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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part BS. Istanbul 2004
3. HERITAGE PERCEPTIONS AND APPROACHES
TO DOCUMENTATION
Our understanding of cultural heritage is expanding, and now
we believe that although Universal heritage values can be
shared, archaeological and historic sites, as well as living
traditions and other aspects of intangible heritage have value
because there is people that is giving them value. The
recognition of the human dimension of cultural heritage is
perhaps the most critical aspect of this new paradigm in
heritage conservation, which is the understanding of the
multiple values of cultural heritage and of the importance of
local communities in shaping the significance of this heritage.
This of course creates a difficult gap to be bridged, between a
rational and scientific approach to documentation and
conservation, and a shifting concept of significance based on
changing values and perceptions.
There are also other practical issues to take into consideration,
and they are presented in no particular order:
— the issue of cost of documentation: the wrong
perception is that documentation is expensive and a
luxury item, to be done only if there is enough time
and money available
— the idea that the use of electronic means improves
documentation. In reality electronic tools improve the
speed of data collection, not its quality, which
depends on the operators’ skills and experience, not
the tools
— the obsession with accuracy and precision, which is
often the cause for increase in costs without obtaining
real benefits
— the lack of training in documentation and survey
among heritage professionals, which causes either
documentation to be dropped or reduced in scale in
conservation projects, or on the contrary to be
allocated excessive resources and to become more
important than the conservation itself.
All this creates difficult operating conditions for the
documentation process, as it becomes unmanageable under
financial, human resources, and technical capabilities
parameters.
4. CIPA TODAY
The evolution of CIPA from a technical forum dedicated to the
photogrammetry of historic monuments to an organization that
debates theoretical and practical issues of documentation of
cultural heritage is a positive trend. In providing various forms
of assistance in identifying and selecting appropriate tools for
heritage documentation, CIPA offers the opportunity to
conservation professionals to compare and discuss methods and
approaches. The message that CIPA sends out today is that
there is no one size fits all solution, and that documentation
projects do not need to be technological displays in order to
achieve good results. So, while CIPA is rightly open to
exploring and testing new technologies, it is also dedicated to
the improvement of traditional and low cost methods. We
believe that it is this balanced approach to documentation and
its problems that makes CIPA a respected forum, demonstrated
also by the quality of its congresses. The fact that CIPA is an
international committee of both ICOMOS and ISPRS makes the
organization open to both a technical audience and one more
dedicated to the conservation. The ICOMOS audience was for
à long time intimidated by the technical and technological
Jargon displayed in the organization, but the recognition of this
841
gap and of the potential benefit of listening more carefully to
the questions and problems of the “conservators” has allowed
CIPA to grow out of its technical framework and improve its
image with the ICOMOS side of its audience.
5. CONCLUSION
All these are positive trends, but there is still work to be done to
improve outreach and the spreading of documentation
consciousness among heritage practitioners. As we said at the
beginning, many of the disasters affecting heritage today could
be avoided with more and better documentation of our cultural
heritage, thus the development of rapid and low-cost assessment
methods for cultural heritage are highly desirable and would
certainly increase the profile of our organization. In the same
direction would go the development of documentation methods
as part of risk preparedness in sites and museums. Besides
playing the role of an organization where ideas are compared
and discussed, CIPA could also increase its existing, but not
still completely developed role of an organization that can bring
together institutions to share knowledge and experience on
specific problems. The biggest challenge ahead however is
how to document sites and monuments not only in their
physical but also in their intangible aspects, and how to develop
meaningful ways to document “values” and feelings about a
place.
Through partnerships and parallel initiatives such as RecorDIM,
CIPA is demonstrating vitality and willingness to work with
heritage professionals and technical experts and we hope that
this positive trend will continue to bear its fruits.
The technology is however one part of the documentation and
conservation process, and most probably the easiest to solve.
Without the collective will and supporting local and
international legal power to implement these programs’ the task
ahead still remains difficult.