Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 30

first rewind previous Page / 2 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  zbiory muzealne
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 2 next fast forward last
1
100%
EN
The paper is a contribution to the discussion concerning the issue of re-privatization of museum items. The authors acknowledge the question whether ordering of matters pertaining to the property ownership by means of re-privatizing and restoring the rights to their former owners constitutes a threat to the national heritage to be truly justified: will it not result in depleting Polish museums and libraries of the most precious items and enhance their uncontrolled selling abroad? The paper begins with a discussion of the notions of museum items and re-privatization. Then, the authors present the foundations of the nationalization process of property items of cultural heritage and the projects to date relating to their re-privatizing. They indicate that the degree of threat of their re-privatization depends on the chosen methods of re-privatization. Next, they discuss the problem of exporting of monuments abroad – the existing legal regulations and potential threats, including those relating to Poland’s belonging to the Schengen zone. The paper ends with final conclusions in which the authors state that in view of the fact that Poland’s membership in the European Union and its accession to the Schengen zone considerably impede extending effective control of export of works of art outside the country borders, re-privatization carried out in an improper manner can bring about a serious threat to the national heritage.
PL
Artykuł omawia dzieje obrazu Carla Friedricha Schulza (1796–1866) ze zbiorów Muzeum Poczty i Telekomunikacji we Wrocławiu. Dzieło nie było dotąd prezentowane publicznie ani też nie stanowiło przedmiotu zainteresowania badawczego naukowców. Do czasu napisania niniejszego artykułu pozostawało nierozpoznane zarówno proweniencyjnie, jak też w katalogach dzieł sztuki zgromadzonych w polskich zbiorach artystycznych. Niniejszy artykuł jest pierwszą prezentacją obrazu Schulza oraz efektem dociekań i pracy badawczej kustoszy muzeum nad ustaleniem proweniencji i atrybucji nieznanego dotąd dzieła.
EN
The aim of this article is to introduce the activities of museums and collections located in the structure of Polish higher education institutions. The analysis is based on concrete examples of academic units operating today. The authors distinguish several categories of museums according to their location, among them university and departmental museums. The second criterion is the organisational formula, in which the authors indicate, apart from museums, also centres and history interpretation units. Using archaeological, medical and natural history collections as examples, they describe similarities and differences in the way they work with resources. The article is also an attempt to start a discourse aimed at drawing attention to the potential lying in such units, the mission and duty of which is to preserve, secure, develop and make available for scientific and didactic purposes the heritage of the university and the history of science. The authors also refer to the legal situation of the university museum units and regulations, which the organisers may use when creating and conducting activities related to the collection and processing of tangible and intangible academic heritage, which is part of the world’s scientific heritage.
EN
The article discusses selected elements of traditional Pyrzyce costume, archive records and an oil painting by August Ludwig Most that survived in the collection housed in the Department of Ethnography of Pomerania at the National Museum in Szczecin. The painter’s sketchbook drawings held in the Department of Old Art were also taken into account, showing the look of the costume in the 1930s and 1940s.
first rewind previous Page / 2 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.