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Cultural Heritage
3 March
- Communnity-based intangible cultural heritage inventorying
capacity-building workshop. Maseru (United Kingdom)
The Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural
Heritage aims at safeguarding living heritage. Unlike tangible
heritage that is conventionally managed by heritage experts (e.g.,
architects, archaeologists, and conservators), intangible cultural
heritage requires a participatory approach to safeguarding involving
various stakeholders, most important of whom are the communities
concerned. Among the obligations of States Parties to the Convention,
the one that is expressed in the strongest language is the duty
to elaborate one or more inventories of the intangible heritage
present on their territories with the participation of the communities
concerned. An effective strategy to ensure the active participation
of communities in the implementation of the Convention is to have
them inventory their own heritage.
More information:
http://www.unesco.org/culture/ich/index.php?lg=EN&meeting_id=00126#meet_00126
- “Recording and safeguarding the intangible”:
third RMSU training module. Palermo, Italy
Oral history, transmission of traditional know-how: what exactly
intangible heritage is about and how to identify it properly?
Addressed to EH 4 projects partners working on intangible heritage,
participants will be trained to tools and methods for the good
management and valorisation of this huge Mediterranean value.
More information:
http://www.euromedheritage.net/intern.cfm?menuID=9&submenuID=7&idnews=300
- Heritage in Haiti: Assessing the Damage
While saving lives and providing humanitarian relief remains the
absolute priority of the international community in helping Haiti
deal with the devastation of the earthquake, information is beginning
to arrive about the state of the country’s tangible and
intangible cultural heritage. The National History Park –
Citadel, Sans Souci, Ramiers, an early 19th century complex in
the north of the country, which includes the ruins of a royal
palace and the largest fortress of the western hemisphere, appears
to have been largely spared by the quake.
More information: http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_ID=40315&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
- Symbolic use of marine shells and mineral pigments by
Iberian Neandertals
Two sites of the Neandertal-associated Middle Paleolithic of Iberia,
dated to as early as approximately 50,000 years ago, yielded perforated
and pigment-stained marine shells. At Cueva de los Aviones, three
umbo-perforated valves of Acanthocardia and Glycymeris were found
alongside lumps of yellow and red colorants, and residues preserved
inside a Spondylus shell consist of a red lepidocrocite base mixed
with ground, dark red-to-black fragments of hematite and pyrite.
A perforated Pecten shell, painted on its external, white side
with an orange mix of goethite and hematite, was abandoned after
breakage at Cueva Antón, 60 km inland. Comparable early
modern human-associated material from Africa and the Near East
is widely accepted as evidence for body ornamentation, implying
behavioral modernity. The Iberian finds show that European Neandertals
were no different from coeval Africans in this regard, countering
genetic/cognitive explanations for the emergence of symbolism
and strengthening demographic/social ones.
More information:
http://www.pnas.org/content/107/3/1023
- Euromed Heritage targets students to raise awareness
about heritage protection - Elaich dissemination meeting. Athens
- February 2010
The EU-funded Euromed Heritage IV, through one of its 12 projects
Elaich, is seeking to increase awareness of cultural heritage
and its conservation by preparing an educational tool addressed
at high school students, which will be evaluated and discussed
during a workshop it is holding in the Greek capital Athens. An
announcement said the workshop, to take place between 22 and 25
February 2010, would evaluate the conclusions of the first experimental
course started in November 2009 and currently under way in Greece,
and discuss recommendations for further developments and a better
sustainability of the action. The introduction of a course for
cultural heritage protection for high-school students will also
be examined. Participants include project partners, teachers,
students and a number of additional stakeholders.
More information: http://www.enpi-info.eu/mainmed.php?id_type=1&id=20780&lang_id=450
- Evening of the Heritage News Reporters Association (HNA)
in the Grand Rex. Paris (France) March 23rd 2010
On the occasion of its 2010 Yearbook publication, the HNA has
the pleasure to invite you to a co-existence and heritage evening
at the Grand Rex next 23rd March. The last HNA members will be
here.
More information in French:
http://universityandheritage.net/Grand_Rex.pdf
2 March
- An article devoted to the research group Achac in “Libération”
In February 26th 2010, the Newspaper Libération dedicates
its rubric “Great angle” to the work carried out by
the research group Achac on immigration from the Southern areas
in France. (article.pdf)
This group of researchers has been working on the representations
and colonial and post-colonial imagery since 1989, as well as
on the migrations from the Southern areas in France.
Created around a web of competences, in association with different
institutions, research groups or universities, its underlying
purpose is to promote research activities (with the creation of
an iconographic collection), editing activities (books, articles,
catalogues, pedagogical brochures, associations...), research
manifestations (colloquia, conferences, seminars, forums...) or
activities open to public opinion (pedagogical programmes, exhibitions,
documentaries...)
More information in French:
http://www.achac.com/
- UNESCO Director General expresses concern about Tomb
of the Patriarchs and Rachel’s Tomb (Palestine)
The Director-General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, expressed
her concern today at the announcement by the Israeli Prime Minister
that two sites located in the occupied Palestinian territory,
the Tomb of the Patriarchs and Rachel’s Tomb, are to be
included in a National Heritage Programme. She also expressed
concern at the resulting escalation of tension in the area. Endorsing
the statement by Robert H. Serry, United Nations Special Coordinator
for the Middle East Peace Process, that these sites are “of
historical and religious significance not only to Judaism but
also to Islam, and to Christianity as well”, the Director-General
reiterated UNESCO’s long-standing conviction that cultural
heritage should serve as a means for dialogue.
More information:
http://www.unesco.org/new/en/media-services/single-view/news/unesco_director_general_expresses_concern_about_
tomb_of_the_patriarchs_and_rachels_tomb/browse/1/back/18276/
1 March
- Heritage Study Pilot Project (Australia)
Heritage Victoria has launched a landmark project designed to
explore the story of migration to Victoria from the 1940s to the
present day, and to identify examples of places and objects that
help tell this important story. In the past, these places have
often not been recognised. With the initial stages of the project
completed, Heritage Victoria is launching a pilot project to test
ways of working with migrant communities (and their organisations)
so that places of importance to the story of migration can be
identified. The pilot project will be undertaken by consultants
Context Pty Ltd.
More information:
http://heritage.vic.gov.au/admin/file/content2/c7/Feb_2010_Inherit.pdf
- A magnificent Minton peacock, a stone miner’s
cottage, a Moderne commercial building and a suburban cricket
ground have been added to the Victorian Heritage Register
A magnificent Minton peacock which survived one of Australia’s
worst shipwrecks, a stone miner’s cottage, a Moderne commercial
building and a suburban cricket ground have been added to the
Victorian Heritage Register this month.
More information: http://heritage.vic.gov.au/admin/file/content2/c7/Feb_2010_Inherit.pdf
26 February
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Launching of the 2010 Season for Archaeological Excavation
sites for volunteers of the French Ministry of Culture and Communication
The 2010 Season for Archaeological Excavation sites for volunteers
of the Ministry of Culture and Communication begins today. Here
you can find the first sites: http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/fouilles/pdf/chantier2010.pdf
(sites for the Alsatian region). For the following sites, you
can regularly visit the following address:
http://www.culture.gouv.fr/fouilles
as those sites which have been previously validated by the different
Committees are being gradually uploaded. You can find more information
in French in the following address below:
More information in French:
http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/fouilles/
- Europa Nostra Council supports Italia Nostra's appeal
for the legal protection of the Historic Town Centre of l'Alquila
(Italy)
The Council of Europa Nostra unanimously decided during its bi-annual
meeting in The Hague (The Netherlands) on 12 February 2010, to
endorse the following appeal to the Italian Government by its
founding Member Organisation Italia Nostra. Italia Nostra urgently
calls for a coherent, consistent and legally binding conservation
plan for the Historic Town Centre of L’ Aquila and its surrounding
small historic villages in the Abruzzo Region of Italy, as they
are rebuilt after the devastating earthquake of 6 April 2009.
Italia Nostra emphasises the need for the entire area to be declared
a historic monument and cultural landscape of extraordinary significance,
and insist that its protection be guaranteed by the State.
More information:
http://www.europanostra.org/news/89/
- Planned Conservation for 20th-century Architectural
Heritage. Como, Italy 2009
Sponsored by the Comune di Como, the conference was organized
by DOCOMOMO Italia, Politecnico di Milano and the UNESCO Chair
on preventive conservation, monitoring and maintenance of monuments
and sites, in collaboration with Fondazione Cariplo. The delegation
from Belgium included Anouk Stulens (Monumentenwacht Vlaanderen),
Prof. Koen Van Balen, Prof. Luc Verpoest, PhD students Willemijne
Linssen, Nea Cebron Lipovec and Hsienyang Tseng, and visiting
scholar Meiping Wu (RLICC).
More information: http://universidadypatrimonio.net/doc/RLICC_Tseng.pdf
- Repair Mortars for Historic Masonry. Stockholm, Sweden
2009
The network of building materials research laboratories consists
of different technical committees. One of them is the RILEM Technical
Committee “Repair Mortars for Historic Masonry”. At
the meeting held in Stockholm on 15-16 October 2009, progress
of the editing of guiding documents has been discussed. Their
subject is the design of mortar for repair of masonry structures
based on technical and scientific input from experts of many Countries
(USA, Canada, The Netherlands, Germany, UK, Finland, Sweden, Belgium,
Italy, Greece, Turkey, France, Czech Republic, etc.). At the meeting
Dr. Ozlem Cizer, post-doctoral researcher at K.U. Leuven, briefly
presented the outcome of her previous PhD research on the competition
between hydration and carbonation on lime based mortars. Also
Dr. Roel Hendrickx presented his PhD research at the same university
on the adequate measuring of the workability of mortar. Both constitute
a significant scientific contribution to the documents the committee
is preparing and will contribute to the creation of a sound basis
for the use of lime based mortar in conservation.
More information: http://universidadypatrimonio.net/doc/RLICC_Balen.pdf
- Networking of Conservation Professionals in the Arab
Region. Sharjah, United Arab Emirates 2009
During 16-18 November 2009 Prof. Koen Van Balen participated in
the “Workshop on networking of conservation professionals
in the Arab region: the role of higher education” at University
of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (UAE). The workshop
was organized within the ATHAR program of ICCROM. The workshop
aimed at understanding the training and education activities in
the Arab Region. The RLICC director presented the set-up and the
results of the Master in Conservation of Monuments and Sites programme
at K.U. Leuven, and the objectives and activities of the UNESCO
Chair on preventive conservation, monitoring and maintenance of
monuments and sites. In relation to the latter first contacts
were made to identify the training needs that would help to improve
the periodic reporting and monitoring of World Heritage Sites.
More information: http://universidadypatrimonio.net/doc/RLICC_Balen.pdf
- Preventive Conservation: Practice in the Field of Built
Heritage. Fribourg, Switzerland 2009
The conference “Preventive conservation: practice in
the field of built heritage” was held on 3-4 September
2009 at Fr ibourg, Switzerland. It was the very topic of the 2009
annual congress and annual general meeting of the Swiss Association
of Conservator-Restorers (SCR/SKR). Preventive conservation is
universally recognized and generally practiced in the museum context,
but in the last 50 years, the importance of regular inspection
and maintenance of historic buildings has been emphasized, and
recently, the same principles have been reiterated by the Swiss
Commission of Historic Monuments.
More information:
http://universidadypatrimonio.net/doc/RLICC_Congress.pdf
- MDDS: Monument Damage Diagnostic System - Master thesis
by Manuela CORE (Architect, Italy)
The development of an expert system as a survey and damage
interpretation tool for the stability of masonry structures.
The aim of this master thesis is to contribute to the development
of the new MDDS component, through the analysis of one of the
main structural damage manifestations, the crack pattern.
More information:
http://universidadypatrimonio.net/doc/RLICC_Manuela.pdf
- Loch Ard Peacock has been included in the Victorian
Heritage Register (Australia)
A grand statue of a peacock washed ashore after one of Victoria’s
most infamous shipwrecks has been included in the Victorian Heritage
Register. The Loch Ard Peacock was shipped to Australia in 1878,
aboard the iron clipper the Loch Ard. On the night of 31 May 1878,
the Loch Ard was shipwrecked along the south-west coast of Victoria,
near Warrnambool. It was one of Victoria’s and Australia’s
worst shipwreck tragedies with the loss of 52 lives. The Loch
Ard Peacock, as it became known after the shipwreck, was originally
destined for Melbourne as one of the key exhibits for the Melbourne
International Exhibition in 1880-1881, marking the opening of
the Royal Exhibition Building.
More information:
http://vhd.heritage.vic.gov.au/vhd/heritagevic#detail_places;113397
- GHF group to restore historic Intramuros. Manila (Philippines)
The Department of Tourism (DOT) received a pledge of support for
the preservation of historic Intramuros from the Global Heritage
Fund (GHF) Mission. The Global Heritage Fund Mission is a distinguished
non-profit conservation group that provides assistance to developing
countries in preserving their cultural heritage sites. Tourism
Secretary Joseph Ace Durano and GHF International Conservation
Director John Hurd signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
on Friday at the Ilustrados Restaurant in Intramuros to formally
commence the working partnership.
More information: http://globalheritagefund.org/index.php/in_the_news/
press_coverage/ghf_group_to_restore_historic_intramuros
- Colombia's 'Lost City' to get $580,000 investment
The Colombian Institute of Anthropology and the Global Heritage
Fund announced on Tuesday that they will invest $580,000 in the
maintenance of the Ciudad Perdida, or Lost City. The Lost City
is in Teyuna Archeological Park, located on Colombia’s Sierra
Nevada mountain range. Discovered in 1972, the ruins are thought
to date from 800 A.D. The site has only recently been open to
visitors, as the area was previously occupied by guerrilla forces.
El Informador explains that the development of the park, recognized
as one of the most historically important in the country, will
be funded by investments of $180,000 by the ICANH and $400,000
by US Heritage Fund. The money will be used for research and restoration
projects in and around the historical site.
More information: http://globalheritagefund.org/index.php/in_the_news/
press_coverage/colombias_lost_city_to_get_580000_investment
- Abbey Road listed by English Heritage as Culture Minister
waxes lyrical
Abbey Road, the world's oldest purpose-built recording studios
which have been at the centre of a £30 million public campaign
to save them, have been officially protected with a Grade II listing
status. Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport Margaret
Hodge was finally compelled to act on a recommendation by advisors
after owners EMI were rumoured to have put the historic St John's
Wood building up for sale, sparking uproar among music and culture
lovers across the UK. English Heritage first urged the government
to list the building in 2003, insisting that the building possessed
"huge cultural importance" and "a remarkable
and inspiring association with music making".
More information:
http://www.culture24.org.uk/history+%26+heritage/historic+buildings/art76402
23 February
- Lawrence Halprin: Creating landscapes for over 60 years
(Pioneers Oral Histories)
Halprin designed spaces which brought his knowledge and love of
nature, movement, and social ideas into urban spaces. Pioneers
Oral Histories help identify designed landscapes that require
special care or consideration in their management and maintenance
decisions. In addition, these interviews often help identify a
designer's involvement when it cannot be determined by more traditional
methods of historical research. Oral histories allow us to capture
and preserve important aspects of the human experience that would
otherwise go undocumented.
More information:
http://tclf.org/pioneer/oral-history-project
- Dreams Do Come True: Cleveland Straddles the Divide
Christopher Marcinkoski, a senior associate with James Corner
Field Operations in New York City, recently gave me an overview
of several of the firm’s projects. I continue to marvel
at their work on the High Line, the abandoned early 20th century
elevated train tracks that have been turned into one of New York’s
21st century cultural gems. The project brilliantly weds fields,
I’ve argued, that are often seen as adversarial, landscape
architecture and landscape preservation. In fact, the work at
Field Operations appears to embrace a design ethic I’ve
long advocated, involving a shared value system of nature, scenery
and culture, and strengthens the need for us to develop professional
standards and ethics regarding cultural systems...
More information: http://tclf.org/content/dreams-do-come-true-cleveland-straddles-divide
- Now We Know What's Out There in Palm Beach
Whenever traveling, I always try to explore parks and
gardens I’ve never visited. Recently, while visiting family
near Palm Beach, Florida, I decided to check out that town’s
historic designed landscapes. For a place that’s so famous
(think Mar-a-Lago or the Breakers), some Web surfing prior to
my arrival yielded few results – just the Flagler Museum
and a handful of consulting firms. Fortunately, the survey section
of my personal library (which includes statewide surveys for Illinois,
Indiana, Maine, and Rhode Island) has the wonderful publication
Historic Landscapes of Florida by Rocco Ceo and Joanna Lombard
(The Deering Foundation and University of Miami School of Architecture,
2001)...
More information: http://tclf.org/content/now-we-know-whats-out-there-palm-beach
- Maritime mysteries: Diving for clues - Cover Story
Under the auspices of UNESCO and the Government of Thailand, with
funding from the Royal Norwegian Government, this class is engaged
in a six-week intensive programme on the basics of underwater
archaeology and cultural heritage management through lectures
and field work, including a two-week survey of the “Mannok
Site”. The iron steamship Ruea Mail lies in the Gulf of
Thailand near Mannok Island, in Thailand’s Rayong province.
Today, where the boat rests on a mostly sandy bottom at 18-20
metres, underwater visibility extends only about two metres. The
Ruea Mail looms dark and mysterious. It might be easy to imagine
shadowy, half-seen things swaying in the slight current are ghosts.
But Duang and the other students have no time for such fantasies
just now. They’re working.
More information:
http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0018/001869/186930e.pdf
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| Publications
N.55 |
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Accessibility to Cultural Heritage: Nordic Perspectives
Editor: Oddbjørn Sørmoen
ISBN 978-92-893-1
Heritage has meaning only through its encounter with people.
This report shows how accessibility questions are being addressed
through practical examples drawn from across the Nordic countries.
There are considerable variations in scale, ranging from the remote
church on an island in Iceland to the baroque palace in the centre
of Stockholm. Most of the cases have found their solutions, some
permanent and others temporary, while others represent challenges
that are still being worked on. It is important to make people aware
of the various choices that have to be taken, especially when the
solutions have negative consequences for the heritage. Physical
accessibility can shadow for understanding and experience of the
site or monument.
http://www.norden.org/sv/publikationer/publikationer/2009-572
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Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger
Editor-in-Chief: Christopher Moseley
Preface by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO
Cartographer: Alexandre Nicolas
ISBN: 978-92-3-104096-2
Languages are not only tools of communication, they also reflect a
view of the world. Languages are vehicles of value systems and cultural
expressions and are an essential component of the living heritage
of humanity. Yet, many of them are in danger of disappearing. UNESCO’s
Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger tries to raise awareness
on language endangerment. This third edition has been completely revised
and expanded to include new series of maps and new points of view.
http://publishing.unesco.org/details.aspx?&Code_Livre=4728&change=E
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Journey to Portugal. Inside and outside the territories
of architecture
Edited by Bruno Pelucca
Abstract: Italian or English
Issue Number 8 of EdA explores, through contributions by professionals
and researchers from both Portugese and Italian universities, the
rediscovery of the significance of the structural and formal system
of collective space, reflections of the appearance of a city network,
the transformation of marginal metropolitan areas, and various academic
approachs to the urban project. Issue Number 8 concludes with a brief
deviation into the field of architecture. http://www.esempidiarchitettura.it/ebcms2.lm.php?mod=
news&modAzione=scheda&o_nome=news&o_id=492_ITA
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Les Castel : une agence d'architecture au XX e siècle
Author: Isabelle Chiavassa & François Gasnault
ISBN: 9782863641934
Gaston Castel (1886-1971) a été l'un des architectes
les plus importants du sud-est de la France, de la fin de la Grande
Guerre aux années de la Reconstruction : ses réalisations
aussi nombreuses que diverses, stylistiquement éclectiques,
restent bien présentes dans le paysage urbain, notamment
à Marseille et à Aix-en-Provence. Architecte en chef
du département des Bouches-du-Rhône dans l'entre-deux-guerres,chroniqueur
aux Cahiers du sud, chef d'atelier à l'Ecole des beaux-arts
de Marseille - Fernand Pouillon y fut son élève -,
Castel a fondé en 1921 une agence qui fut ensuite dirigée
par son fils Ello puis par son petit-fils Yves. Ce livre réunit
des études qui réévaluent l'apport des Castel
à la création architecturale du xxe siècle
et fournit le catalogue quasi exhaustif, projet par projet, des
archives écrites et graphiques de cette agence.
http://www.citechaillot.fr/activite/sortie_de_livre.php?id=352
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The International Journal of Conservation Science
(IJCS) - Call for Papers
International Journal of Conservation Science is published using an
open access publication model, meaning that all interested readers
are able to freely access the journal online without the need for
a subscription. The journal has a distinguished editorial board with
extensive academic qualifications, ensuring that the journal maintains
high academic standards and has a broad international coverage. Submit
your paper to International Journal of Conservation Science! - http://www.ijcs.uaic.ro/submission.html
The International Journal of Conservation Science (IJCS)
is a high quality peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication
of original research papers in applied conservation science and
its broad range of applications.
The topics cover all disciplines and branches of modern scientific
conservation, including different aspects on general conservation
theory, scientific investigation of works of art, authentication,
determination of conservation state, compatibility studies for preservation
and restoration procedures, monitoring of interventions effectiveness,
etiopathology of historic and natural monuments, studies on the
mechanisms of deterioration and degradation for different materials
as structural and ornamental elements, impact of the environmental
factors or agents on monuments and ecosystems, obtaining and characterization
of new materials and development of new technologies for preservation
and restoration, new methodologies for scientific investigation,
other cross-disciplinary aspects of research applied to conservation
science.
http://www.ijcs.uaic.ro/
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