been returned. They should be assisting us to better understand how those stolen antiquities got to the museum," said Gordon, "The story's not over yet. They have the opportunity to do the right thing now."

Extracted from "Denver Art Museum cut ties with a disgraced donor—but critics say that's not enough" by David D'Arcy. Published in The Art Newspaper on 7 August 2023


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Possible cenotaph

Please note: a pre-need memorial was created in this cemetery before Mrs Bunker's death. Obviously she had not been interred as of that date. Further as of early 2024 it has not been determined with any certainty if her ashes were eventually interred here or if her name on her husband's marker remains a cenotaph.

Interestingly, above her name is an engraved representation of what appears to be the Hindu god Ganesh. Whether that is indicative of future disposition plans is unknown.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Emma Cadwalader Bunker died peacefully in her home in Denver Colorado on February 21st, at the age of 90.

She was born in Haverford, Pennsylvania on June 19, 1930.

She earned a B.A. from Bryn Mawr College and a M.A. from New York University Institute of Fine Arts.

She was a world renowned research scholar, archeologist, professor and author of Asian Art History, specializing in Eurasia, China and Cambodia.

She published over 50 works of scholarly research that expanded and deepened the world's knowledge of the ancient world.

She taught Art History at the Colorado College and mentored many aspiring scholars and artists.

She served on numerous boards and committees of art museums and cultural institutions including; Denver Art Museum, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Freer and Sackler Gallery, Center for Khmer Studies and Institute for the Study of the Ancient World.

She was preceded in death by her husband John B. Bunker and son, John C. Bunker.

She is survived by her children; Emmy, Jeanie, Harriet, and Lambert along with adopted Chinese children Dongning Wang and David Shu.

She is also survived by 19 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.

A memorial event to honor her life and contributions to the field of Art History will be held at a date to be announced in the future.

Information from Horan & McConaty Funeral Service and Cremation


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Emma Cadwalader Bunker (19 June 1930, Haverford, Pennsylvania - 21 Feb. 2021, Denver, Colorado, USA) was an American scholar, archeologist, professor and author specializing in Eurasia, China and Cambodia and Asian art, whose reputation was posthumously questioned for her association with art dealer Douglas Latchford, and her implication in looted Khmer artifacts illegal trading.

According to the laudatory obituary The Denver Post published after her death, "she taught Art History at the Colorado College and mentored many aspiring scholars and artists. She served on numerous boards and committees of art museums and cultural institutions including Denver Art Museum, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Freer and Sackler Gallery, Center for Khmer Studies and Institute for the Study of the Ancient World." One year later, however, that same newspaper ran a scathing reportaccusing her of using the Denver Art Museum -- where an entire gallery still beared her name -- as a "laundromat" for stolen Khmer sculptures. In a subsequent editorial, the newspaper's editorial board stated: "We are dismayed that Christoph Heinrich, the director of the Denver Art Museum, has not publicly responded to the scandal. We worry the institution is hoping the storm will blow over without having to address the fact that not only is the museum housing artwork that was likely smuggled into the U.S. by art dealer Douglas Latchford and then legitimized by The Scholar Emma C. Bunker, but the Denver Art Museum's complicity also helped give these two people legitimacy in the eyes of other buyers."

This is a rare instance of an internationally-recognized researcher being named as an active accomplice in art trafficking. Emma "Emmy" Bunker's husband, John Bunker, a wealthy businessman and the son of businessman and diplomat Ellsworth F. Bunker (1894-1984) -- appointed US Ambassador to South Vietnam by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967–1973 and a staunch supporter of US incursions into Laos and Cambodia -- was also a donator to the Denver Museum and liked to give lectures on "business ethics". John Bunker worked for National Sugar Refining, a company founded by his grand-father and headed by his father.

Among her more than 50 published works, she co-authored with Latchford Adoration and Glory: The Golden Age of Khmer Art (Art Media Resources, 2004, ISBN-13: ‎978-1588860705), a book often quoted by art historians.

Published in the Angkor Database | A Social Responsibility Project by Templation Angkor Resort, Siem Reap

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Denver Art Museum (DAM), eager to purge traces of institutional deference to colonialism, last year removed all references to Christopher Columbus from its collections.

This spring, after a scathing exposé in its local newspaper, the museum excised the name of its late benefactor Emma C. Bunker from its Arts of Asia gallery, for which Bunker's family had raised money. The museum also closed down an acquisition fund in her name. But Bunker would be a hard presence to expunge entirely in Denver, if the museum wanted to. Her memory is still a presence in other departments where she donated objects.

A veteran author on Asian art and a longtime donor to the museum, Bunker died in 2021 at the age of 90. Her father-in-law, Ellsworth Bunker, had been US ambassador to Vietnam from 1967 to 1973, when Richard Nixon ordered the bombing of Cambodia.

The reason the museum removed Emma Bunker's name was because of her work with Douglas Latchford (1931-2020), a dealer based in Bangkok and a notorious smuggler of art who sold sculptures looted from temples in Cambodia and Thailand. She co-wrote books with Latchford on Cambodian art that experts now say were filled with false provenances.

Bunker was associated with the museum for decades, during which time she brought works purchased from Latchford into the collection. Four of those works have been returned to Cambodia. There could be more. The US Department of Homeland Security is said to be investigating sculptures (including one now in Denver) from a site in Thailand near the Cambodian border.

The veteran writer was herself known to law enforcement. In a 2021 complaint in US District Court targeting Latchford, and detailing Bunker's own efforts to mislead investigators, federal prosecutors in New York called her "The Scholar" and, without naming her, identified her as a volunteer research consultant who "facilitated the sale and donation" of looted objects, "including by vouching for their provenance."

Bunker was also called "The Scholar" and identified by name in earlier US efforts to recover looted objects from Sotheby's in 2012, and from the dealer Nancy Wiener in 2011. In the latter case, Bunker provided a false provenance for a stolen bronze Buddha that Latchford sold to Wiener for $500,000.

A detailed series on her double life, published by Sam Tabachnik in the DenverPost last December, brought this long-running cultural saga to a wider audience. His tale of Emma Bunker's adventures with Latchford also brought the Denver Art Museum more attention than it has had since 2006, when it opened a steel building with shiny spikes designed by the architect Daniel Libeskind.

So has the museum now entered a post-Bunker era? Not if transparency is the standard. The institution turned down a request from The Art Newspaper to interview its director, but a press representative noted by email that "the museum's collecting policies are in alignment with AAM and AAMD best practices, and have evolved in lockstep with the museum field… The Denver Art Museum is committed to ethical collecting practices, and has a track record of working proactively and collaboratively with US and foreign governments to return artworks proven to belong to another nation or individual."

The museum also declined to talk to Tabachnik of the Denver Post over the year that he spent writing his series on Bunker and art smuggling. "There was no conversation. They never spoke to me. They never gave me an interview," he said. Nor would members of the Denver Art Museum board talk to Tabachnik.

The Cambodian government is also seeking a greater level of transparency from the Denver Art Museum, noted Bradley J. Gordon, a lawyer for the Kingdom of Cambodia. Speaking by phone from that country, he said that his client is eager to know about any other objects that left Cambodia and passed under Bunker's eye. Gordon says Bunker helped make the DAM "a laundromat for looted objects," which then passed into museums and private collections.

"For us, the disappointing situation at the moment is that Denver has still not handed over any provenance documents," he said. "For our research, it's important to have as many documents as we can."

"Any sort of documentation that they have relating to Cambodian artifacts is helpful to us. But they've been silent," Gordon noted. "We're not getting any information from them at all."

The museum countered in a statement that it has worked directly with the US Justice Department: "The museum has done so, including providing all records to the DOJ regarding the returned pieces."

For the Cambodians, that's not enough. "The DAM had stolen antiquities, and now they've been returned. They should be assisting us to better understand how those stolen antiquities got to the museum," said Gordon, "The story's not over yet. They have the opportunity to do the right thing now."

Extracted from "Denver Art Museum cut ties with a disgraced donor—but critics say that's not enough" by David D'Arcy. Published in The Art Newspaper on 7 August 2023


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  • Created by: Starfishin
  • Added: Apr 1, 2024
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/268975238/emma-bunker: accessed ), memorial page for Prof. Emma “Emmy” Cadwalader Bunker (19 Jun 1930–21 Feb 2021), Find a Grave Memorial ID 268975238, citing Wheatland Cemetery, Wheatland, Platte County, Wyoming, USA; Cremated; Maintained by Starfishin (contributor 48860385).