The British Museum has become the latest cultural organisation to remove the Sackler family name from galleries and rooms they have supported.
George Osborne, the museum’s chair, announced the move on Twitter, saying: “We’re moving into a new era, presenting our great collection in different ways for new audiences.”
For decades the Sackler name had been associated with generous philanthropic donations to galleries and museums in the UK, Europe and the US. However, in recent years it has become toxic, with the family accused of making a profit from the US opioids crisis.
The Mortimer and Raymond branches of the Sackler family owned Purdue Pharma, the maker of the opioid painkiller OxyContin, which played a central role in what has been described as “the worst drug crisis in American history”.
Osborne said the museum had reached an agreement with the Raymond & Beverly Sackler Foundation to remove the Sackler name from all the galleries, rooms and endowments they had supported.
That includes the Raymond & Beverly Sackler Galleries of the Ancient Levant, which opened in 1998 and contain treasures from a region which corresponds with modern-day Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Jordan and western Syria.
It also had “Sackler rooms” available for commercial hire.
The campaign to disavow Sackler money has been spearheaded by the American art photographer and activist Nan Goldin, founder of the campaign group Pain (Prescription Addiction Intervention Now).
It has had a number of notable successes. Tate announced in 2019 that it would no longer take donations from the Sackler family. Last month it was reported that a plaque marking “the Sackler escalator” had been removed and a sign by the “Sackler lifts” had been taken down.
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