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Authenticity and Replication

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This volume explores the evolving concepts of authenticity and replication in the interpretation, display, and conservation of cultural heritage. Challenging traditional Western emphasis on origina...
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  • 01 February 2014
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What is the �real thing� in cultural heritage? The papers in this book address the concepts of authenticity and replication for the interpretation, display and conservation of our cultural heritage.

In the West the value placed on �original� materials has been central to our understanding of cultural heritage. While advances in conservation science provide detailed information on the tangible properties of objects, there is a growing emphasis on the importance of their conceptual framework and the context in which they were created. Therefore, we have to consider the value of different ways of representing objects and debate whether one stage of their history should take precedence over others. In this context, the potential use of replication broadens the discussion on authenticity and brings about additional challenges � in what circumstances does a replica gain significance as another form of the �real thing�?

While the concept of authenticity continues to be one of the core factors driving decision making in conservation and interpretation, new approaches towards the display and use of collections are challenging conventions, making the roles of curators, conservators, art historians and conservation scientists increasingly complex. The papers in this volume address this dilemma and provide a platform for the continued discussion of this valuable and intriguing subject.

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Price: £37.50
Pages: 224
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 February 2014
Trim Size: 9.70 X 6.85 in
ISBN: 9781904982999
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

ART / Conservation & Preservation, Conservation, restoration and care of artworks

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These papers cover a broad range of conservation disciplines and periods, documenting philosophical thinking as well as object-based research and treatment. The 'authenticity' of the artwork or artefact is of central concern to the conservation field but the scope of this text extends further, encompassing museum display, education and visitor experience. While there is no doubt that each paper stands alone, this is a volume worth reading in its entirety.

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Opening thoughts

�Indisputable authenticity�: engaging with the real in the museum

Mary M. Brooks

Challenging authenticities and the �real thing�

Bringing the past to life? Exploring the role of authenticity in developing young people�s historical understanding

Ceri Jones

Conservation of Japanese paintings on paper and silk: tradition and innovation

Keisuke Sugiyama

Baskinta�s Mother(s) of God: one strainer with two paintings found in the Convent of Saint Sassine in Lebanon

Kerstin Khalife, Cristoph Krekel and Aline El Maalouf

Twenty-first century approaches to reframing Italian Renaissance panels at the National Gallery

Harriet O�Neill

Differing interpretations of the authenticity of an Ushak carpet from The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Giulia Chiostrini

�And I know damned-well what he wanted!�: deliberate alteration and interpretations of intent in several late sculptures by David Smith

Richard Mulholland

The Triumph of the Virgin: unravelling authenticities in a Glasgow Museums� tapestry

Sarah Foskett

Identifying and pursuing authenticity in contemporary art

Rebecca Gordon

Artist in conversation

�Real Life� questions of authenticity

Ross Sinclair

Replication and its relationship with the �real thing�

Definitions of authenticity: a study of the relationship between the reproduction and original Gone With The Wind costumes at the Harry Ransom Center

Jill Morena

Calling authenticity into question: investigating the production of versions and copies in Tudor portraiture

Sophie Plender and Polly Saltmarsh

Rediscovering the Unicorn tapestries

Caron Penney

Stitching the twenty-first century into a Gilded Age Mansion

Alexandra Allardt

Dressing up for the Preston Guild: a �very admirable and correct costume!�

Uthra Rajgopal

Authenticity in the revival of Orthodox ecclesiastical embroidery in post-Soviet Russia

Luba Dovgan Nurse, Dinah Eastop and Mary M. Brooks

Experiencing the authentic: the reconstruction of the Tingelstad frontal, a Norwegian altar frontal from the 13th century

Katrine Scharffenberg and Anne Milnes

How to keep what was intended to be temporarily functional? Reflections on decision-making for the conservation of polyurethane ready-to-wear fashion

Susana Fran�a de S�, Joana Lia Ferreira, Ana Maria Ramos, B�rbara Coutinho and Rita Macedo

Cultural heritage online: questions of authenticity, authority and authorship

Anna B�low and Dinah Eastop