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Wyświetlanie 1-4 z 4
Tytuł:
Konserwacja Wawelu w świetle doktryn konserwatorskich
The conservation of Wawel castle in the light of conservation doctrines
Autorzy:
Stępień, Piotr M.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/538866.pdf
Data publikacji:
2009
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
Wawel
prace konserwatorskie i restauratorskie na Wawelu
konserwacja Wawelu
prace na Wzgórzu Wawelskim
studium restauracji zamku
projekt restauracji katedry
Sławomir Odrzywolski
regotycyzacja prezbiterium
Zygmunt Hendel
doktryny konserwatorskie na Wawelu
Adolf Szyszko-Bohusz
prof. Witold Minkiewicz
prof. Alfred Majewski
koncepcje prac konserwatorskich na Wawelu
prof. Jan Ostrowski
Opis:
The article analyses the conservation and restoration conducted from the third quarter of the nineteenth century on Wawel Hill, both within the royal residence complex and the cathedral, from the viewpoint of the then prevailing and present-day conservation doctrines. The first pioneering study of the restoration of the royal castle, prepared by Tomasz Pryliński in 1881-1882, must be highly assessed also as regards the current conservation method. On the other hand, the project of the restoration of the cathedral proposed by Sławomir Odrzywolski in 1886 still contained numerous elements of stylistic purism. In the course of its realisation it was considerably modified by a limitation of the re-Gothicisation, a preservation of the majority of the historical strata and an introduction of modern elements (Art Nouveau). The project of the restoration of the castle presented by Zygmunt Hendel in 1908 became the topic of a discussion in which diverse stands were represented by Max Dvořak, the chief conservator of historical monuments in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, and Professor Stanislaw Tomkowicz, chairman of the Castle Restoration Committee. Continuing the ideas launched by Alois Riegel, Dvořak was in favour of strictly comprehended conservation, while Tomkowicz defended the idea of scientific restoration. The outcome of the discussion was a compromise favourable for Wawel Hill, entailing a resignation from controversial reconstruction proposals but not from the actual restoration of the royal residence. In 1916-1939 the restoration of the castle was continued by Adolf Szyszko-Bohusz, whose specific approach was based more on artistic creation. Today, his realisations already possess a certain historical value and deserve to be subjected to conservation protection on their own merit. Their essential novelty consisted of arranging two archaeological- -architectural reservations. Out of for four conceptions pertaining to the whole Hill (1917, 1919, 1939, 1946) Szyszko-Bohusz or his successors implemented the best elements. Fortunately for Wawel Hill, they did not realise plans for a Pantheon and an amphitheatre, which cannot be favourably judged from the viewpoint of conservation doctrine. After the Second World War conservators resigned from these plans and under the supervision of Witold Minkiewicz and Alfred Majewski initiated, i.a. work on mediaeval walls in the western and southern part of Wawel Hill. The range of the reconstruction was distinctly limited in comparison with the conceptions expounded by Szyszko-Bohusz, thus expressing the transformations of the conservation doctrine of the period. In 2008 a positive opinion about those realisations was reflected in its entry into a register of historical monuments as a “conservation document”. Modern elements of exposition arrangements introduced into the Treasury, the Armoury and the exhibition “The lost Wawel” are distinct from the authentic substance, a solution that reflects a clear-cut impact of the doctrine recorded in the Charter of Venice. Complex conservation, comprising the next stage of work conducted on Wawel Hill, had been initiated in 1990 by the present-day Director of the Royal Castle on Wawel Hill and Conservator of Historical Monuments on Wawel Hill – Professor Jan Ostrowski. The basic premises of these undertakings are contained in the Statute of the Royal Castle on Wawel Hill, which defines both the function of the Castle complex as a museum- -historical residence and the trend of conservation: “the preservation of the historical substance of monuments belonging to the Castle”. “Conservation” should, however, be comprehended as “conservation- -restoration”, since present-day activities should supplement those of the predecessors and not negate them. Such a continuation of earlier initiatives included the recreation of the surface of the arcade courtyard, the recreation of the historical crowing of Lubranka, the completion of the conservation- -restoration of the Sandomierz bastion, the architectural correction of the elevation of the Royal Kitchens (no. 5), the recreation of the royal gardens and the revalorisation of the complex of Gothic houses, i.e. building no. 7. An essential element in embarking upon conservation decisions is a valorisation of the historical strata, which includes also the results of earlier conservation. The negative opinion about the nineteenth- century introduction of barracks in the royal palace complex is maintained, but Austrian fortifications extant up to this day have been recognised as an element subjected to protection. Redesigning introduced during the Nazi occupation, fortunately not extensive, has also been negatively assessed. The principles applied in reference to the outcome of previous conservation assumed their preservation as historical values unless they collide with the fundamental purpose of the presentation of a historical royal residence, i.e. falsify its image or damage its historical substance. In such cases, corrections are advised, as exemplified by the exit from the castle to the royal gardens and a new arrangement of the reservation in the west wing of the castle.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2009, 1; 83-100
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
ZAMEK CZORSZTYN ZABYTKOWA RUINA W PARKU NARODOWYM
CZORSZTYN CASTLE HISTORICAL RUIN IN A NATIONAL PARK
Autorzy:
Stępień, Piotr M.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/538794.pdf
Data publikacji:
2005
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
Zamek Czorsztyn
zabytkowa ruina
warownia
Baszta Baranowskiego
Park Narodowy w Pieninach
dziedzictwo kulturowe
uroczysko
zabezpieczenie ruin
Alfred Majewski
Zieleniec
Opis:
Researchers have acknowledged that the oldest fortress on the site of the present-day castle was built during the third quarter of the thirteenth century and became known as “Wronin”. The castle named “Czorsztyn”, expanded and redesigned upon numerous occasions starting with the fourteenth century, played the part of a custom house, the seat of the office of a starosta not associated with the castletown, and a royal residence located next to an important route to Hungary. In 1629-1643 starosta Jan Baranowski, the count of Jastrzębiec, basically redesigned the object. The downfall of the castle began with its devastation in 1734-1735, and final collapse was caused by a fire which broke out in 1790. From that time on, the castle remained a ruin. This was the state in which it was discovered by nineteenth-century tourists and artists, becoming part of the Polish Romantic tradition. Attempts at preserving the ruins were made already during the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century by the owners of the castle, members of the Drohojowski family. A natural reserve was created in 1921 after rare (endemic) species of plants were found amidst the ruins. During the 1950s limited preservation work was conducted after the monument was taken over by the State Treasury. Changes in the surrounding environment caused by the construction of an artificial water reservoir made it necessary to embark upon wider conservation undertakings, realised since 1992 by the present-day administrator of the monument, i. e. the Pieniński National Park, according to projects by Piotr M. Stępień, an architect, and Dr. Stanisław Karczmarczyk, an engineer. The basic conservation premise accepted by all the variants and stages of the project is to preserve the characteristic silhouette of the ruins of Czorsztyn Castle in view of its above mentioned role played in Romantic tradition and connections with the protected landscape of the Pieniny Mts. The process of securing relics uncovered in the course of research and opening the ruins to visitors calls for the introduction of roofs, stairs and gangplanks within the object. From the viewpoint of construction, the basic method of protection proved to be the recreation of selected elements of the historical ceilings, arches, etc., supplemented by means of injections and roof bolting in the case of threatened fragments of the walls. The author lists the reasons and consequences of resorting to this particular method. Heretofore efforts have managed to maintain the accepted conservation premises. The correctness of the selected conservation trend is confirmed by the large numbers of visitors and their approval for the object. By using the example of Czorsztyn, the author analysed the conservation of historical ruins, claiming that the threats posed to historical ruins include the doctrine of non-intervention and unhampered fantasy. As a rule, a radically conceived principle of nonintervention signifies consent to the annihilation of the historical ruin in the near future. A similar threat is posed by reconstruction which enters into the domain of fantasy, unsupported by iconography or the outcome of architectural research. By restoring the utilitarian and technical value of the given object, such reconstruction destroys its historical merits, sometimes irreversibly. A wide field of professional solutions located between those two radical attitudes, makes it possible to preserve an object without losing any of its historical qualities.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2005, 1; 5-28
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Dokonania konserwatorskie prof. Alfreda Majewskiego w Krakowie
Autorzy:
Wójcik-Łużycki, A.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/217408.pdf
Data publikacji:
2007
Wydawca:
Stowarzyszenie Konserwatorów Zabytków
Tematy:
Majewski Alfred
konserwator
konserwacja zabytków
rewaloryzacja
Kraków
zamki Małopolski
conservator
conservation of monuments
revaluation
Malopolska castles
Opis:
Powszechnie znany z inicjowania i przeprowadzenia rewaloryzacji szeregu zamków małopolskich (m.in. Pieskowa Skała, Wiśnicz, Krasiczyn, Baranów Sandomierski, Przecław, Niedzica, Sucha Beskidzka, Ujazd) prof. dr hab. inż. arch. Alfred Majewski (1907-1998), absolwent Politechniki Lwowskiej, którego początki pracy na rzecz ochrony czołowych polskich zabytków architektury wiążą się z jego rodzinnymi stronami i okresem międzywojennym, w roku 1947 trafił do Krakowa, by związać się z królewskim miastem i wzgórzem wawelskim do końca życia. Początkowo Majewski objął funkcję zastępcy dyrektora Kierownictwa Odnowienia Zamku Królewskiego na Wawelu (dalej: KOZK) prof. Witolda Minkiewicza, by od 1951 roku aż do przejścia na emeryturę w roku 1983 zostać szefem tej najstarszej polskiej firmy konserwatorskiej.
Widely known for initiating and carrying out a series of locks restoration of Malopolska (including Pieskowa Rock, Wisnicz, Krasiczyn, rams Sandomierz, Przeclaw, Niedzica, dry Beskid, Ujazd) prof. dr hab. Eng. architect Alfred Majewski (1907-1998), a graduate of the Technical University of Lviv, the origins of which work for the protection of the leading Polish architectural landmarks associated with his family and the period between the parties, in 1947 came to Krakow to tie up with the royal town and Wawel Hill the end of life. Initially, Majewski took the position of Deputy Director of Management Renewal Wawel Castle (the goat) prof. Witold Minkiewicz that since 1951 until his retirement in 1983 to become head of the oldest Polish company conservator.
Źródło:
Wiadomości Konserwatorskie; 2007, 21; 96-101
0860-2395
2544-8870
Pojawia się w:
Wiadomości Konserwatorskie
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
To już 10 lat...
It has been 10 years...
Autorzy:
Wójcik-Łużycki, A.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/217853.pdf
Data publikacji:
2008
Wydawca:
Stowarzyszenie Konserwatorów Zabytków
Tematy:
Majewski Alfred
zamek
konserwator
architekt
castle
conservator
architect
Opis:
W maju bieżącego roku minęła 10 rocznica śmierci prof. Alfreda Majewskiego, najwybitniejszego architekta-konserwatora zamków polskich. Po studiach na Wydziale Architektury Politechniki Lwowskiej, w 1933 roku rozpoczął rewaloryzację zamków w Olesku, Tarnopolu i Zbarażu (obecnie Ukraina). Po II wojnie światowej zamieszkał w Krakowie, gdzie w latach 1951-1983 był dyrektorem Kierownictwa Odnowienia Zamku Królewskiego na Wawelu, instytucji powołanej w 1905 roku dla przeprowadzenia rewaloryzacji najcenniejszego zespołu zabytkowego Polski. W ciągu 32 lat pracy A. Majewski nie tylko dokończył konserwację zamku królewskiego na Wawelu, ale także prowadził prace konserwatorskie w licznych zamkach na terenie Polski południowej, m.in. w Pieskowej Skale, Baranowie Sandomierskim, Suchej Beskidzkiej, Wiśniczu, Niedzicy, Czorsztynie, Dębnie, Przecławiu i Ujeździe. Odrestaurował także jeden z najstarszych i najcenniejszych budynków uniwersyteckich Europy - gotycki gmach Collegium Maius, obecnie pełniący rolę siedziby Muzeum Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. W latach 1972-1974 pełnił funkcję Generalnego Konserwatora Zabytków. Równolegle do pracy zawodowej Alfred Majewski prowadził działalność naukową będąc profesorem, a także dziekanem Wydziału Architektury Politechniki Krakowskiej. Prof. Alfred Majewski był współzałożycielem ICOMOS, a także wiceprezydentem IBI.
In May 2008, we celebrated the 10th anniversary of the death of Professor Alfred Majewski, the most outstanding architect and conservator of Polish castles. After graduating from the Faculty of Architecture of Lvov Polytechnic, in 1933 he began the restoration of castles in Olesko, Tarnopol and Zbaraż (present-day Ukraine). After World War II, he moved to Krakow where, from 1951 to 1983, he was the president of the Board for the Restoration of the Wawel Royal Castle, an institution which came into being in 1905 to restore the most precious monument complex in Poland. During 32 years of his work, A. Majewski not only completed the process of conservation of the Royal Wawel Castle in Krakow, but also conducted conservation work in numerous castles all over the area of southern Poland, including Pieskowa Skala, Baranow Sandomierski, Sucha Beskidzka, Wi.nicz, Niedzica, Czorsztyn, Dębno, Przecław and Ujazd. He also restored one of the oldest and the most valuable university buildings in Europe - the Gothic edifice of Collegium Maius, currently serving as the main seat of the of the Jagiellonian University Museum in Krakow. From 1972 to 1974 he was the General Landmark Conservator. Simultaneously with professional work, Alfred Majewski developed his scientific activity as he was a Professor and the Dean of the Faculty of Architecture in Krakow Polytechnic. Professor Alfred Majewski was the co-founder of ICOMOS, as well as he vice-president of IBI.
Źródło:
Wiadomości Konserwatorskie; 2008, 23; 157-159
0860-2395
2544-8870
Pojawia się w:
Wiadomości Konserwatorskie
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-4 z 4

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