Cultural Preservationist Sheds Light on Threatened World Heritage Sites

The idea of preserving artwork during times of war was brought into the public consciousness by a recent movie called “The Monuments Men.” The movie is based on a true story about an international team of experts who saved works of art from the Nazis during World War II. 

 

There is a modern-day version of that story playing out right now in the Middle East and an American cultural preservationist says everyone should be concerned about what Islamic State militants are doing to destroy the world’s common cultural heritage. 

 

Corine Wegener

Corine Wegener is a retired major with 21 years of service in the U.S. Army Reserve. She played a vital role in helping the National Museum of Iraq recover from the looting that took place during the Gulf War. 

“I came home and realized there’s just not a lot for the disaster response for cultural heritage around the world. There just aren’t too many organizations that are really equipped to do that kind of work,” Wegener said.

 

Now Wegener works with a group whose mission is to protect cultural and artistic treasures around the world from conflict and natural disasters.

 

Much of that effort today is focused on Iraq and Syria, where Islamic State extremists are destroying artifacts that date back to the dawn of civilization. Wegener says that even though what’s happening in the Middle East seems far away, everyone should be concerned about it.

 

“The heritage of ancient Mesopotamia, the land of the first cities, some of the first writing in the world — this is part of our shared cultural heritage,” she said. “If you write, or if you read languages, this is part of your cultural heritage, too. And what right do these people have to destroy it?”

 

Wegener will speak at West Virginia University’s Creative Arts Center at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 17, about efforts to protect cultural heritage sites in the Middle East and around the world.

 

Her talk is part of the activities celebrating the opening of the Art Museum of WVU

 

WVU Gifted Social Justice-Inspired Art

50 years ago this month, in March of 1965, armed policemen attacked peaceful civil rights demonstrators attempting to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. The incident became known as Bloody Sunday. 17 marchers were hospitalized and 50 more were treated for injuries.

An African American artist, Jacob Lawrence, depicted a scene on the bridge. That work of art is among the pieces being gifted to West Virginia University’s new art museum in Morgantown.

WVU alumnus Harvey Peyton and his wife Jennifer will present “Confrontation at the Bridge” at a public event this week in the university’s new art museum. The museum’s director Joyce Ice said that “the Peytons have given a number of works of art to the Museum that speak to issues of social and racial injustice,” and that this work of art in particular contributes to the ongoing national dialog on race and police brutality.

Harvey Peyton says he’s dedicated collecting art to the idea that visual art and the concept of social justice should go hand in hand. The Peyton’s also donated a dozen works of art from their personal collection in 2013, along with a financial gift of $75,000 for the new Art Museum.

Currently, the new building in Morgantown is in the process of being completed. The ceremony is set for 2p.m., Thursday, March 26th.

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