4.3. Use within
the entire territory
With the use of the
ecclesiastical museum, one can launch initiatives to promote the recognition of
cultural heritage present in the territory. In this regard it would be
advisable to:
- arrange meetings
between believers and non-believers, faithful and pastors, visitors and
artists;
- promote awareness-raising in families as a place of education for Christian
art and for an understanding of the values transmitted by it;
- inspire young people towards the culture of memory and the history of
Christianity.
By its very nature the
ecclesiastical museum must remain in close connection with the territory in
which it carries out its specific pastoral mission since it gathers that which
came from this territory in order to offer it again to the faithful through a
double itinerary of historical memory and aesthetic fruition. Besides being an
"ecclesial place", the ecclesiastical museum is in fact a "territorial
place" because faith inculturates itself in specific environments. The
materials employed for the production of the many artefacts refer to precise
natural contexts. The buildings have a definite impact on the environment;
artists and commissions are tied to the tradition that develops in a certain
place; the contents of the works themselves are inspired and respond to the
necessities tied to the habitat in which the Christian community develops.
Monumental complexes, artworks, archives and libraries are conditioned by the
territory and refer to it. Even the ecclesiastical museum is not a separate
place, but in continuous physical and cultural contact with the surrounding
environment.
Consequently, the
ecclesiastical museum is not extraneous to other Church settings that belong to
a certain territory. All have in fact the same pastoral aim and, in their
different typology, weave an organic and differentiated relationship. This
continuity is stressed in the mind of the Church through the cultural assets
placed at the service of her mission. Such goods enter into a unique
dialogue by which as a matter of regulation they are coordinated among
themselves and as a matter of fact they must express this unity through their
complexity and diversity. For its part, the museum gathers and assembles
art-historical treasures by making visible a reference to the whole territory
and to the ecclesial framework.
In reference to the
territory the ecclesiastical museum carries out various functions. First of
all, it abides by a traditional one of "conservative gathering" of
what has derived from the areas in which the individual local churches have
developed but can no longer be kept in their places (due to difficulty in
custody, unknown provenance of the artefacts, alienation or destruction of the
original places, degradation of the structures of provenance, seismic risks or
other natural disasters). One can add, however, other functions that must be
carefully considered while planning an ecclesiastical museum. The layout of the
artefacts must show the history of a certain portion of the church. The museum
structure is called to document the entire ecclesiastical territory, and thus
should connect what it contains to the places of provenance. In order to make
evident the continuity between the past and the present, the ecclesiastical
museum should provide a stable memory of the history of a Christian community
and, at the same time, it is also called to welcome occasional events of
contemporary artistic expression connected to the action of the Church.
These functions suggest
the use, whenever possible, of new multimedia technology that is able to
present in a virtual, systematic and visual manner the intimate tie between the
museum and the territory from which its assets come. In this sense the concept
of an ecclesiastical museum can be specified as an integrated and spread out
museum. Such an assertion refers to polycentric structures for which the
diocesan museum carried out a role of coordination. Thus, around it, one can
display the cathedral treasure and the cultural assets of the chapter in
rotation; the collections of the parish churches and other Church places; the
works contained in all the monumental complexes; and eventual archeological
finds. A network is thus woven that can dynamically connect the diocesan museum
with other museum structures and all the Church's cultural assets with the
entire territory.
In particular, the diocesan
museum carries out a peculiar task since it shows the unity and consistency
of the cultural assets of the particular churches. In it, one should present
the inventory of the entire art-historical patrimony of the diocese. With the
aid of explanations that can be easily understood, one should place the
cultural assets conserved and other assets present in their context within the
domain of the ecclesiastical territory. With the use of scientific instruments
one should have access to the inventory and the catalogue of the art-historical
patrimony of the area (at least for that which is of public use). Thus a
complex explanation of the inculturation work of faith within the territory is
set in motion; that unites the entire activity of the local Church aimed at the
production of cultural assets that are suitable to her mission; that shows the
cultural and spiritual importance of the deposit of memory; that stimulates a
sense of belonging to collectivity through the heredity handed down by
individual generations; that favours solutions of protection and scientific
research; that opens up to welcome contemporary works so as to demonstrate the
vitality and the pastoral function of the cultural assets of the Church present
in each reality in which the Christian message has been widespread.
In this sense the diocesan
museum can constitute a cultural centre of great importance, because
founded on the art-historical deposit that qualifies and unites the entire
Christian community.
Together with it, the
cathedral must represent a living patrimony that has in its complex a
museum-treasury, structures and works that function to meet the various
ceremonial and organizational needs. In the same
way parishes, shrines, monasteries, convents, confraternities, are
places that own artefacts protected within their own structures or in a centralized
museum (with the guarantee to re-use them in particular circumstances). Even
restoration laboratories and technical offices must make reference to such a
diocesan center in order to insert themselves in the vital complex of the
particular church. The conservation task reduces itself thus as only one aspect
of the activity of enhancement that centers around the diocesan museum.
Artworks, liturgical furnishings, vestments, etc. that for reasons of security,
due to disuse or alienation of cultual complexes or to the precarious
conditions or destruction of the structures housing these items converge in
ecclesiastical museums, remain thus a living part of the cultural assets of the
ecclesial community and the entire civil collectivity present in the territory.
The notion of an integrated
museum system widens considerably and assumes ecclesial importance in
reference to other civil institutions present in the territory. Such a concept
brings about the juridical recognition of such entities as a whole; forms the
basis for the request of public funding; conditions the cultural policies of
the region; establishes systems of regulation and protection of employees and
volunteers. Consequently, this new configuration has an undeniable social and
political valence because it offers a cultural service of public utility and
opens discreet opportunities of employment.
The typology of the
wide-spread and decentralized ecclesiastical museum system qualifies the
territory while enhancing the entire ecclesiastical art-historical patrimony.
In this perspective the individual museum or collection is no longer a place of
deposit or gathering of works detached from their context but a qualifying
element of the local culture that has relations with other cultural assets.
The decentralized system
that leads to the protection of the works in both the places of provenance and
these same ecclesiastical spaces, underlines especially minor arts and at the
same time makes precious every individual portion of the diocesan territory
made up of parishes, convents, shrines, etc. If liturgical furnishings in
disuse, lying around in churches, could be concentrated in one museum, they
would be lacking the sees of provenance and the museum would become a deposit
overcrowded by material. Such an option would devaluate these same artefacts
that besides so many others and more important works, would become unimportant
and less useful. Therefore, one should safeguard on site the various
expressions that endow the environment evoking the memory of the benefactors
and the commissions, famous artists and simple craftsmen, past traditions and
current customs. If suitable structures are missing or can not be established,
it would then be preferable to house the items in a centralized museum complex.
The diocesan museum can
become a place for awareness-raising of the ecclesial community and a place for
dialogue between the various cultural forces present within the territory. In
order for this to take place one must proceed to assure a connection between
inventories and catalogues; sollicit topographical and photographic
documentation in the recording of the provenance of the works as well as the
territory; promote illustrated stands, contemporary exhibitions, art-historical
studies, restoration campaigns; organize guided visits that starting from the
museum may lead to other monumental complexes in the area. This coordinated
group of events will show the work done by the Church in a certain region and
will favour the protection of cultural assets in their original context.
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