The Library

Below is a list of books and journals that the Center for Art Law compiles in our quest to keep track of the art law publications and relevant scholarship.

If you are working on a new title, or your book is already out, and you would like to have it included in the Repository, please send us information about it (Title, Author/Editor(s), Date of Publication; ISBN, short summary, link to your publisher/distributor).

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680 results
CfAL The African Kingdom of Gold Britain and the Asante Treasure

The African Kingdom of Gold: Britain and the Asante Treasure

Barnaby Phillips
English
April 2026

“1874. Kumasi, the Asante capital, burns. British soldiers prowl the palace, looting as much gold as they can find, before razing it to the ground. In Britain the soldiers are feted as heroes. In 1896 they return, looting the palace a second time and carrying off more gold to London in triumph.

Royalty, aristocracy and London’s most illustrious museums divide the spoils. ‘It is scarcely possible to do justice to the variety and beauty of these specimens,’ The Times declares. There are golden masks, swooping eagles and an exquisitely wrought ram’s head. One mpomponsou – a ceremonial sword – comes wrapped in a leopard skin sheath.

Tracing the course of Britain’s wars with the Asante alongside the course of its plundered relics, Barnaby Phillips weaves a thrilling and poignant tale of imperial ambition and African resistance. Travelling from the Gold Coast to the museum galleries, officers’ mess rooms and aristocratic homes of Britain, The African Kingdom of Gold confronts us with urgent questions about the legacy of Empire and, in particular, how our museums should respond.”

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Barnaby Phillips, The African Kingdom of Gold: Britain and the Asante Treasure, April 2026
CfAL Have You Seen My Gods? poster

Have You Seen My Gods?

English
May 2025

“Sparked by his grandmother’s ailing health, a filmmaker returns to Kathmandu, a city of vanished gods and fading rituals. When the Laxmi Narayan statue, stolen in the 1980s, resurfaces in a U.S. museum, its repatriation led by local activists becomes a path he follows through ritual, shrines, and the diaspora. Featuring rare archival footage of Kathmandu from the 1950s and a quiet investigative thread that uncovers the identity of the art collector who acquired the statue, the film becomes a lyrical elegy and a quiet act of resistance against colonial theft and cultural erasure.”

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Have You Seen My Gods?, May 2025
CfAL Stolen Legacies The Fight for Nazi Looted Art Cover

Stolen Legacies: The Fight for Nazi-Looted Art

Adena Bernstein
English
March 2026

“In Stolen Legacies, prosecutor, author, and granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, Adena J. Bernstein, explores the global failure to return Nazi-looted art. As she travels through thirteen countries, she shows how forced sales became legal transactions, how survivors were asked to prove the impossible, and how delays have replaced justice.

Blending investigative history, legal analysis, and personal storytelling, Bernstein exposes a harsh truth: when possession is protected, accountability disappears.

The book concludes by connecting art back to its human roots, with contemporary artists reflecting on why creation still matters after cultural devastation.”

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Adena Bernstein, Stolen Legacies: The Fight for Nazi-Looted Art, March 2026
CfAl The Duke poster

The Duke

English
September 2020

In 1961, Kempton Bunton, a 60 year old taxi driver, steals Goya’s portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London.”

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The Duke, September 2020
CfAL The Oligarch and the Art Dealer poster

The Oligarch and the Art Dealer

English
January 2026

“Yves Bouvier brokers masterpieces, from da Vinci to Rothko, into the private collection of Dmitry Rybolovlev until Bouvier is accused of a billion-dollar betrayal. Rising ambitions, frayed relationships, and bruised egos fuel a decade-long all-out war between the Swiss art dealer and the elusive Russian oligarch. Available in person only.”

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The Oligarch and the Art Dealer, January 2026