Heritage Days 2024 at the Institut national d'histoire de l'art and its library (INHA)

Published by Cécile de Sortiraparis, Rizhlaine de Sortiraparis, Laurent de Sortiraparis · Photos by Laurent de Sortiraparis · Published on July 22, 2024 at 06:46 p.m.
To mark the 41st Journées du Patrimoine (Heritage Days), the Institut national d'histoire de l'art invites you to discover a range of free tours and activities for the whole family on September 21 and 22, 2024. An opportunity to discover a building usually reserved for students and researchers.

For the 41st edition of the Journées du Patrimoine, we're off to theInstitut national d'histoire de l'art, which is offering tours and other events all weekend long on September 21 and 22, 2024. Restored by architect Henri Labrouste in the 19th century, the former imperial library invites you to discover its two spaces: the Labrouste room and the Colbert gallery. A wonderful visit for all lovers of libraries and historical monuments!

A true architectural masterpiece, the building has been listed as a historical monument since 1983, and reopened in 2016 after several years of restoration... Access to the building, usually reserved for art history students and researchers with a reader's card, is now open to the public on the occasion of these open days. By opening its doors, the INHA is offering the public the chance to discover its research facilities, which are usually closed to visitors, and to understand how the major issues surrounding images are approached across the discipline, and what tools art historians use to carry out their research.

Why not take advantage of this new edition of the Journées du Patrimoine (Heritage Days ) to discover this place that is exceptionally opening its doors to us? Discover the program below!

The program for the Journées du Patrimoine 2024 at the Institut national d'histoire de l'art (INHA):

Colbert Gallery

  • Symposium - Architecture of the Past: Inspiration for the Future
    Friday, September 20, 09:00, 14:00

    International symposium entitled "Architecture of the Past: Inspiration for the Future". The event, free on registration, will take place over two days on September 19 and 20, in Paris in the Salle Jullian at INHA (2 rue Vivienne, 75002).
    The aim of the event is to bring together practitioners and theoreticians from a variety of careers (archaeologists, historians, architects, urban planners, craftsmen, curators, restorers, etc.), whose work is representative of the diversity of built forms, and of interest to current and future environmental, social and economic issues.
    The Colloquium will be structured around 4 thematic sessions, each led by a moderator, and will include papers (15 minutes), posters (5 minutes) and keynote speakers (40 minutes). After the presentations, 30 minutes will be devoted to discussion and questions. At the end of the two-day colloquium, a cross-disciplinary debate on the adaptability of architectural practices and the complementarity of disciplines will bring the meeting to a close.
    The 4 themes that will be addressed:
    (1) Adaptation of architecture to environments;
    (2) Inspiration, research and development;
    (3) Perception, identity and heritage;
    (4) Community, actor, reflection and rehabilitation;
    DETAILED PROGRAMME: https: //eur-archal.pantheonsorbonne.fr/colloque-international-architecture-past-inspiration-future
    REGISTRATION LINK: https://forms.gle/BE2e5zfMu4m6crT47
    The Zoom link for the event (valid September 19 and 20): https://pantheonsorbonne.zoom.us/s/92936609688
    I - Description of themes
    Theme 1: Adapting architecture to environments
    Architectural solutions responding to geomorphological, climatic and environmental constraints. Case studies: Morocco, Egypt, Peru, Ecuador, Saudi Arabia, India.
    Theme 2: Inspiration, research and development
    Combining ancient know-how and contemporary construction techniques. Inspiration from vernacular architecture and biomimicry.
    Theme 3: Communities, players, reflection and rehabilitation
    Strategies of local communities to reconcile traditions and contemporary challenges. Human, economic and technical investments in building rehabilitation.
    Theme 4: Perception, identity and heritage
    Study of the perception of buildings between rejection, inspiration, reinterpretation and reappropriation. Construction of social and cultural identity between tradition and globalization.
    II - Organizing committee
    Alberto Brutto (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Università di Bologna, EUR ArChal, UMR 7041 ArScAn - GAMA)
    Valentin Loescher (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, EUR ArChal, UMR 7041 ArScAn - Aegean Protohistory)
    Clémentine Martal (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, EUR ArChal, UMR 8096 - ArchAm
    III - Conference Steering Committee
    Maddalena Achenza (Architect, Associate Professor, Cagliari University, Chairwoman ICOMOS International Scientific Committee on Earthen Architectural Heritage)
    Mounia Bouali (Architect, Assistant Professor, ENSA PVS, UMR 7218 LAVUE)
    Claire Cornu (Architect DPLG and urban planner DESS, REPS, FFPPS, SPS, ICOMOS, déléguée thématique (pierre sèche) Fondation du patrimoine)
    Andrea Gaucci (Archaeologist, Associate Professor, Università di Bologna)
    Sarra Kasri (Architect, Assistant Professor, Umons de Belgique)
    Maia Pomadère (Archaeologist, Assistant Professor, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, UMR 7041 ArScAn)
    Haris Procopiou (Archaeologist, Professor, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, UMR 7041 ArScAn, EUR ArChal)
    Nadya Rouizem Labied (Architect, Assistant Professor, ENSA PVS, UMR 3329 AUSser)
    Eleftheria Tsakanika (Civil Engineer, Associate Professor, National Technical University of Athens)



  • Presentation of the editions of the Institut national d'histoire de l'art
    September 21 and 22

    In the rotunda of the Galerie Colbert, visitors will be able to discover the latest works published by INHA.
    The Galerie Colbert's partners will be presenting their activities and answering all your questions about art history, heritage, research and the issues involved.



  • Self-guided tours or guided tours by students of archaeology, art history and heritage.
    September 21 and 22

    To mark the European Heritage Days, the two sites of the Institut national d'histoire de l'art, the Galerie Colbert, a former shopping arcade, and the prestigious Salle Labrouste, the library of the Institut national d'histoire de l'art, designed by architect Henri Labrouste, are open to visitors, either on their own or with a guided tour led by students of archaeology, art history and heritage. Visitors can discover the little-known history of the Galerie Colbert, a Parisian passageway. In the library, the public can admire the spectacular reading room with its ceramics and painted decor, the medallions decorated with gold leaf, the monumental caryatids and the pneumatic system installed in 1932.



  • Screening: 20 years, 20 images, a series of interviews
    September 21 and 22

    20 visual objects from the last 20 years, analyzed and commented on by 20 art historians in a series of interviews
    All images have a history, and all our histories are made up of images. Art history is a fascinating tool that enables us to read the world differently, through its many sensitive expressions. From architecture to fashion, painting, cinema and photography, the aim is to show that art historical research is interested in all sensitive and visual expressions. It speaks to us of our lives and our imaginations, in both their most prosaic and most unexpected dimensions. Art historians look back on 20 images that have marked the last 20 years, 20 videos that will be screened in the Colbert Gallery during the European Heritage Days.



  • Le pli de la lecture" workshop - Bibliothèque Charlotte Delbo
    Saturday, September 21, 1:30 p.m.

    The librarians at the Charlotte Delbo library (75002) are organizing workshops for children using folding techniques to create the shapes behind the words by recycling used books.
    From age 8.



  • Mini-conferences by doctoral students in art history and archaeology
    September 21 and 22

    Doctoral students from the Colbert Gallery's partner universities will also be taking the floor during the European Heritage Days. They will be presenting to the public, in a brief and lively format, their thesis topics and the methods they use on a daily basis for their research.



  • Le codex dont vous êtes le héros" workshop
    Saturday, September 21, 3:00 pm

    Write your own story by discovering the codes and symbols of Mexican pictographic manuscripts!
    Mesoamerican pictographic manuscripts, also known as "codexes", were largely destroyed by the Spanish during the Conquest in the 16th century, and very few have survived to the present day. Many codexes are books of sacred divination, but others recount the chronicles of great historical figures or the founding stories of certain peoples.
    Ages 15 and up
    Speakers:
    Marie Chosson (Director of INALCO's Americas Department)
    Students and alumni of INALCO's Diplôme de Langues et Civilisations de Mésoamérique: Emmanuel Augé, Diane Coutellier, Terry David, Marilou Renard, Camille Simon



  • Create your own livrimage" workshop in partnership with the Charlotte Delbo library
    Saturday, September 21, 3:30 p.m.

    In partnership with the EAC mission of the Institut national d'histoire de l'art, librarians at the Charlotte Delbo library (75002) are offering a workshop for children on books and art history. After discovering how a book is constructed, they will choose and describe the works of art of their choice. In this way, each and every one will participate in the creation of his or her own "livrimage".
    From 8 years of age.



  • Introduction to Mayan epigraphy" workshop
    Saturday, September 21, 4:30 p.m.

    Play the epigraphist's apprentice and discover how ancient Mayan rulers inscribed the beginning of their reign on stelae!
    In the pre-Hispanic Maya world, glyphic writing was a political instrument used to assert the power of the ruler. Epigraphists and archaeologists decipher these glyphs to learn more about the history of these ancient Mayan cities.
    Ages 15 and up
    Speakers:
    Marie Chosson (Director of the Americas Department at INALCO)
    Students and alumni of INALCO's Diplôme de Langues et Civilisations de Mésoamérique: Emmanuel Augé, Diane Coutellier, Terry David, Marilou Renard, Camille Simon



  • Shipwrecked sculptures: "Memory of circulation in the Mediterranean basin (3rd c. BC - 2nd c. AD)".
    Saturday, September 21, 5:45 p.m.

    "The sea is the greatest museum in the world", wrote Salomon Reinach, as the first discoveries drew attention to sculptures sunk beneath the waves during shipwrecks in antiquity. In recent years, discoveries have multiplied with the development of underwater excavation techniques. These works of art were transported in a variety of contexts, in response to various demands: spoils of war, trade, public or private commissions. The lecture will focus on these accidents of history, which shed light on the history of circulation and exchange by sea, as well as on tastes and power relations in the ancient Mediterranean.
    Speaker: François Queyrel (EPHE)



  • How to dress up your movie character
    Sunday, September 22, 11:00 a.m., 1:30 p.m.

    The Cin&Fil association offers a workshop on film costume. After reading a short scenario of adventure and exploration, participants will work in small groups to imagine how heroines and heroes could be dressed, made-up and styled to best express their universe and personalities. The program includes drawing, magazine cutting, paper collage and fabric sampling. Get creative and create your own inspiration board!
    The workshop is led by Aure Lebreton and Annelise Gavoille (IRCAV, Sorbonne Nouvelle)
    Cin&Fil is a research association dedicated to the promotion of cinema costume and its crafts.
    For 8-12 year-olds



  • My Master's in Art History in 180 seconds" competition
    Sunday, September 22, 2:00 p.m.

    It's one of the highlights of the program: in the Jacqueline Lichtenstein auditorium of the Galerie Colbert, 20 Master 2 students in art history and archaeology will have three minutes to present their research in a dedicated competition to an audience unfamiliar with the discipline. They must give a clear, engaging and stimulating presentation of their research in three minutes (180 seconds), making the complex subjects they have been working on for several months understandable to all. A jury of leading art historians will award prizes for the best presentations.



Library

  • Artistes et historiens d'art en voyage" exhibition
    September 21 and 22

    Whether painters or architects, archaeologists, amateurs or art historians, all travelers share a common destiny, including an attraction to escapism and travel. Exhibited during the European Heritage Days, the material traces left by these travelers (autograph letters, archival documents, drawings, prints, photographs) illustrate the diversity and richness of the heritage collections of the Bibliothèque de l'Institut national d'histoire de l'art.
    Not everyone travelled the world for the same reasons or for the same pretexts. While apprentice journeys complete the training of young artists, scientific or diplomatic archaeological expeditions involve the dissemination of knowledge through scholarly publications or dedicated media. But beyond these noble motives sometimes lurks a desire to escape, far from everyday life and social and family constraints. Whether imaginary or real, travel fosters this impulse towards faraway places, creating genuine sources of renewal and transmission of artistic practices.



  • Presentation of professions by teams from the Institut national d'histoire de l'art
    Saturday, September 21, 2:00 p.m.

    The exceptional opening of the library of the Institut national d'histoire de l'art during the European Heritage Days is an opportunity for the staff present, whether curators, storekeepers, restorers or researchers, to talk about their jobs and explain how the library works to the public.



Practical information

Dates and Opening Time
From September 21, 2024 to September 22, 2024

× Approximate opening times: to confirm opening times, please contact the establishment.

    Location

    58 Rue de Richelieu
    75002 Paris 2

    Route planner

    Access
    Metro line 3 "Quatre Septembre" or "Bourse" station

    Prices
    Free

    Official website
    www.inha.fr

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