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Vol.15 no1(2000) - 2000-01-01 - Conservation at the Millennium II (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.15 no1(2000) - 2000-01-01 - Conservation at the Millennium II Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2000 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Antiquités -- Vol (droit) -- 21e siècle
Archéologie -- Bases de données
Archéologie -- Droit
Conservation et restauration -- Bases de données
Conservation et restauration -- Étude et enseignement
Conservation et restauration -- Philosophie
Restaurateurs d'art -- Déontologie
Technologie de l'information
Tourisme culturelMots-clés : CoOL Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Conservation at the New Century
Timothy P. Whalen
Ethics and Policy in Conservation
Frank Matero
The Dilemma of Conservation Education
Sharon Cather
Getting Caught Up: Information Technology and Conservation
Walter Henry
Conserving the In Situ Archaeological Record
William D. Lipe
Looting and Theft of Cultural Property: Are We Making Progress?
Karen D. Vitelli
Cultural Tourism
Dean MacCannell
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, courses, publications, and staff
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v15n1.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.15 no1(2000) - 2000-01-01 - Conservation at the Millennium II [texte imprimé] . - 2000.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Antiquités -- Vol (droit) -- 21e siècle
Archéologie -- Bases de données
Archéologie -- Droit
Conservation et restauration -- Bases de données
Conservation et restauration -- Étude et enseignement
Conservation et restauration -- Philosophie
Restaurateurs d'art -- Déontologie
Technologie de l'information
Tourisme culturelMots-clés : CoOL Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Conservation at the New Century
Timothy P. Whalen
Ethics and Policy in Conservation
Frank Matero
The Dilemma of Conservation Education
Sharon Cather
Getting Caught Up: Information Technology and Conservation
Walter Henry
Conserving the In Situ Archaeological Record
William D. Lipe
Looting and Theft of Cultural Property: Are We Making Progress?
Karen D. Vitelli
Cultural Tourism
Dean MacCannell
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, courses, publications, and staff
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v15n1.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23375 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.15 no2(2000) - 2000-05-01 - Preventive Conservation (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.15 no2(2000) - 2000-05-01 - Preventive Conservation Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2000 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Archéologie préventive
Conservation et restauration -- Aspect environnemental
Conservation et restauration -- Philosophie
Getty center (Los Angeles, Calif.) -- Recherche
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Pratique
Patrimoine culturel -- Protection -- Coopération internationale
PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge (cover)
Historic Portuguese ceramic tiles on walls at the Museum of Sacred Art in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. Damage to the tiles is the result of salt coming up from groundwater through the building structure and out between seams in the tiles. Loss to the tile glazing is caused by salt crystallization pressures. At the Museum of Sacred Art, environmental management strategies were developed that integrated the conservation needs of both the historic structure and the collection. Photo: James Druzik.
Managing the Environment: An Update on Preventive Conservation
Recognition of the importance of preventive conservation is growing in virtually every region of the globe. Defined as the management of the environmental conditions under which collections are housed and used, preventive conservation has advanced in both research and application. The older model of conservation—in which the conservator is perceived as the primary, if not the sole, guardian of a collection--is gradually being replaced by long-term preventive conservation strategies in which conservators share responsibility with others.
Preventive Conservation: A Discussion
Catherine Antomarchi of the International Center for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property in Rome, Colin Pearson of the Cultural Heritage Research Center at the University of Canberra in Australia, and Luiz Souza of the Centro de Conservação e Restauração de Bens Culturais Móveis in Brazil, sat down with the GCI’s Kathleen Dardes and Jeffrey Levin to discuss efforts to promote preventive conservation.
Funding Conservation: The Getty Grant Program at Work
The Grant Program, the philanthropic arm of the Getty Trust, provides financial support for projects in conservation. While grants are awarded for different types of conservation activities, a unifying element is the inclusion of educational opportunities and the work's potential to make a significant contribution to the field. Recently funded projects include medieval villages in the Caucasus Mountains of Georgia, the last remaining cathedral in Ghana made of earthen materials, internships for Latin American conservators, and Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater.
Values and Heritage Conservation
Sites, objects, and buildings acquire significance as cultural heritage because of the values ascribed to them—be they historical, aesthetic, social, or others. To ensure that conservation initiatives consider social as well as physical conditions, values need to be analyzed through a participatory process that promotes sustainable conservation by engaging communities in the preservation of their own heritage.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications, and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, courses, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v15n2.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.15 no2(2000) - 2000-05-01 - Preventive Conservation [texte imprimé] . - 2000.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Archéologie préventive
Conservation et restauration -- Aspect environnemental
Conservation et restauration -- Philosophie
Getty center (Los Angeles, Calif.) -- Recherche
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Pratique
Patrimoine culturel -- Protection -- Coopération internationale
PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge (cover)
Historic Portuguese ceramic tiles on walls at the Museum of Sacred Art in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. Damage to the tiles is the result of salt coming up from groundwater through the building structure and out between seams in the tiles. Loss to the tile glazing is caused by salt crystallization pressures. At the Museum of Sacred Art, environmental management strategies were developed that integrated the conservation needs of both the historic structure and the collection. Photo: James Druzik.
Managing the Environment: An Update on Preventive Conservation
Recognition of the importance of preventive conservation is growing in virtually every region of the globe. Defined as the management of the environmental conditions under which collections are housed and used, preventive conservation has advanced in both research and application. The older model of conservation—in which the conservator is perceived as the primary, if not the sole, guardian of a collection--is gradually being replaced by long-term preventive conservation strategies in which conservators share responsibility with others.
Preventive Conservation: A Discussion
Catherine Antomarchi of the International Center for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property in Rome, Colin Pearson of the Cultural Heritage Research Center at the University of Canberra in Australia, and Luiz Souza of the Centro de Conservação e Restauração de Bens Culturais Móveis in Brazil, sat down with the GCI’s Kathleen Dardes and Jeffrey Levin to discuss efforts to promote preventive conservation.
Funding Conservation: The Getty Grant Program at Work
The Grant Program, the philanthropic arm of the Getty Trust, provides financial support for projects in conservation. While grants are awarded for different types of conservation activities, a unifying element is the inclusion of educational opportunities and the work's potential to make a significant contribution to the field. Recently funded projects include medieval villages in the Caucasus Mountains of Georgia, the last remaining cathedral in Ghana made of earthen materials, internships for Latin American conservators, and Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater.
Values and Heritage Conservation
Sites, objects, and buildings acquire significance as cultural heritage because of the values ascribed to them—be they historical, aesthetic, social, or others. To ensure that conservation initiatives consider social as well as physical conditions, values need to be analyzed through a participatory process that promotes sustainable conservation by engaging communities in the preservation of their own heritage.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications, and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, courses, publications, and staff.
The GCI Newsletter Staff BoxEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v15n2.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23374 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.15 no3(2000) - 2000-09-01 - Surface Cleaning & Conservation (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.15 no3(2000) - 2000-09-01 - Surface Cleaning & Conservation Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2000 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Art -- Conservation et restauration
Art -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Hiéroglyphes -- Copán (Honduras ; site archéologique)
Monuments historiques -- Nettoyage
Mosaïque -- Prague (République tchèque) -- 14e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Saint-Pétersbourg (Russie)
Peinture -- Nettoyage
Prague (République tchèque) -- Cathédrale Saint-Guy -- Conservation et restauration
Sculpture -- NettoyageIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Detail of James Ensor's painting Christ's Entry into Brussels (1889) being cleaned in 1988 with the gels cleaning process. The GCI is currently conducting a research project to answer questions regarding the long-term effect of cleaning with the gels systems. Photo: Mark Leonard.
A Note from the Director
Surface Cleaning and Conservation
The cleaning of works of art and historic monuments—as an evolving idea and in practice—has had a long history. Since ancient times, the condition of cleanliness has been understood as a symbol of purity and integrity. In later periods, when decay and patina were appreciated as testimony of genuine origin and true age, cleaning was less favored by many. Today, with cooperation between conservators, art historians, and scientists, a balanced understanding of the problems of cleaning seems to have been reached, one that relies on a common agreement of the historical uniqueness of every artistic or cultural relic.
Finding a Certain Balance: A Discussion about Surface Cleaning
Three conservators that head up Getty Museum conservation departments—Brian Considine of decorative arts and sculpture, Mark Leonard of paintings, and Jerry Podany of antiquities—discuss some of the philosophical and technical issues related to the surface cleaning of objects in museum collections.
The Gels Cleaning Research Project
In the early 1980s, Richard Wolbers of the University of Delaware introduced gels cleaning systems to the conservation community. Because of important advantages, these cleaning systems are now widely used in conservation lab practice. The GCI—in collaboration with colleagues at the Winterthur Museum, Gardens, and Library, the Winterthur—University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation, the Chemistry Department of California State University, Northridge, and the Getty Museum—has been carrying out in-depth research on the gels cleaning systems and their long-term effects on painted surfaces.
Preservation in St. Petersburg
As St. Petersburg prepares for its 300th birthday in 2003, the St. Petersburg International Center for Preservation is assuming a vital role as the only noncommercial organization devoted exclusively to cultural heritage preservation in this World Heritage City. The mission of the Center—an independent organization backed by a coalition of institutions in St. Petersburg, the United States, and Europe—is to encourage and facilitate modern conservation strategies through professional programs in education and training, information services, collaborative scientific research, and heritage advocacy.
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/v15n3.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.15 no3(2000) - 2000-09-01 - Surface Cleaning & Conservation [texte imprimé] . - 2000.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Art -- Conservation et restauration
Art -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Hiéroglyphes -- Copán (Honduras ; site archéologique)
Monuments historiques -- Nettoyage
Mosaïque -- Prague (République tchèque) -- 14e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Saint-Pétersbourg (Russie)
Peinture -- Nettoyage
Prague (République tchèque) -- Cathédrale Saint-Guy -- Conservation et restauration
Sculpture -- NettoyageIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Detail of James Ensor's painting Christ's Entry into Brussels (1889) being cleaned in 1988 with the gels cleaning process. The GCI is currently conducting a research project to answer questions regarding the long-term effect of cleaning with the gels systems. Photo: Mark Leonard.
A Note from the Director
Surface Cleaning and Conservation
The cleaning of works of art and historic monuments—as an evolving idea and in practice—has had a long history. Since ancient times, the condition of cleanliness has been understood as a symbol of purity and integrity. In later periods, when decay and patina were appreciated as testimony of genuine origin and true age, cleaning was less favored by many. Today, with cooperation between conservators, art historians, and scientists, a balanced understanding of the problems of cleaning seems to have been reached, one that relies on a common agreement of the historical uniqueness of every artistic or cultural relic.
Finding a Certain Balance: A Discussion about Surface Cleaning
Three conservators that head up Getty Museum conservation departments—Brian Considine of decorative arts and sculpture, Mark Leonard of paintings, and Jerry Podany of antiquities—discuss some of the philosophical and technical issues related to the surface cleaning of objects in museum collections.
The Gels Cleaning Research Project
In the early 1980s, Richard Wolbers of the University of Delaware introduced gels cleaning systems to the conservation community. Because of important advantages, these cleaning systems are now widely used in conservation lab practice. The GCI—in collaboration with colleagues at the Winterthur Museum, Gardens, and Library, the Winterthur—University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation, the Chemistry Department of California State University, Northridge, and the Getty Museum—has been carrying out in-depth research on the gels cleaning systems and their long-term effects on painted surfaces.
Preservation in St. Petersburg
As St. Petersburg prepares for its 300th birthday in 2003, the St. Petersburg International Center for Preservation is assuming a vital role as the only noncommercial organization devoted exclusively to cultural heritage preservation in this World Heritage City. The mission of the Center—an independent organization backed by a coalition of institutions in St. Petersburg, the United States, and Europe—is to encourage and facilitate modern conservation strategies through professional programs in education and training, information services, collaborative scientific research, and heritage advocacy.
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/v15n3.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23373 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.16 no1(2001) - 2001-01-01 - Conservation of Earthen Architecture (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 no1(2001) - 2001-01-01 - Conservation of Earthen Architecture Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2001 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Constructions en terre -- Conservation et retauration
Constructions en terre -- El Salvador -- Conservation et restauration
Fouilles archéologiques -- El Salvador
Peinture et décoration murales -- Dunhuang (Chine) -- Grottes de Mogao -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Detail of the deteriorating earthen walls of the Telouet Casbah, southeast of Marrakesh in Morocco. Photo: Eric Blanc.
The Conservation of Earthen Architecture
The tradition of building with earth is evidenced the world over. Earthen structures range from simple forms to vast, monumental sites of high complexity. Indeed, earthen sites make up 10 percent of the UNESCO World Heritage List. But many significant sites are threatened. While new earthen construction—abetted by the environmental movement—has seen increasing standardization and industrialization in recent decades, the conservation of earthen architecture is still coming into its own as a discipline.
Conservation and Continuity of Tradition: A Discussion about Earthen Architecture
Three international specialists in the conservation of earthen architecture discuss the historical significance, the preservation challenge, and the future of this substantial—but often overlooked—part of the world's cultural heritage.
Project Terra
Since the late 1980s, the International Centre for Earth Construction—School of Architecture of Grenoble, the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property, and the Getty Conservation Institute have collaborated on issues related to earthen architecture conservation. In 1997 they established Project Terra, with the mission of fostering the development of earthen architecture conservation as a science, a field of study, a professional practice, and a social endeavor.
Joya de Cerén: Conservation and Management Planning for an Earthen Archaeological Site
The World Heritage Site of Joya de Cerén in El Salvador is an exceptional window into the past. Buried by a volcanic eruption in the sixth century, the earthen architectural remains and the artifacts of this Classic Period village have been remarkably preserved. Nevertheless, the exposed excavated earthen structures present a conservation challenge. In 1998, as part of its Maya Initiative, the GCI, working with Salvadoran cultural authorities, began a collaborative project at Joya de Cerén to develop a conservation and management plan for the site.
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/v16n1.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.16 no1(2001) - 2001-01-01 - Conservation of Earthen Architecture [texte imprimé] . - 2001.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Constructions en terre -- Conservation et retauration
Constructions en terre -- El Salvador -- Conservation et restauration
Fouilles archéologiques -- El Salvador
Peinture et décoration murales -- Dunhuang (Chine) -- Grottes de Mogao -- Conservation et restaurationIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu :
Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Enlarge
Detail of the deteriorating earthen walls of the Telouet Casbah, southeast of Marrakesh in Morocco. Photo: Eric Blanc.
The Conservation of Earthen Architecture
The tradition of building with earth is evidenced the world over. Earthen structures range from simple forms to vast, monumental sites of high complexity. Indeed, earthen sites make up 10 percent of the UNESCO World Heritage List. But many significant sites are threatened. While new earthen construction—abetted by the environmental movement—has seen increasing standardization and industrialization in recent decades, the conservation of earthen architecture is still coming into its own as a discipline.
Conservation and Continuity of Tradition: A Discussion about Earthen Architecture
Three international specialists in the conservation of earthen architecture discuss the historical significance, the preservation challenge, and the future of this substantial—but often overlooked—part of the world's cultural heritage.
Project Terra
Since the late 1980s, the International Centre for Earth Construction—School of Architecture of Grenoble, the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property, and the Getty Conservation Institute have collaborated on issues related to earthen architecture conservation. In 1997 they established Project Terra, with the mission of fostering the development of earthen architecture conservation as a science, a field of study, a professional practice, and a social endeavor.
Joya de Cerén: Conservation and Management Planning for an Earthen Archaeological Site
The World Heritage Site of Joya de Cerén in El Salvador is an exceptional window into the past. Buried by a volcanic eruption in the sixth century, the earthen architectural remains and the artifacts of this Classic Period village have been remarkably preserved. Nevertheless, the exposed excavated earthen structures present a conservation challenge. In 1998, as part of its Maya Initiative, the GCI, working with Salvadoran cultural authorities, began a collaborative project at Joya de Cerén to develop a conservation and management plan for the site.
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/v16n1.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23372 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt 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.16 no3(2001) - 2001-09-01 - Site Management (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.17 no1(2002) - 2002-01-01 - Photographic Conservation (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.17 no2(2002) - 2002-05-01 - Sites with Painful Memories (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.17 no3(2002) - 2002-09-01 - Modern Science & Contemporary Paintings (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.18 no1(2003) - 2003-01-01 - Integrating Conservation & Archaeology (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.18 no2(2003) - 2003-05-01 - Mural Conservation (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.18 no3(2003) - 2003-09-01 - Conservation Education (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.19 no1(2004) - 2004-01-01 - Implementing Preventive Conservation (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.19 no2(2004) - 2004-05-01 - Heritage Charters and Conventions (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
PermalinkVol.19 no3(2004) - 2004-09-01 - Partnership : a joint with UNESCO (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
Permalink