Chapter, Paragraph, Part
1 Int | have the function of the material preservation, juridical
2 2, 2,1 | should represent, by the material it contains, the "stable
3 2, 3,1 | antique artefacts, others with material of more recent date. These
4 2, 3,2 | and the community, even material considered to be of lesser
5 2, 3,2 | services. They allow this material to be protected, preserved
6 2, 3,2 | works in wood or of other material of minor quality); ~- sacred
7 2, 3,2 | musical scores, etc: ~To this material, which often constitute
8 2, 3,2 | maps, etc.); ~- documentary material connected to the artefacts (
9 2, 4 | spaces, the selection of material, the strategies of exhibition,
10 3, 1,2 | should not accumulate this material. The architecture of the
11 3, 1,2 | make available some support material (printed or audiovisual)
12 3, 1,3 | matter and multimedia support material, should present to the visitor'
13 3, 1,4 | the work, author, date, material, provenance, (and possibly
14 3, 1,6 | of graphics, audiovisual material, illustrations, other innovative
15 3, 1,8 | publications and other printed material on the art-historical patrimony
16 3, 1,9 | photographic and graphic material, etc. ~It would be advisable
17 3, 1,9 | contain at least a copy of all material useful for the documentation
18 3, 1,10| distributing free brochures. Such material would help recall what has
19 4, 2,1 | hope. The collection of material artefacts is not a sign
20 4, 2,1 | in works of spiritual and material mercy. ~Around each of these
21 4, 3 | a deposit overcrowded by material. Such an option would devaluate
22 6 | promoting multimedia educational material, by setting up an active
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