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Conservation skills / Chris Caple
Titre : Conservation skills : Judgement, method and decision making / Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Chris Caple, Auteur Editeur : London : Routledge Année de publication : 2000 Importance : xiv, 232 p. Présentation : ill. en noir et blanc, couv. ill. en coul. Format : 25 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-415-18880-7 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Antiquités -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé :
Conservation Skills provides an overview of the issues facing conservators of historic and artistic works. It not only describes the nature of conservation but also provides an ethical framework to which the conservation of objects can be related. Drawing on case studies of well-known objects such as the body of Lindow Man and the Statue of Liberty it addresses the following issues:
* perception, judgement and learning
* reasons for preserving the past
* the nature and history of conservation
* conservation ethics
* recording, investigating, cleaning objects
* stabilisation and restoration
* preventive conservation
* decision making and responsibilitiesConservation skills : Judgement, method and decision making / [texte imprimé] / Chris Caple, Auteur . - London : Routledge, 2000 . - xiv, 232 p. : ill. en noir et blanc, couv. ill. en coul. ; 25 cm.
ISBN : 978-0-415-18880-7
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Antiquités -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé :
Conservation Skills provides an overview of the issues facing conservators of historic and artistic works. It not only describes the nature of conservation but also provides an ethical framework to which the conservation of objects can be related. Drawing on case studies of well-known objects such as the body of Lindow Man and the Statue of Liberty it addresses the following issues:
* perception, judgement and learning
* reasons for preserving the past
* the nature and history of conservation
* conservation ethics
* recording, investigating, cleaning objects
* stabilisation and restoration
* preventive conservation
* decision making and responsibilitiesRéservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 22103 7.025 CAP Livre ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible SL 22775 7.025 CAP Livre ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible Vol.16 no2(2001) - 2001-05-01 - Destruction of World Heritage (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.16 no2(2001) - 2001-05-01 - Destruction of World Heritage Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2001 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Antiquités -- Conservation et restauration
Dommages de guerre
Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) -- Destruction et pillage
Monuments historiques -- Conservation et restauration -- Chine
Patrimoine culturel -- Chine -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Protection -- Coopération internationale
Patrimoine mondial culturel et naturel -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Photographie -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Statues colossales -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc. -- Bāmiyān (Afghanistan ; région)
Unesco. Convention concernant la protection du patrimoine mondial, culturel et naturel (1972)Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
The 1,500-year-old Colossal Buddha in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, as it appeared in 1963. It was the largest Buddhist sculpture in the world until it was destroyed in March 2001 by the Taliban regime. Photo: UNESCO/A. Lézine.
A Note From the Director
World Heritage: Shield or Target?
In the latter part of the 20th century, a new consensus on the importance of cultural heritage and the necessity to protect it—prompted in part by the two world wars, unprecedented in their devastation—led to the creation of international agreements designed to shield cultural heritage. But, as the destruction by the ruling Taliban of two giant fifth-century statues of Buddha in Afghanistan may demonstrate, the notion of world heritage, intended as a shield, may instead, at times, act as a target.
Cultural Heritage and International Law: A Conversation with Lyndel Prott
The director of UNESCO's Division of Cultural Heritage discusses the impact of a half-century of international law on protecting cultural heritage from damage or destruction amid armed conflict.
The China Principles
China's 3,000 years of unbroken civilization have created a vast range of immovable heritage. But rampant economic development and the rapidly expanding tourism industries pose threats to this heritage. In 1997 the Getty Conservation Institute and the State Administration for Cultural Heritage in China began a collaborative program with the Australian Heritage Commission to develop a set of principles to guide the conservation and management of cultural sites in China.
Values and Site Management: New Case Studies
Recently the heritage field has seen the introduction of values-based management, which takes a holistic view of a site. Its objective is always the conservation and communication of the values that make a particular site significant. In collaboration with the Australian Heritage Commission, English Heritage, Parks Canada, and the U.S. National Park Service, the GCI has initiated the development of a series of case studies that can serve as examples of how values-driven site management can be interpreted, employed, and evaluated.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v16n2.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.16 no2(2001) - 2001-05-01 - Destruction of World Heritage [texte imprimé] . - 2001.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Antiquités -- Conservation et restauration
Dommages de guerre
Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) -- Destruction et pillage
Monuments historiques -- Conservation et restauration -- Chine
Patrimoine culturel -- Chine -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Protection -- Coopération internationale
Patrimoine mondial culturel et naturel -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Photographie -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Statues colossales -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc. -- Bāmiyān (Afghanistan ; région)
Unesco. Convention concernant la protection du patrimoine mondial, culturel et naturel (1972)Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
The 1,500-year-old Colossal Buddha in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, as it appeared in 1963. It was the largest Buddhist sculpture in the world until it was destroyed in March 2001 by the Taliban regime. Photo: UNESCO/A. Lézine.
A Note From the Director
World Heritage: Shield or Target?
In the latter part of the 20th century, a new consensus on the importance of cultural heritage and the necessity to protect it—prompted in part by the two world wars, unprecedented in their devastation—led to the creation of international agreements designed to shield cultural heritage. But, as the destruction by the ruling Taliban of two giant fifth-century statues of Buddha in Afghanistan may demonstrate, the notion of world heritage, intended as a shield, may instead, at times, act as a target.
Cultural Heritage and International Law: A Conversation with Lyndel Prott
The director of UNESCO's Division of Cultural Heritage discusses the impact of a half-century of international law on protecting cultural heritage from damage or destruction amid armed conflict.
The China Principles
China's 3,000 years of unbroken civilization have created a vast range of immovable heritage. But rampant economic development and the rapidly expanding tourism industries pose threats to this heritage. In 1997 the Getty Conservation Institute and the State Administration for Cultural Heritage in China began a collaborative program with the Australian Heritage Commission to develop a set of principles to guide the conservation and management of cultural sites in China.
Values and Site Management: New Case Studies
Recently the heritage field has seen the introduction of values-based management, which takes a holistic view of a site. Its objective is always the conservation and communication of the values that make a particular site significant. In collaboration with the Australian Heritage Commission, English Heritage, Parks Canada, and the U.S. National Park Service, the GCI has initiated the development of a series of case studies that can serve as examples of how values-driven site management can be interpreted, employed, and evaluated.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v16n2.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23371 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.17 no2(2002) - 2002-05-01 - Sites with Painful Memories (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.17 no2(2002) - 2002-05-01 - Sites with Painful Memories Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2002 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Berlin (Allemagne) -- 1918-1945
Centres de détention -- Buenos Aires (Argentine) -- 20e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) -- Camps de concentration -- Conservation et restauration
Hiroshima (Japon) -- 1945 (Bombardement)
Histoire -- Aspect psychologique
Mémoire collective
Monuments commémoratifs -- Conservation et restauration
Niépce, Nicéphore (1765-1833) -- Premières œuvres -- Conservation et restauration
Parcs -- Hiroshima (Japon)
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Photographie -- France -- 19e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Auschwitz concentration camp, Oswiecim, Poland. During World War II, between 1 and 1.5 million people, the majority Jews, died at the Nazi-run Auschwitz and its extension, Auschwitz-Birkenau making the area one of the most important sites of memory for the Holocaust. In 1979, Auschwitz was designated a World Heritage Site. Photo: Giora Solar.
Sites of Hurtful Memory
Most would agree on the positive impact of cultural heritage preservation. However, there are those buildings and sites that may not be included in local history and topography because they convey memories of events that some prefer to forget. The issue of preserving sites of hurtful memory prompts three fundamental questions: Why should places be preserved if they offend the feelings of people who don't wish to be reminded? What kind of information do they convey that is not already available in other forms? And why and how should these places be dealt with as material heritage to be conserved?
From Memory into History: A Discussion about the Conservation of Places with Difficult Pasts
Preserving buildings and sites associated with painful memories or tragedies encompasses challenges that extend far beyond technical ones. Historian Conover Hunt, geographer Kenneth E. Foote, and filmmaker and preservation activist Felicia Lowe spoke with the GCI's Kristin Kelly and Jeffrey Levin regarding their perceptions of the complicated human concerns that this area of preservation inevitably involves, particularly with respect to sites in the United States.
Remembering and Imagining the Nuclear Annihilation in Hiroshima
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park is located in the heart of the city of Hiroshima, the most conspicuous reminder of the city's near-total annihilation by a U.S. atomic bomb on August 6, 1945. The 1948 Peace City Construction Law, enacted through a local referendum, enabled construction of the Peace Memorial Park. While the idea of Hiroshima as a symbol of world peace seems almost self-evident today, that Hiroshima should become a symbol of peace as the world's first site of atomic destruction was not so obvious immediately following the war. Citizens and critics publicly debated about what should be done with the incinerated space around ground zero.
AATA Goes Online
Conservation professionals have long recognized the important role played by the publication Art and Archaeology Technical Abstracts (AATA), not only in the development of conservation as a field of study but also in the overall effort to preserve the world’s material cultural heritage. Now this major reference work for the conservation field—managed and published by the GCI since 1983—is available for free to conservators around the globe. After almost 50 years, AATA has increased its accessibility to the conservation profession by becoming a free online service.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v17n2.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.17 no2(2002) - 2002-05-01 - Sites with Painful Memories [texte imprimé] . - 2002.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Berlin (Allemagne) -- 1918-1945
Centres de détention -- Buenos Aires (Argentine) -- 20e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) -- Camps de concentration -- Conservation et restauration
Hiroshima (Japon) -- 1945 (Bombardement)
Histoire -- Aspect psychologique
Mémoire collective
Monuments commémoratifs -- Conservation et restauration
Niépce, Nicéphore (1765-1833) -- Premières œuvres -- Conservation et restauration
Parcs -- Hiroshima (Japon)
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Photographie -- France -- 19e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Auschwitz concentration camp, Oswiecim, Poland. During World War II, between 1 and 1.5 million people, the majority Jews, died at the Nazi-run Auschwitz and its extension, Auschwitz-Birkenau making the area one of the most important sites of memory for the Holocaust. In 1979, Auschwitz was designated a World Heritage Site. Photo: Giora Solar.
Sites of Hurtful Memory
Most would agree on the positive impact of cultural heritage preservation. However, there are those buildings and sites that may not be included in local history and topography because they convey memories of events that some prefer to forget. The issue of preserving sites of hurtful memory prompts three fundamental questions: Why should places be preserved if they offend the feelings of people who don't wish to be reminded? What kind of information do they convey that is not already available in other forms? And why and how should these places be dealt with as material heritage to be conserved?
From Memory into History: A Discussion about the Conservation of Places with Difficult Pasts
Preserving buildings and sites associated with painful memories or tragedies encompasses challenges that extend far beyond technical ones. Historian Conover Hunt, geographer Kenneth E. Foote, and filmmaker and preservation activist Felicia Lowe spoke with the GCI's Kristin Kelly and Jeffrey Levin regarding their perceptions of the complicated human concerns that this area of preservation inevitably involves, particularly with respect to sites in the United States.
Remembering and Imagining the Nuclear Annihilation in Hiroshima
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park is located in the heart of the city of Hiroshima, the most conspicuous reminder of the city's near-total annihilation by a U.S. atomic bomb on August 6, 1945. The 1948 Peace City Construction Law, enacted through a local referendum, enabled construction of the Peace Memorial Park. While the idea of Hiroshima as a symbol of world peace seems almost self-evident today, that Hiroshima should become a symbol of peace as the world's first site of atomic destruction was not so obvious immediately following the war. Citizens and critics publicly debated about what should be done with the incinerated space around ground zero.
AATA Goes Online
Conservation professionals have long recognized the important role played by the publication Art and Archaeology Technical Abstracts (AATA), not only in the development of conservation as a field of study but also in the overall effort to preserve the world’s material cultural heritage. Now this major reference work for the conservation field—managed and published by the GCI since 1983—is available for free to conservators around the globe. After almost 50 years, AATA has increased its accessibility to the conservation profession by becoming a free online service.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v17n2.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23368 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.26 no2(2011:fall) - 2011-09-01 - Historic cities (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.26 no2(2011:fall) - 2011-09-01 - Historic cities Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2011 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Architecture -- 20e siècle -- Aspect historique
Architecture -- 21e siècle -- Aspect historique
Dommages de guerre
Séminaire international pour la réhabilitation des centres historiques des villes d'Amérique latine
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Protection
Sites historiques -- Protection -- Amérique latine
Urbanisation -- Histoire et critiqueIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Download PDF Version (6.5 MB, 32pp) (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
Aerial view of Amsterdam. In 1975, the city hosted the Council of Europe's Congress on the European Architectural Heritage, which produced the seminal policy document the Declaration of Amsterdam. It states that architectural conservation must become an integral part of urban and regional planning and should involve both local authorities and citizens. Photo: © Narvikk.
A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR
By Timothy P. Whalen
FEATURE ARTICLE
CONSERVATION PLANNING
The Road Less Traveled
By Francesco Siravo
SUSTAINABLE PRESERVATION OF THE URBAN HERITAGE
Lessons from Latin America
By Eduardo Rojas
CONTEMPORARY ARCHITECTURE IN HISTORIC URBAN ENVIRONMENTS
By Susan Macdonald
THE CONSERVATION OF HISTORIC CITIES AND URBAN SETTLEMENTS INITIATIVE
By Françoise Decamps
BALANCING CONTINUITY AND CHANGE
A Discussion about Urban Heritage Conservation
KEY RESOURCES
A list of key resources related to historic cities
GCI NEWS
Projects, events, and publications
China Principles Revision Workshop
MOSAIKON: Bulla Regia
Exhibit: From Start to Finish: De Wain Valentine's Gray Column
Modern Paints: CAPS Workshop
Scholar Applications Now Being Accepted
Graduate Intern Program
Upcoming Stone Conference
GCI Website Redesigned
Postdoctoral Fellows Arrive
2011 Stone Course Completed
GCI Staff Honored
US/ICOMOS Award for GCI
Visiting Scientist
Facing the Challenges of Panel Paintings Conservation: Trends, Treatments, and Training
From Start to Finish: De Wain Valentine's Gray Column
Jean Paul Riopelle[n° ou bulletin]Vol.26 no2(2011:fall) - 2011-09-01 - Historic cities [texte imprimé] . - 2011.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Architecture -- 20e siècle -- Aspect historique
Architecture -- 21e siècle -- Aspect historique
Dommages de guerre
Séminaire international pour la réhabilitation des centres historiques des villes d'Amérique latine
Sites historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Sites historiques -- Protection
Sites historiques -- Protection -- Amérique latine
Urbanisation -- Histoire et critiqueIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Download PDF Version (6.5 MB, 32pp) (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
Aerial view of Amsterdam. In 1975, the city hosted the Council of Europe's Congress on the European Architectural Heritage, which produced the seminal policy document the Declaration of Amsterdam. It states that architectural conservation must become an integral part of urban and regional planning and should involve both local authorities and citizens. Photo: © Narvikk.
A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR
By Timothy P. Whalen
FEATURE ARTICLE
CONSERVATION PLANNING
The Road Less Traveled
By Francesco Siravo
SUSTAINABLE PRESERVATION OF THE URBAN HERITAGE
Lessons from Latin America
By Eduardo Rojas
CONTEMPORARY ARCHITECTURE IN HISTORIC URBAN ENVIRONMENTS
By Susan Macdonald
THE CONSERVATION OF HISTORIC CITIES AND URBAN SETTLEMENTS INITIATIVE
By Françoise Decamps
BALANCING CONTINUITY AND CHANGE
A Discussion about Urban Heritage Conservation
KEY RESOURCES
A list of key resources related to historic cities
GCI NEWS
Projects, events, and publications
China Principles Revision Workshop
MOSAIKON: Bulla Regia
Exhibit: From Start to Finish: De Wain Valentine's Gray Column
Modern Paints: CAPS Workshop
Scholar Applications Now Being Accepted
Graduate Intern Program
Upcoming Stone Conference
GCI Website Redesigned
Postdoctoral Fellows Arrive
2011 Stone Course Completed
GCI Staff Honored
US/ICOMOS Award for GCI
Visiting Scientist
Facing the Challenges of Panel Paintings Conservation: Trends, Treatments, and Training
From Start to Finish: De Wain Valentine's Gray Column
Jean Paul RiopelleExemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23476 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt