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Museum History Journal, 2019
The aim of this article is to highlight the scientific practices of a range of 'invisible technicians' in order to provide a more complete understanding of the history of the National Archaeological Museum, in Portugal. At the meeting point of people, objects and knowledge, the history of its collections reveals the existence of local contexts and hitherto unknown individuals who were part of global communication networks. Thus there is a need for reassessing what is currently seen as the dominant role of a small number of actors at the national level. In the process of the construction of collections of archaeological objects, we argue that the scientific practices of local landowners, information providers and the many private collectors should be taken into account and their knowledge assigned due importance.
The relic, as a physical, rare, and valuable remnant of a lost or destroyed religious past, as well as of great spiritual and sensory value, is a vast and complex subject due to the multiplicity of research, conservation, and valuation perspectives that it raises. Despite the diversity of studies on relics and their reliquaries, both national and international, the sharing of knowledge on this subject is scarce, focusing mainly on issues of historical and anthropological nature. Thus, RelicS 2021 aimed to foster interdisciplinary cross-studies, projects, strategies, and artistic practices based on multiple and multidisciplinary approaches. This book brings the contributions that during RelicS 2021 Conference reflected on relics, their materiality, cults and devotions, iconographies, or even contemporary interpretations that displaced the concept far beyond any historical specificities. Some interventions here presented focused mainly on historical and iconographic themes, covering issues of devotion, meaning, patronage, etc., under the theme of Patronage, Worship & Meanings. Others, aggregated in Scientific Studies and Conservation Perspectives, dealt with materiality studies, possibilities for Conservation and Restoration, Museology, and Scientific Studies. Finally, in Anthropology of the Sacred: Extended Approaches, the communications presented a broad reading of Relics, involving reflections on geographies, borders, artistic interpretations and what is assumed here as the anthropology(ies) of the sacred and its critical possibilities. RelicS 2021, was, then, an opportunity to bring together different scientific areas, and foster discussion & knowledge around a fruitful topic.
debates with the public about ethical issues and the archaeologists have had to be honest and selfreflective in their engagement with the public about these issues. The archaeologists have been taught to think beyond their own cultural attitudes and in confronting opposing attitudes attached to the discovery of human remains have strengthened their own future exploration of these remains.
24th Annual Meeting - European Association of Archaeologists, 2018
The dissemination of music archaeological research calls, even more than in other branches of archaeology, for the negotiation between science, art and entertainment. The reconstruction of musical instruments or acoustic environments can often only be transmitted through experiencial learning, and the public engagement that can be achieved thanks to these musical experiences is remarkable. However, there are certain problematics that need to be discussed. On the one hand, as any other human science, music archaeology proposes particular narratives about music history and human cultures that often project onto the past modern musical identities and concepts, which legitimate contemporary social and political agendas. On the other hand, one of our main objectives as researchers is to question these narratives and preconceptions in the light of archaeological data. However, public engagement can only be achieved by a certain degree of negotiation between this scientific approach and the artistic and entertainment expectations of the audiences. Based on the experiences gathered in the European Music Archaeology Project and the exhibition Archaeomusica, this paper will discuss possible ways of transmitting music archaeological knowledge through art and entertainment and will propose ways of challenging certain harmful narratives and concepts about past music, while trying to offer results that are still significant for the general public and artistically relevant.
24th Annual Meeting - European Association of Archaeologists, 2018
The dissemination of music archaeological research calls, even more than in other branches of archaeology, for the negotiation between science, art and entertainment. The reconstruction of musical instruments or acoustic environments can often only be transmitted through experiencial learning, and the public engagement that can be achieved thanks to these musical experiences is remarkable. However, there are certain problematics that need to be discussed. On the one hand, as any other human science, music archaeology proposes particular narratives about music history and human cultures that often project onto the past modern musical identities and concepts, which legitimate contemporary social and political agendas. On the other hand, one of our main objectives as researchers is to question these narratives and preconceptions in the light of archaeological data. However, public engagement can only be achieved by a certain degree of negotiation between this scientific approach and the artistic and entertainment expectations of the audiences. Based on the experiences gathered in the European Music Archaeology Project and the exhibition Archaeomusica, this paper will discuss possible ways of transmitting music archaeological knowledge through art and entertainment and will propose ways of challenging certain harmful narratives and concepts about past music, while trying to offer results that are still significant for the general public and artistically relevant.
PARSE: On the Question of Exhibition – Part 2, 2021
Portugal’s two colonial exhibitions took place in 1934 and 1940, the first in Porto and the second in Lisbon. Both exhibitions were set up by the fascist regime of António Salazar, as powerful tools of propaganda that asserted an idea of empire and invited the population to colonize Portugal’s ultramarine domains and civilize indigenes populations. Both exhibitions created a “Square of the Empire,” punctuated by a monument erected in perishable materials, as temporary instalment. In Porto, celebrating the Portuguese colonial effort and, in Lisbon, the Portuguese discoveries. While these monuments were demolished after the exhibitions ended, replicas of each were later re-erected in stone and brought to “Squares of the Empire,” in Lisbon—1960—and Porto—1984. I frame these monuments historically, attending to the contexts of their making, their recreation/relocation and presence in public space. Studying how these monuments—and squares—move the ideas promoted by the exhibition into public space. I engage a diverse body of literature to reflect about how these exhibitions still linger and haunt the urban landscape and collective memory. Telling about Portugal’s difficulties in dealing with its past, due to how the regime succeeded in communicating a sense of Portuguese identity construed on idealized versions of history, that in their persisting memorialization, render invisible other versions, and the people affected to them, in a country with enduring and widespread racism, and inequality. I look at artists engaging critically with the monuments at both Squares—Ângela Ferreira, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Interstruct Collective—and present my own research practice where I study different inhabitations/views of a monument to research how the ideas they air can be seen as a spectre haunting the present, engaging with Spectrality Studies, and “ghost” and “haunting” as operative concepts when analysing cultural situations where there is an erasure, an invisibility, or latency.
2019
Editors: Joana Baião (IHA/NOVA/FCSH; LAB-GM/CIMO/IPB), Leonor de Oliveira (IHA/NOVA/FCSH; Courtauld Institute of Art), Susana S. Martins (IHA/NOVA/FCSH) The latest issue of Revista de História da Arte critically addresses the “exhibition,” not just as an object of study, but mainly as a prolific and fruitful problem. The theme is explored here from various theoretical and methodological perspectives, underlining the vital importance of exhibitions for different interdisciplinary lines of research dealing with museums, art, culture and diplomacy. This issue features an interview with art historian Terry Smith, essays by Reesa Greenberg and Rémi Parcollet, and a themed dossier that incorporates different approaches related to the topic of exhibitions, including photography, catalog production, theoretical and critical analysis of contemporary practices, reassessment of historical shows, exhibitionary impacts in the writing of art history, the role of exhibitions in the retrieval and re-exhibition of works of art. With contributions by Felix Vogel, Catalina Imizcoz, Kathryn M. Floyd, Maria de Fatima Morethy Couto, Ana Bilbao, Katherine Jackson, Laurens Dhaenens, Joana Silva, Joana Lia Ferreira, Maria de Jesús Ávila and Ana Maria Ramos. Editors: Joana Baião (IHA/NOVA/FCSH; LAB-GM/CIMO/IPB), Leonor de Oliveira (IHA/NOVA/FCSH; Courtauld Institute of Art), Susana S. Martins (IHA/NOVA/FCSH)
Community museums now exist throughout the world. Community museums are initiatives that embody the definition of ICOM, which considers that museums should be “in the service of society and its development”. In general terms, a community museum constitutes a tool of identity reaffirmation and of social and heritage empowerment. Symbolically, two key moments can be identified in the formulation of the concept of a museum linked to social development. One of them was the 1971 concept of the ‘Ecomuseum’, idealized by Huges de Varine’s as a new type of museum, framed by the environment and liberated from being within four walls. The other, occurred a year later, at the Round Table in Santiago, Chile, where the concept of the ‘Integral Museum’ was born. This advanced the notion that a museum does not have to be stuck within the temporal past of its collections, instead, the integral museum looks for new ways of being integrated into society and contributing to its development. Here we endeavor to reflect on the variety that exists between community museums in European, Latin American and Caribbean contexts, demonstrating how each country or region adapts to its own realities and needs.
Visualizing, reconstructing, and „visiting” the past: a challenge for the modern archaeotourist? This paper aims to present how the modern digital technology can be a medium to a direct connection between the past and the future for visitors of archaeological sites. The presentation is based on my PhD dissertation about the cult group in Lycosura in Arcadia of Peloponnese and the upcoming 3D reconstruction project of the colossal statues in the dark cella of the temple of Despoina. Pausanias was an archaeotourist of the 2nd century AD., who visited the sanctuary of Despoina at Lycosura and his description about the temple, the statues, and the secret cult of the goddess is the only literary source about this archaeological site. The preserved fragments of the depicted figures in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens and of Lycosura Museum and the digital reconstruction of the group give the opportunity to the modern scholar and viewer to visualize and see them completed. A 3D visualization and tour inside the temple, where the visitor can experience and interpret the colossal group could be a real challenge. What is the purpose of this reconstruction and how far can the virtual reality affect the interest of interpreting ancient traditions? How can the visitor- in the case of Lycosura- experience the secret and forbidden and be a part of them?
RBPP, 2019
Економіка та суспільство
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