Artigo Revisado por pares

Perceiving the Past: From Age Value to Pastness

2017; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 24; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0940739117000236

ISSN

1465-7317

Autores

Cornelius Holtorf,

Tópico(s)

Conservation Techniques and Studies

Resumo

Abstract: According to the Austrian art historian Alois Riegl (1857–1905), cultural heritage possesses age value ( Alterswert ) based on the perception of an object’s visible traces of age. His 1903 essay “The Modern Cult of Monuments” became a classic, and age value has ever since been constitutive for cultural heritage. Closer scrutiny, however, reveals that clever copies, reconstructions, and imaginative inventions can possess age value too. I therefore suggest “pastness” as a useful term for denoting the perception that a given object is “of the past.” Pastness is not immanent in an object but, rather, results from its appearance (for example, patina), its context (for example, in a museum), or its correspondence with preconceived expectations among the audience. In this article, I review the concept of pastness and discuss its implications for the global heritage sector. Age value emerges as being less universal than Riegl thought and was linked to a very particular intellectual and cultural context.

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