Art should not be preserved. - Lemmy.World
There has been a movement for a long time, going back even to ancient
civilizations finding things from ancient-to-them civilizations, to preserve
art. But this is a faulty premise in its essence. Art is, in modern terms, a
snapshot. A picture. It is a piece of its culture captured for only a moment.
Without context, art is nothing or, even worse, something it was never intended
to be. And as such, truly preserving it is impossible, and the act of such
destroys the piece in a far more egregious manner than time ever could. As an
image for this post, I chose the Ecco Homo held in a sanctuary in Borja, Spain
which was made famous for its faulty restoration. But while this is a literal
destruction of a piece of art during an attempt at restoration, it isn’t at the
heart of that of which I speak. Because this is what happens to the soul of a
piece of art when you take it out of its cultural context. And in a more literal
sense, this is what happens to art whenever we try to preserve it. There are few
if any pieces of art from dead cultures on display that have not been restored
to some extent. Ones open to the environment, like the roof of the Sistine
Chapel, are regularly touched up to preserve what some new artist thinks they
should look like. Every act of preservation is a reinterpretation, an
adulteration using someone else’s skill to try and mimic the original. Which is,
of course, impossible to truly do. And it creates a layer of falsehood that
covers the original work and tarnishes its purity. Rather, art is a symbol of
its time, a culture that will inevitably fade. In accordance with this, the art
itself too should fade and decay the same way that its context did, the culture
it captured did, and the artist who made it did. Be that film or statuary,
painting or architecture, the preservation of art is the violation of that same
art. Returning to it outside of the context of its creation only causes us to
misunderstand the piece, to project our modern sensibilities on it. Every time
we observe a piece of art from a dead culture, we are doing with our minds what
those who sandblasted the statues of ancient Rome and Greece did. We are forcing
our sensibilities on them with no ability to truly understand what they once
meant to the people for whom they were made. Attempting to preserve art is only
hastening its obliteration and creating obscene forgeries that claim to have the
same value as their progenitor. Any piece which has been preserved, especially
through restoration, gives those observing it now a false idea of what the piece
truly was, in both the spiritual and material sense. But more egregiously, as
art is an expression of an idea born of a person or people within a certain
culture existing in a certain place at a certain time, as those elements are
lost, the truth of the art is also lost, causing any attempt to preserve the
piece just an extension of misinterpretation and misunderstanding of the artwork
which can be twisted in uncountable ways. Therefore, art should not be preserved
but rather allowed to die its noble death naturally as time and tide dictate.