Arte, legge, restauro
L’Europa e le prime prassi per la protezione del patrimonio
edited by
abstract
This volume collects the outcomes of the conference Art – Law – Restoration, that was held at the University Ca’ Foscari of Venice in July 2021. Through the studies outlined by several international scholars, crucial aspects of the history of heritage protection and restoration in sixteenth- to nineteenth-century Europe are reconsidered, combining different disciplines and geographical contexts into a comparative perspective. The systems elaborated in the early modern States to preserve artefacts, monuments, and antiquities are evaluated following multifarious approaches – including archaeology, art history, history of law, social history, and the history of museums. Particular consideration is given to the practices established in the Kingdom of Naples, Spain, the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Greece, Prussia, the Papal States, Portugal, and the Scandinavian Countries to protect what they thought of as ‘heritage’ respectively. The project LawLove and the publication of this volume are supported by the European Commission (Marie Skłodowska-Curie project no. 837857).
Art market • History of museums • Definition of heritage • Public asset • Romanticism • Kingdom of Naples • Property • National identity • Heritage protection • Papal States • Rome • Europe • Paintings • History of law • Eighteenth century • Italian peninsula • Prussia • Conservation • Restoration • Carlos III • Pompeii • Herculaneum • Catalogue • History of Art Criticism • Assessor for sculptures • Legislative provision • Goods of artistic value • Kingdom of Spain • Heritage • Legislation • Modern age • Early modern centuries • Classical antiquity • Art history • History of collections • Restoration of paintings • History of restoration • Seventeenth century • Protection of cultural heritage • Art promotion • Greece