1.2. An Approach
towards the Safekeeping of Art-Historical Patrimony
One can interpret the
conservation of the patrimony of cultural memory in cultures in different ways.
In the West and its cultures, for example, the memory of the past is nourished
by conserving artefacts that are obsolete but rich in their art-historical
importance or simply for their value as memories. In other cultures, however,
the cultivation of memory takes place through the oral tradition of past events
because often for climatic reasons the conservation of artefacts is difficult.
Finally, in other situations, safekeeping implies remaking the artefacts while
respecting the materials and stylistic models. Among all populations, however,
the living sense of memory is considered a fundamental value that must be
cultivated with great care.
In countries with an
older Christian tradition, the art-historical patrimony that has been enriched
throughout the centuries with new forms of interpretation, and has been for
entire generations a privileged instrument of catechesis and worship has more
recently, and at times, acquired an entirely aesthetic value due to
secularization. It is wise, therefore, that in these cases the particular
churches recall the contextual importance of art-historical goods by means of
fitting strategies, so that the artefact with an aesthetic value may not be
totally detached from its pastoral function or its historical, social,
environmental, and devotional context which it it expressed and witnessed to.
A Church museum is
rooted in a specific territory, it is directly connected to the action of the
Church and it is the visible witness of its historic memory. It cannot be
reduced simply to "the collection of antiquities and curiosities", as
Paolo Giovio and Alberto Lollio intended back in the Renaissance, but it must
conserve in order to present works of art and objects of a religious nature.
A Church museum is
neither a Mouseion, nor the "temple of the Muses" in the
etymological sense of the term, recalling the structure founded by Tolomeus
Sotere of Alexandria of Egypt; but it is always the building that cares for the
art-historical patrimony of the Church. In fact, even if many artefacts no
longer carry out a specific Church function, they continue to transmit a
message that the Christian communities, living in past epochs, have wanted to
hand on to posterity. As a result, one must develop methods to ensure the
adequate presentation and conservation of the art-historical patrimony in an
ecclesial sense. Such methods should include the following tasks:
- safekeeping promoted
by specific institutions on diocesan and national levels;
- the knowledge of the
principal aim and history, besides its major characteristics through the means
of inventories and catalogues (See Sacred Congregation for the Clergy, Circular
Letter Opera Artis de cura patrimonii historico-artistici Ecclesiae, ad
Praesides Conferentiarum Episcopalium, April 11, 1971; AAS 63 [1971]
p. 315-317; Codex Iuris Canonici [1983] can. 1283 n. 2-3; Pontifical
Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church, Circular Letter, The
Inventory and Cataloguing of the Cultural Heritage of the Church, a Necessary
and Urgent Task, see...);
-
a contextual approach to the works appreciating their
original social, ecclesial, devotional realities;
- the consideration of
the works of the past in reference to cultural and ecclesial experience today;
- the preservation and
eventual use of works of the past in a pastoral dimension (Secretary of State,
Circular Letter to the Bishops of Italy on the preservation, custody and use of
Church archives and libraries, April 15, 1923, Prot. N. 16605 [M. Vismara Missiroli,
Codice dei Beni Culturali di interesse religioso. I. Normativa Canonica,
Milano 1993, p. 188-196]. Ibid., Circular Letter to the Bishops of
Italy, September 1, 1924, Prot.
N. 34215 [ibid., p. 196-198]).
In order to fulfill
these tasks, it would be useful to establish Church museums that, while making
reference to the historical and artistic patrimony of a determined territory,
also assume the role of centres of cultural education. It also becomes
important to coordinate the different offices in charge of the sector of
cultural heritage within the Church. Whenever possible one should create ways
to ensure collaboration between Church offices and related public offices in
order to plan common projects.
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