Roxanna Brown

Roxanna Maude Brown (2 May 1946 – 14 May 2008) was a prominent authority on Southeast Asian ceramics and director of the Bangkok University's Southeast Asian Ceramics Museum.[1][2]

Biography

Brown was born on a farm in Illinois, United States, and received a bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1968. She then became a journalist in South Vietnam, where her brother was serving in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. Interested in Asian art, she earned a master's degree from University of Singapore in 1973. She married and made her home in Bangkok, but she was run over and nearly killed in a traffic accident in the 1980s, which cost her a leg and seriously damaged her hearing. Nevertheless, in 2004, she received a Ph.D. from UCLA, working on the so-called Ming Gap, a 300-year interval when China blocked exports of ceramics. A production boom across Southeast Asia resulted. Brown's analysis of ceramics recovered from shipwrecks of the period "revolutionized the understanding of trade patterns in the region," according to colleagues cited in the Los Angeles Times.[3][4]

Arrest and death

While employed as a curator by Bangkok University, she became involved in the investigation of the smuggling of art objects from Thailand to the United States, assisting U.S. Government agents. However, she was herself implicated in the possible false authentication of stolen objects, based on material found during 2002 raids on Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Pacific Asia Museum in Pasadena, California, the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, California, and the Mingei Museum in San Diego. Brown was arrested on May 9, 2008 for alleged wire fraud when she arrived in the United States to deliver a lecture at an Asian art symposium at the University of Washington.[5] She was found dead in her cell at the Federal Detention Center in SeaTac on May 14.[6] The charge was dropped immediately after her death at the facility.[7]

The question of her actual involvement in the smuggling ring, the justification for her arrest, and her lack of medical attention after it, was the subject of a series of articles in the Los Angeles Times.[3][7][8]

Medical malpractice lawsuit

A medical malpractice lawsuit was filed by her son, Taweesin Ngerntongdee, after it was determined that Brown had died of peritonitis caused by a perforated ulcer.[5] The suit claimed she had suffered stomach problems in the detention center and that other inmates took her to a shower after a guard would not respond when she vomited something that "smelled like excrement." When Brown requested for help after the 10 p.m. lockdown on May 13, the guard told her she would have to wait until the morning for medical attention, according to the suit.[7] Detention center officials acknowledged there was no overnight medical staff on duty and took the case to mediation. The federal government settled the case for $880,000 in July 2009. Attorney Tim Ford stated part of the settlement stipulated that Brown's death would be investigated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons.[5]

Books

She was author of a number of academic books on Southeast Asian ceramics. Among the ones that established her early reputation are:

Among her later works are:

References

  1. "Questions Surround the Life and Death of an Antiquities Scholar" by Marcia Ann Overland, Chronicle of Higher Education, September 14, 2008. article
  2. Rooney, Dawn F. 2008. "Roxanna Brown (1946-2008)". Orientations. 39, no. 6: 108. OCLC
  3. 1 2 "Her career revived, scholar turns tipster" By Jason Felch, Los Angeles Times, September 12, 2008 pt.2
  4. Brown, Roxanna M. The Ming Gap and Shipwreck: Ceramics in Southeast Asia. Thesis (Ph. D.), University of California, Los Angeles, 2004. WorldCat
  5. 1 2 3 Mike Carter (July 7, 2009). "U.S. pays $880,000 in death of detained antiquities expert". The Seattle Times. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  6. "Inmate Locator: Roxanna Maude Brown". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  7. 1 2 3 Jason Felch (September 13, 2008). "Once an aid in a federal probe, antiquities scholar becomes a key target". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 17, 2008.
  8. "A scholar's journey leads through war, addiction and injury to arrest. By Jason Felch, Los Angeles Times, September 11, 2008 pt.1

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