Architectuur en monument

The relation between architectural history and heritage is ambiguous. Both domains are confronted with rapid changes in scale and complexity, leaving practitioners in both fields with the challenging task to provide new methods and a new vocabulary to enable research and communication. 70 years ago...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arjen Oosterman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KNOB 2010-08-01
Series:Bulletin KNOB
Online Access:https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/245
id doaj-9b9e110713e84b5ea1d4a8ead92e657a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9b9e110713e84b5ea1d4a8ead92e657a2021-07-15T10:58:14ZengKNOBBulletin KNOB0166-04702589-33432010-08-0114614810.7480/knob.109.2010.4.134206Architectuur en monumentArjen OostermanThe relation between architectural history and heritage is ambiguous. Both domains are confronted with rapid changes in scale and complexity, leaving practitioners in both fields with the challenging task to provide new methods and a new vocabulary to enable research and communication. 70 years ago Nicolaus Pevsner could write about Lincoln cathedral and the bicycle shed to discern between architecture and building. These days not only housing and urban development have been accepted as ‘objects’ of research, in fact all material manifestation of human occupation, at least as far as design is involved, is considered worth studying. On the heritage side, developments are comparable: horizontally and vertically the domain has been enlarged tremendously: from a collection of ‘diamonds’ to complete cities, to landscapes and structures. This is not only true for scale and layers, but also for cultural norms of quality. Cultural relativism requires that ‘beauty’ and ‘quality’ are defined in relation to the social group or culture they refer to. The logic that an elite determines what is good and what is right is challenged by the notion that popular taste is in principle equal. So what does this do to our museum collections and lists of protected monuments? The consequences for architectural history are not yet clear. Including new realities like digital design and new fields of practice like the virtual, the knowledge base and toolbox of the architectural historian has to expand beyond the Renaissance ideal of the ‘uomo universale’.https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/245
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arjen Oosterman
spellingShingle Arjen Oosterman
Architectuur en monument
Bulletin KNOB
author_facet Arjen Oosterman
author_sort Arjen Oosterman
title Architectuur en monument
title_short Architectuur en monument
title_full Architectuur en monument
title_fullStr Architectuur en monument
title_full_unstemmed Architectuur en monument
title_sort architectuur en monument
publisher KNOB
series Bulletin KNOB
issn 0166-0470
2589-3343
publishDate 2010-08-01
description The relation between architectural history and heritage is ambiguous. Both domains are confronted with rapid changes in scale and complexity, leaving practitioners in both fields with the challenging task to provide new methods and a new vocabulary to enable research and communication. 70 years ago Nicolaus Pevsner could write about Lincoln cathedral and the bicycle shed to discern between architecture and building. These days not only housing and urban development have been accepted as ‘objects’ of research, in fact all material manifestation of human occupation, at least as far as design is involved, is considered worth studying. On the heritage side, developments are comparable: horizontally and vertically the domain has been enlarged tremendously: from a collection of ‘diamonds’ to complete cities, to landscapes and structures. This is not only true for scale and layers, but also for cultural norms of quality. Cultural relativism requires that ‘beauty’ and ‘quality’ are defined in relation to the social group or culture they refer to. The logic that an elite determines what is good and what is right is challenged by the notion that popular taste is in principle equal. So what does this do to our museum collections and lists of protected monuments? The consequences for architectural history are not yet clear. Including new realities like digital design and new fields of practice like the virtual, the knowledge base and toolbox of the architectural historian has to expand beyond the Renaissance ideal of the ‘uomo universale’.
url https://bulletin.knob.nl/index.php/knob/article/view/245
work_keys_str_mv AT arjenoosterman architectuurenmonument
_version_ 1721301310571020288