Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Street art i patrimoni cultural: ¿Apoderament i legitimació de nous agents culturals?

  • Autores: Gloria Romanello
  • Localización: VII Congrés Català de Sociologia i V Congrés Català de Joves Sociòlegs / Sociòlogues: llibre de resums de les sessions dels Grups de Treball, 2017, ISBN 978-84-8424-611-4, pág. 43
  • Idioma: catalán
  • Enlaces
  • Resumen
    • November 17th 2015 bandits stole 17 rare paintings from the Museum of Castelvecchio, in Verona (Italy). The haul included some masterpieces by Tintoretto, Mantegna, Rubens – just to mention a few of them. Thieves basically took a significant collection away in about an hour and a half, with no hurry at all. National media coverage was scarce, while institutions engaged in the usual blaming game.

      To draw attention on this cause, a group of artists, who were shocked at the indifference of the national cultural system and the public in general, calls for action by launching the campaign #iononmilasciofregare (#Iwontgetscrewedover). A large network of artists is involved: they are asked to choose one of the works stolen from Castelvecchio and re-interpret it either on a legal public wall, or – more often – in any public area.

      Every new street-art work shows the campaign logo and, despite its complexity, this campaign is quickly spreading, forcing us to think twice about street-art legitimacy, supposed semantic limits and cultural value. Street-art agents, as a rightful but frustrated public, is blaming and pressing institutional cultural hierarchies to rethink their roles. Are traditional cultural institutions properly promoting, conserving and legitimating our heritage? All this considered, #iononmilasciofregare campaign brings different approaches to cultural policies and art word contents into communication with one another and leads us to compare traditional art institutions and street-art contexts, in a time when these worlds seem to slowly get closer to each other.

      This paper aims to put forward street-art themes from an unusual point of view: while (apparently) they tend to dissociate from traditional art display settings, such as museums and galleries, they take on their role to enhance the value and profile of traditional cultural heritage, wishing to make street-art duly taken into account for its political, cultural and moral value.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus

Opciones de compartir

Opciones de entorno