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Special topics in art history
Course: Special topics in art history > Unit 1
Lesson 7: Documenting and protecting cultural heritage- Diarna: documenting the places of a vanishing Jewish history
- A Landmark Decision: Penn Station, Grand Central, and the architectural heritage of NYC
- Frameworks for cultural heritage protection: from ancient writing to modern law
- A race against time: manuscripts and digital preservation
- Provenance and the Antiquities Market
- Saving Torcello, an ancient church in the Venetian Lagoon
- A Renaissance masterpiece nearly lost in war: Piero della Francesca, The Resurrection
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Saving Torcello, an ancient church in the Venetian Lagoon
Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, Torcello, founded 639, reconstructed 864 and 1008, an ARCHES video.
speakers: Melissa Conn, Director Venice Office, Save Venice, and Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(gentle piano music) - [Beth] I'm standing in the
Church of Santa Maria Assunta on the island of Torcello with Melissa Conn from Save Venice. We're about half an hour water
taxi ride from Venice proper in the oldest structure
in the Venetian lagoon. - [Melissa] Torcello
was consider by Ruskin the Mother of Venice. This was the first area where
the early Venetian settlers came from the mainland to
escape the Barbarian invasions, but this is the swampiest part and so it's understandable
why Venice shifts to what we know as Venice proper and thrived during the Renaissance, but Torcello is traced back to the Byzantine era and earlier. - [Beth] It's painful
to think about the water that was here so recently and the imminent danger to the church, and without the work that Save Venice and others have done over the years, we might lose that historical record. - [Melissa] Salt is our
biggest enemy at this point. The salts have increased
now since the floods of November of 2019 when the
church had over a foot of water in it on several occasions. And so that increased the
salt that was already present. It corrodes stone, it
seeps up through the soil and up through the very floor
itself, which is also ancient. It comes up through the sea water and is also in the atmosphere, and then when the water evaporates, the salt crystals remain on
the surface of the stonework. It also swells as it dries. The salt creates the rise in the pavements and it disintegrates the bricks which then weakens the structure that hold the mosaics in place. And so a lot of our work is desalinating, and so you have to work brick by brick to make sure the bricks are
stable and not too full of salt. But you don't want to
replace too many bricks because you don't wanna new wall. - [Beth] And I think some people might ask why not have a new wall,
why preserve those bricks? - [Melissa] It's really
an incredible structure here on Torcello, and we've seen the
evolution of the building as each wall has different fragments, and then some of the
stonework is even older because it comes from a Roman
settlement on the mainland, and so you have such a mix, and that's very important. - [Beth] It gives us a sense
of the building through time, and that's precious knowledge. - [Melissa] In the 19th century, people had no qualms about
rebuilding and changing and creating new elements, and now you want to preserve as much of the original elements, make those original elements stable and worthy of continuing in the future. Save Venice was first involved
in Torcello in the 1980s in a campaign with other
international committees to preserve the mosaics. Now Save Venice has returned to Torcello as part of an anniversary project to celebrate Save
Venice's 50th anniversary, and we have adopted two
apses which have mosaics that date from the 9th
to the 11th century. - [Beth] If you work on the
mosaics, you have to work on the architectural fabric
of the church itself. - [Melissa] Absolutely, our
work now entails the inner walls of the mosaics, also the outer wall which
supports the mosaic, and that's most in danger because
the brickwork is crumbling from the salts, the
mortar is disintegrating. - [Beth] The other thing
that we can think about is the layers, the accretions of history. So we look at that beautiful
marble below the mosaic. Part of it has been removed where we see an even older fresco. So there are constant
decisions to be made. - [Melissa] Save Venice works closely with the Italian Ministry of Culture, the Superintendency of
Fine Arts and Monuments, as well as architects and art
historians and conservators, and you have to decide
if you remove something, you know, which era are
you going to retain. In conservation today, we
don't eliminate anything. There are the fresco fragments
from probably 11th century. We're going to remove
some other marble sheeting to see if there are more fragments, but chances are then that marble sheeting will be put back up. - [Beth] The deep faith of the people who lived here is so
evident in the mosaics that Save Venice is
working hard to preserve. This golden apse with Mary
holding the Christ child as our sole focus, and then on the archway above, you see the Angel Gabriel on
the left and Mary on the right at the moment of the Annunciation, the moment when God is made flesh, the moment when mankind can be saved. - [Melissa] Well, Torcello
is very important was that the Maria Assunta was
the most important church in this whole area and Mary
is a very important figure. The Annunciation, a very
important interpretation because March 25th, 421, is the
day of the historic founding of the city of Venice. That's also the feast
day of the Annunciation. - [Beth] And then on the opposite wall we have another fabulous mosaic, this one incredibly complicated. Subjects ranging from Christ
taking Adam and Eve out hell, a scene of the Last Judgment, of Christ and Mary and John
surrounded by the Apostles, the river that flows down from Christ in that lovely mandorla, the angels awakening the
dead from their graves, the tortures of hell on Christ's left, on the right, the blessed in heaven, and you walked in and out
through this west wall of this church, and Mary in the center,
just above that doorway, holding her hands out as
though showing us on one side the angel and on the
other side the demons, reminding us that on the day
of our death we will be judged. And there are side chapels
and there we see an image of Christ the Pantokrator,
Christ the all-powerful judge who judges all souls. - [Melissa] What we call
the Diakonikon apse, and the Christ the Pantokrator mosaic has the Angel Gabriel
and the Angel Michael, and then you have the angels
holding up the Lamb of God and all the various beasts and flowers. Some of the floral
imagery relates directly to the plants that are found
in the Venetian lagoon. - [Beth] That plant life, that
sense of greenery, of birds, of life that we see remind us of paradise. The church is a place where one could imagine heaven on earth and I can't imagine a more
important place to be saved. We're very grateful for the
work that Save Venice is doing and for your time today, thank you. (gentle piano music)