Οι άχρηστοι στην Τουρκία καταστρέφουν τον αρχαιοελληνικό πολιτισμό +pics
Έρευνες ξεκίνησαν οι αρχές στη Μογγολία για τον βανδαλισμό (περί αυτού πρόκειται) πολύτιμων ψηφιδωτών από τους «υπεύθυνους» για τη συντήρηση.
Μοναδικής κατασκευής αριστουργήματα της στην Κιλικία, χάσανε τα χρώματα και τις λεπτομέρειές τους και κατάντησαν σχεδόν γελοίες απομιμήσεις...
Authorities
launch investigation after reports that priceless relics have undergone
a restoration which has distorted their features
A mosaic before (L) and after (R) restoration, in the Hatay Archaeology
Museum, Turkey. At least 10 mosaics were seriously damaged during
restoration, officials have said.
Photograph: STR/EPA
At least 10 priceless mosaics held in the Hatay Archaeology Museum in Turkey have been badly damaged during restoration, officials and craftsmen have said.
The RomanΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΡΕ ΤΡΟΜΠΕΣ mosaics, some of which date back to the second century,
include world-famous panels depicting the sacrifice of Isaac and another
of Narcissus. The museum in Turkey’s southern province of Hatay houses
one of the world’s largest collections of mosaics.
Authorities have launched an investigation following reports that
restoration has distorted the mosaics’ features and left them looking
markedly different from the valuable originals.
A mosaic before (L) and after (R) restoration, in the Hatay Archaeology Museum, Turkey. Photograph: Tamer Yazar/AP
The issue was first raised by a local craftsman, Mehmet Daşkapan, who
told a newspaper: “Valuable pieces from the Roman period have been
ruined. They have become caricatures of their former selves. Some are in
an especially poor condition and have lost their originality and value.
“The panel that I saw could not have been the original mosaic from
the second century. Some of its stones are missing, while others have
been misplaced, creating a discordant look.”
His concerns were echoed by Şefik Çirkin, a lawmaker from the
opposition Nationalist Movement party (MHP), who called the restored
work “a massacre of history” and blamed the Islamic-rooted ruling AKP
for “a bureaucratic scandal”.
A mosaic before (L) and after (R) restoration, in the Hatay Archaeology Museum, Turkey. Photograph: STR/EPA
An official from the ministry of culture confirmed that there had
been “erroneous practices” during the restoration, which he attributed
to the “adding of [mosaic] pieces” into the originals. He confirmed that
all restorations were on hold while the issue was being investigated.
However, the official also confirmed that the restorers had years of
experience, including the restoration of the renowned mosaics at Zeugma
Mosaic Museum in south-eastern Turkey.
This was also confirmed by Kenan Yurttagül, a former head of
Turkey’s monuments and museums general directorate, who told Hürriyet
newspaper that the issue was “in the phase of investigation and debate”.
Yurttagül said: “After reports are prepared, errors, if there are any,
will be reported and then fixed.”
A mosaic before (L) and after (R) restoration, in the Hatay Archaeology Museum, Turkey. Photograph: STR/EPA
The restorers have denied all claims of wrongdoing and argued that
the before and after images were manipulated in the Turkish press. A
member of the restoration team also argued that the erroneous stones and
modern varnished surface had in fact been added into the mosaic in the
1930s by a team of French restorers, using practices that have since
been outlawed.
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