Alhambra Palace - Granada
Palacio de la Alhambra - Granada

La Segunda Guerra Mundial se cobró más vidas que cualquier otra guerra de la historia y destruyó una gran cantidad de bienes culturales que definían a las comunidades en las que se construyeron. Esto incluyó muchas ciudades históricas de Europa.

Tras el conflicto, el mundo necesitó una institución técnica dedicada a preservar, proteger y restaurar lo que la humanidad había destruido. Como respuesta, la UNESCO creó el ICCROM y eligió Roma como su sede. Siendo cuna del ICCROM y beneficiaria de sus primeros esfuerzos, Europa es una región con la que la organización siempre ha tenido estrechos vínculos y que también ha desempeñado un papel importante en el sector de la conservación.

Sesenta años después, la humanidad se enfrenta una vez más a acontecimientos a gran escala y catastróficos: desplazamientos masivos de personas, conflictos arraigados, endurecimiento del clima. Todos ellos ponen en tela de juicio la preservación del patrimonio cultural. Europa se encuentra de nuevo en posición de beneficiarse y servir a los esfuerzos del ICCROM. Esto se debe no sólo a que estas fuerzas demográficas, políticas y climáticas están actuando dentro o cerca de sus fronteras, sino también a que Europa es capaz y, por tanto, responsable de desempeñar un papel más universal en la realización del cambio.

El ICCROM está deseoso de comprometerse con una Europa que aproveche todos sus recursos, desde la experiencia y los conocimientos diplomáticos hasta el modelo de sociedades inclusivas y comprometidas. Este continente puede tomar la iniciativa para integrar verdaderamente a los refugiados que vienen en busca de seguridad, al acoger las culturas que traen e incorporarlas a las propias. Este continente puede mostrar cómo el cuidado de la cultura es el cuidado de las personas, ya que el patrimonio congrega y genera cohesión, comprensión e incluso oportunidades económicas. Y cuando Europa extienda esta labor más allá de sus fronteras, podrá demostrar que los beneficios de la diplomacia cultural convierten a las naciones en más estables, inclusivas y justas, con el fin de obtener un mundo mejor.

Temas destacados

Interpares meeting

InterPARES Trust Transnational Team Meeting

ICCROM is hosting a meeting of the InterPARES Trust (ITrust) Transnational Team. The meeting gathers experts in archival science, records management, diplomatics, information technology and digital forensics working in international organizations, as well as members of ITrust Team Europe, and archivists from other international organizations based in Rome and Florence.

PCA

Promoting People-Centred Approaches

ICCROM is pleased to announce the commencement of its first course on Promoting People-Centred Approaches: Engaging Communities in the Conservation of Nature and Culture (PCA15).

Nieves-Valentin

ICCROM Council Member wins prestigious conservation award

Nieves Valentin, an ICCROM council member since 2013, has been awarded the Spanish National Prize for Restoration and Conservation of Cultural Heritage 2015, granted by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport.

Stone course closure

Stone Course 2015 closure

On Thursday 2 July, twenty mid-career professionals completed their training at the joint ICCROM-Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) course focusing on theoretical and practical aspects of stone conservation. The Stone Course participants spent approximately 720 hours learning about stone characterization, consolidation, conservation, structural repair, graffiti removal and non-destructive...

2nd re-org

2nd RE-ORG Canada (Atlantic) launches

Following a 2011 resolution adopted by ICCROM Member States on the reorganization of museum storage, in 2013 ICCROM launched a large-scale call for partners to implement RE-ORG projects worldwide. More than 40 Member States showed interested in the initiative.

Re org belgium

RE-ORG Belgium Launches

Following a 2011 resolution adopted by ICCROM Member States on the reorganization of museum storage, in 2013 ICCROM launched a large-scale call for partners to implement RE-ORG projects worldwide. More than 40 Member States showed interested in the initiative, including the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA) in Brussels, Belgium. Now, in collaboration with the Flemish interface...

L.Mora restoring Canaletto

Laura Mora (1923 – 2015)

Laura Sbordoni Mora, famed paintings and mural paintings conservator, has died in Rome. She was 92 years old. A frequent collaborator and permanent consultant of ICCROM, she was a chief restorer at the Italian Istituto Centrale del Restauro (ICR), active in restoration over a period of more than 50 years, and was also my mentor, colleague and friend.

Stone group

Participant Voices: insights and impressions of the Stone Course

As we move into the seventh week of the International Course on Stone Conservation, participants are spending more time together, extending their knowledge and strengthening new friendships. They are currently travelling through Italy, visiting the World Heritage sites of Florence, Pisa, Parma and Venice. They have studied traditional carving techniques at a sculpture studio in Carrara and visited...

First aid

Protecting heritage amidst an unfolding crisis

A group of 20 cultural heritage professionals – archaeologists, archivists, and architects – arrived on the scene to assess the damage to a World Heritage Site. Tensions between the two countries that border the site had escalated into a violent protest and a bomb blast had gone off directly next to the historic structure. Artifacts of all kinds were scattered under rubble and ash.

Course on Stone Conservation

Course on Stone Conservation begins in Rome

For the nineteenth time since 1976 a group of mid-career professionals from 20 different countries are gathering for the International Course on Stone Conservation co-organized by ICCROM in partnership with the Getty Conservation Institute. The Non-Catholic Cemetery in Rome will be hosting the field activities throughout the course and YoCoCu will provide assistance during lab exercises.