On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments

The Charter of Venice stipulates that changes to a monument are only permitted on the basis of functional requirements. Changes to the symbolic function are explicitly excluded. However, this principle leads to conceptual problems with dissonant heritage, as illustrated by a number of recent monume...

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Main Author: Philipp Oswalt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lublin University of Technology 2024-12-01
Series:Ochrona Dziedzictwa Kulturowego
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Online Access:https://ph.pollub.pl/index.php/odk/article/view/6154
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author Philipp Oswalt
author_facet Philipp Oswalt
author_sort Philipp Oswalt
collection DOAJ
description The Charter of Venice stipulates that changes to a monument are only permitted on the basis of functional requirements. Changes to the symbolic function are explicitly excluded. However, this principle leads to conceptual problems with dissonant heritage, as illustrated by a number of recent monument conflicts in Germany concerning buildings of National Socialism as well as anti-Semitic, racist, colonial and militaristic monuments. The planned restoration of the Haus der Kunst München (1933-37) to its original state by Chipperfield Architects in accordance with the monument requirements has led to a controversial debate (since 2017), as has the symbolically unbroken continued use of the repeatedly modernized and renovated building of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. The insertion of Günther Domenig's Documentation Center (1998-2001) into the Congress Hall of the Nazi Party Rally Grounds in Nuremberg (1935-43) and the conversion of the Arsenal Main Building (1873-1877) into the Dresden Military History Museum by Daniel Libeskind (2001-2011) de facto overruled the premise of monument preservation, but the results were viewed positively by the public. The discussion about the appropriate way to deal with the depiction of Jewish sows in medieval churches is still ongoing. The requirements of monument preservation are at odds with the desire to distance oneself from anti-Semitic artworks. The competition (2023) for the desired redesign of the Bismarck monument in Hamburg (1906) has recently failed due to the conceptual conflict with the rules of monument preservation. In the Anglo-Saxon world, debates similar to those in Germany have broken out in the context of the Black Life Matters movement. The essay argues in favor of granting dissonant heritage opportunities for symbolic interventions and thus deviating from the principles of the Venice Charter.
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spelling doaj-art-5fb01e86d7bd40da938163a4d03169de2025-08-20T03:14:41ZengLublin University of TechnologyOchrona Dziedzictwa Kulturowego2543-64222024-12-012110.35784/odk.6154On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monumentsPhilipp Oswalt0University of Kassel The Charter of Venice stipulates that changes to a monument are only permitted on the basis of functional requirements. Changes to the symbolic function are explicitly excluded. However, this principle leads to conceptual problems with dissonant heritage, as illustrated by a number of recent monument conflicts in Germany concerning buildings of National Socialism as well as anti-Semitic, racist, colonial and militaristic monuments. The planned restoration of the Haus der Kunst München (1933-37) to its original state by Chipperfield Architects in accordance with the monument requirements has led to a controversial debate (since 2017), as has the symbolically unbroken continued use of the repeatedly modernized and renovated building of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. The insertion of Günther Domenig's Documentation Center (1998-2001) into the Congress Hall of the Nazi Party Rally Grounds in Nuremberg (1935-43) and the conversion of the Arsenal Main Building (1873-1877) into the Dresden Military History Museum by Daniel Libeskind (2001-2011) de facto overruled the premise of monument preservation, but the results were viewed positively by the public. The discussion about the appropriate way to deal with the depiction of Jewish sows in medieval churches is still ongoing. The requirements of monument preservation are at odds with the desire to distance oneself from anti-Semitic artworks. The competition (2023) for the desired redesign of the Bismarck monument in Hamburg (1906) has recently failed due to the conceptual conflict with the rules of monument preservation. In the Anglo-Saxon world, debates similar to those in Germany have broken out in the context of the Black Life Matters movement. The essay argues in favor of granting dissonant heritage opportunities for symbolic interventions and thus deviating from the principles of the Venice Charter. https://ph.pollub.pl/index.php/odk/article/view/6154symbolic interventionCharta of Venicedissonant monuments
spellingShingle Philipp Oswalt
On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
Ochrona Dziedzictwa Kulturowego
symbolic intervention
Charta of Venice
dissonant monuments
title On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
title_full On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
title_fullStr On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
title_full_unstemmed On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
title_short On the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
title_sort on the necessity of symbolic interventions in dissonant monuments
topic symbolic intervention
Charta of Venice
dissonant monuments
url https://ph.pollub.pl/index.php/odk/article/view/6154
work_keys_str_mv AT philipposwalt onthenecessityofsymbolicinterventionsindissonantmonuments