4.2.3. Use in the
Church context
According to common
thinking, the word museum recalls to mind a place separate from present-day
life; an unchanged, static, cold and silent place. Rather, the ecclesiastical
museum describes itself as an authentic "greenhouse", a living
centre for cultural development that can spread and strengthen awareness for
the conservation and enhancement of the cultural heritage of the Church. The
ecclesiastical museum has the unique task of preserving and displaying
historical memories in the living context of the Church as they have been
developed in a certain territory through many forms of artistic expression.
In order to reach such
objectives, it is not enough to organize intelligent and well-planned exhibit
itineraries, where appropriate works are placed side by side to delineate and
explain an environmental context and a precise historical reality. The problem
that must be tackled is that of how to balance the co-existence of the two
primary functions of the Church museum structure correctly: conservation
and display. The criteria for exhibition must in fact contribute to enhancing
the connection between the work and the community it belongs to, in order to
indicate the ecclesial life of the Christian community of the past. Museum education
must then give life to a communicative and formative circuit in order to
make visitors aware of today's ecclesiastical lifestyle.
On the other hand, the
time allotted for a visit often does not allow one to appreciate the historical
and documentary richness of a museum fully. Therefore it would seem
appropriate to organize itineraries in a diversified manner in order to offer
visitors, contemporarily to an educational visit, relevant materials that can
be consulted outside the museum.
The ecclesiastical
museum becomes then a centre of cultural animation for the entire community. It
becomes alive through the awareness raising of groups. It plans an annual
calendar of events in order to insert it within a wider pastoral project of
both the particular church as a whole as well as of the individual Church
institutions that are part of it. In such a calendar one can foresee:
- temporary exhibits
that can show periods, artists, historical circumstances, spirituality,
devotions, traditions, rites;
- lectures in fixed periods of the year according to thematic cycles;
- presentations of books, or new or restored artworks;
- meetings, workshops, debates with artists, restorers, historians and critics;
- presentations of events promoted by institutions or associations that would
otherwise not be able to develop within the diocesan environment;
- the organization of catechism classes on the
site.
But the best way to
understand the value of artworks, and thus the sense of an ecclesiastical
museum, consists in teaching visitors to look around for themselves and to
connect events, objects, history, persons which in that territory were and
remain the living soul present even today. The ecclesiastical museum can then
unite past and present in the ecclesial lifestyle of a particular Christian
community.
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