Beazley Inspirational Landscapes as World Heritage

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    Inspirational Landscapes as World Heritage: Problems of Identification and

    Management

    by

    Olwen Beazley

    Centre for Cross Cultural Research, Australian National University, Australia

    I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud

    I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o'er vales and hills,

    When all at once I saw a crowd,

    A host, of golden daffodils;

    Beside the lake, beneath the trees,

    Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

    Continuous as the stars that shine

    And twinkle on the milky way,

    They stretched in never-ending line

    Along the margin of a bay:

    Ten thousand saw I at a glance,Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

    The waves beside them danced; but they

    Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:

    A poet could not but be gay,

    In such a jocund company:

    I gazed--and gazed--but little thought

    What wealth the show to me had brought:

    For oft, when on my couch I lie

    In vacant or in pensive mood,

    They flash upon that inward eye

    Which is the bliss of solitude;

    And then my heart with pleasure fills,

    And dances with the daffodils.

    William Wordsworth 1804

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    Introduction:

    The landscape of the Lake District in northern England inspired the English poet William

    Wordsworth to write this and other poems. Should this artistic production, or any artistic

    production by a celebrated artist, inspired by the beauty of a landscape, be a reason for the

    inclusion of such a landscape on the World Heritage List and if so, why?

    As part of their long-term management and international recognition, the stewardship of

    cultural landscapes that posses outstanding universal value, will often include their

    nomination to UNESCOs World Heritage List. Many will be included for their physical,

    material values but some may be proposed for inclusion because of their non-material,

    intangible heritage values.

    In 1992, the World Heritage Committee identified three categories of cultural landscapes that

    could subsequently be included on the World Heritage List. One of these categories was that

    of associative cultural landscapes:

    The inclusion of such landscapes on the World Heritage List is justifiable by virtue of

    the powerful religious, artistic or cultural associations of the natural element rather

    than material cultural evidence, which may be insignificant or even absent (UNESCO

    2000 para 39,iii)

    To date, the most widely recognised form of an associative cultural landscape is one that has

    spiritual associations, such as the dreaming landscape of Uluru Kata-Tjuta, formerly known

    as Ayres Rock, in Australia. A less obvious subset of the associative cultural landscape are,

    what are now commonly referred to in World Heritage circles as, inspirational landscapesi.e. an associative cultural landscape that is justifiable for inclusion on the List by virtue of its

    artistic or cultural associations.1

    Although there has been the facility for including inspirational landscapes on the World

    Heritage List since 1992, none have yet been nominated to, or included on, it. The absence of

    inspirational landscapes on the List may point to the inherent difficulties in the identification

    1 This term evolved from the Australia ICOMOS and UNESCO Asia-Pacific Regional Workshop on AssociativeCultural Landscapes, held at the Sydney Opera House and the Blue Mountains in Australia in April 1995.

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    and management of this type of cultural landscape through existing World Heritage

    mechanisms. It is these issues that will be explored in this paper.

    Outline of Paper:

    There are three major objectives of this paper. Firstly, to establish what is meant - within the

    remit of the World Heritage Convention and the Operational Guidelines for the

    Implementation of the World Heritage Convention (Operational Guidelines) (UNESCO 2000)

    - by the concept of inspirational landscapes. Secondly, to discuss the theoretical and

    methodological problems in identifying inspirational landscapes for inclusion on the World

    Heritage List and thirdly, to consider the problems of monitoring and managing the intangible

    cultural heritage values ofinspirational landscapes included on the List in the future.

    Inspirational Landscapes as World Heritage:

    In 1972, UNESCO adopted The Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural

    and Natural Heritage, (UNESCO 1972) the World Heritage Convention (the Convention).

    Under the definition of sites, Article 1 of the Convention accommodates the inscription of

    cultural landscapes on the World Heritage List:

    works of man or the combined works of nature and man, and areas including

    archaeological sites which are of outstanding universal value from the historical,

    aesthetic, ethnological or anthropological point of view (UNESCO 1972)

    It is the aesthetic value referred to in this article that is important to the identification of

    associative inspirational landscapes. Cultural criterion (vi) is the World Heritage criterion

    that is used to identify non-material, associative, intangible heritage values of places on the

    List:

    (vi) be directly or tangibly associated with events or living traditions, with ideas, or

    with beliefs, with artistic and literary works of outstanding universal significance

    (the Committee considers that this criterion should justify inclusion in the List only in

    exceptional circumstances and in conjunction with other criteria cultural or natural)

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    (UNESCO 2000)2

    What is a World Heritage Inspirational Landscape?

    The Oxford English Dictionary definition of inspiration is:

    b. gen.A breathing in or infusion of some idea, purpose, etc. into the mind; the suggestion,

    awakening, or creation of some feeling or impulse, esp. of an exalted kind (Simpson 2004).

    Thus, inspirational landscapes can be said to be those places associated with positive and

    inspiring aesthetic or cultural perceptions of a place and experiences derived from that place

    (Australian Heritage Commission 2002).

    Inspirational landscapesare included on the World Heritage List not because of their material

    heritage or natural values but because of their non-material, intangible cultural heritage

    values. Intangible heritage value is an ascribed value that is related to an association with a

    place. It is the special connections that exist between people and a place and the meanings

    that people attribute to a place; this can be related to a spiritual association (ICOMOS 1999,

    para 1.15) The ascribed values ofinspirational landscapes are dependant on their association

    with, what the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu (Bourdieu 1993) would call, a cultural

    production, in other words, an art form. This art form is associated with, and been inspired

    by, an identifiable landscape. In the narrowest interpretation such a cultural production would

    relate to paintings or poetry but in its widest sense could include film, television, literature,

    photography, music etc.

    Inspirational landscapes are identified because of the powerfulartistic or cultural

    associations of the natural element and can be inscribed using criterion (vi) if they be

    directly or tangibly associated withwith artistic and literary works of outstanding

    universal significance (UNESCO 2000). One of the major issues concerning the inclusion of

    inspirational landscapes on the World Heritage List are the theoretical and methodological

    processes to be used in their identification as World Heritage places. As an inspirational

    landscape has not yet been explicitly inscribed on the World Heritage List, there have been no

    2 The Operational Guidelines are being revised and as part of this revision the wording of cultural criterion (vi)

    may change in order to accommodate a more plural heritages in line with the objectives of the World HeritageCommittees Global Strategy.

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    debates within the World Heritage Committee on the nature of the values acceptable for

    inscription under this sub category of associative cultural landscapes.3

    Neither has there been

    any debate or discussion about how, or in what way, a landscape can be assessed as having

    artistic or cultural associations with artistic and literary works of outstanding universal

    significance.

    In 1995, Dr Henry Cleere, former World Heritage Convenor of the International Council on

    Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS), offered an early interpretation of how cultural criterion (vi)

    would be applied to places which had associations with artistic and literary works:

    The evaluation of landscapes with artistic or cultural associations remains to be

    considered by ICOMOS. The basic criterion must surely be that of the outstanding

    universal value of the artist concerned. The success of a hypothetical nomination of

    the Montaigne Sainte Victoire would depend upon the evaluation of the universal

    significance of Cezanne who painted it so often. This is an aspect of the concept of

    associative cultural landscapes that requires long and deep consideration, and by an

    organization other than ICOMOS, which is not equipped to pronounce upon matters of

    non-material culture of this kind.

    (Cleere 1995:56)

    Thus, Cleeres suggested interpretation is that an artistic or literary work can only be of

    outstanding universal value if the artist is of world renown. The views of selected World

    Heritage experts and professionals, about how inspirational landscapes can and should be

    3Mount Lushan, China is an area in the Jiangxi Province and was the first of the Chinese sacred mountains to be

    the inspiration for artistic works. Lushan was the home and inspiration to great Chinese poets, painters and

    calligraphers. The pioneer of the Chinese sect of Buddhism also worked at Lushan (ICOMOS. 1996.Lushan

    National Park No 778, Evaluation Report. ICOMOS.. Mount Lushan was inscribed in 1996 and was recognised

    by ICOMOS, in their evaluation of the World Heritage nomination, as a cultural landscape of outstanding

    aesthetic value and powerful associations with Chinese spiritual and cultural life. ICOMOS evaluates cultural

    properties for their World Heritage significance and makes recommendations to the World Heritage Committee

    on their suitability for inscription on the World Heritage List. The World Heritage Committee has not, however,

    formally recognised Lushan as a cultural landscape) although it is inscribed under cultural criterion (vi) for its

    inspirational and spiritual associations.

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    identified, have been canvassed as part of recent research by the author.4

    Most of those

    interviewed also interpreted the application of criterion (vi) in the same way as Cleere has

    (Cleere 1995:56) (Interview, 24 January 2002, Henry Cleere) i.e. based on the outstanding

    universal value of the artist concerned, although they do not necessarily agree with its

    premise. Domicelj (Interview, 27 July 2002, Joan Domicelj) diverges from this view and has

    suggested that the outstanding universal value referred to in criterion (vi) relates to the art-

    work itself, not the artist:

    This divergence in views concerning the interpretation of criterion (vi) and its application to

    inspirational landscapes highlights the ambiguous nature of not only the category of cultural

    landscape, but also of the wording of the criterion used to inscribe such landscapes on the

    World Heritage List. The interpretation of criterion (vi) artistic and literary works of

    outstanding universal significance to mean that the artistic production must be by an artist

    who is considered to be of outstanding universal significance, highlights some crucial issues

    in the consideration of inspirational landscapes for World Heritage status. A critical

    theoretical and methodological question for the application of the World Heritage Convention

    is why is it that the consecration of an artist - i.e an artist who is accepted as great artist

    apparently confers sacredness on not only the art work produced by such an artist but also

    on the subject of their cultural production, in this case landscapes? The majority

    interpretation of criterion (vi) in relation to inspirational landscapes opposes the theories of

    the French sociologist, and theorist, Pierre Bourdieu (Bourdieu 1993). He argued that the

    merit of the artistic creation lay in the representation, not in the thing represented.

    At the Asia-Pacific Regional Workshop on Associative Cultural Landscapes in Sydney in

    1995, the discussion that considered inspirational landscapes was one that centred on the

    concept of the artists vision. The proposition was that because a famous artist - who by

    4Cleere, H. 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes, the Global Strategy and Criterion (vi), 24th

    January 2002.." Edited by O. Beazley: Unpublished; Domicelj, J. 2002. "Interview on the Inscription of

    Hiroshima, Criterion (vi) and the Global Strategy, 27th July 2002." Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra:

    Unpublished; Fowler, P. 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes and the Application of Cultural

    Criterion (vi) in Relation to the Meeting at La Petite Pierre, Templin and Vienna." Edited by O. Beazley.

    London: Unpublished; Jacques, D. 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes and the World Heritage

    Convention." Edited by O. Beazley. London: Unpublished; Lennon, J. 2002. "Interview on the World Heritage

    Convention, The Asia Pacific Regional Workshop on Associative Cultural Landscapes." Edited by O. Beazley.

    Melbourne: Unpublished; Sullivan, S. 2003. "Interview on the Inscription of Hiroshima, Cultural Criterion (vi)

    the Global Strategy and Inspirational Landscapes." Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra: Unpublished; Taylor, K.2002. "Interview in the Templin Cultural Landscape Meeting 1993, The Asia Pacific Regional Workshop on

    Associative Cultural Landscapes, Sydney 1995." Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra: Unpublished.

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    virtue of their talent, had an ability to identify beauty - had selected a place for representation,

    it could therefore be considered to be beautiful (Interview, 19 March 2003, Sharon Sullivan).5

    The idea of the artists vision and the identification of the artist rather than the art-work, as

    being of outstanding universal value, in World Heritage evaluation processes, plays to the

    charismatic ideology, as Bourdieu calls it, that of the artist as the genius (Bourdieu 1993).

    The corollary of this approach is that if the artist is not of outstanding universal value then

    the subject of his/her cultural production will be unworthy of consideration and, by

    extrapolation, the places depicted not worthy of World Heritage status. Thus, inspirational

    qualities of landscapes and places may only be considered to be valid if they inspire great

    artists to produce art, although not if they inspire thousands of non consecrated amateurs to

    paint the same scene. This premise has repercussions in relation to the continual authenticity

    of an inspirational landscape, which will be discussed in the last section of this paper.

    In considering these issues of artistic merit, together with the suggested World Heritage

    methodology behind the identification ofinspirational landscapes - which is some how tied

    in with the artists vision(Interview, 19 March 2002, Sharon Sullivan) - one can ask if the

    World Heritage Committee is actually attempting to include landscapes on the List that are

    admired, on purely aesthetic grounds? If this is the case, is the Committee perhaps proposing

    to use the connection of certain landscapes with consecrated artists to construct some form

    of bar or cultural bench mark in order to justify their identification and evaluation for

    inclusion on the List and in so doing employing the charismatic ideology referred to by

    Bourdieu? (Bourdieu 1993).

    A crucial methodological question for the World Heritage Committee and ICOMOS is how

    they will evaluate one subject of cultural production, one inspirational landscape, associatedwith one consecrated artist over another? When asked how ICOMOS might deal with an

    evaluation of a nomination of an inspirational landscape to the World Heritage List, Cleere

    recently suggested that there should be a hit-list of premier leaguethinkers, writers,

    painters, composers and other brains (Interview, 24 January 2002, Henry Cleere). One

    wonders how such a hit-list this would be linked to the World Heritage Committees Global

    Strategy and how the representivity of such a hit-list could be ensured? Perhaps every geo-

    5 This meeting was convened by Australia ICOMOS and UNESCO at the Sydney Opera House, Sydney and inthe Blue Mountains, outside Sydney, Australia in April 1995.

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    cultural region would have to identify key artists and thinkers who were considered to be of

    outstanding universal value.

    Monitoring, Management and Authenticity of Inspirational Landscapes:

    Grasmere, Lake District National Park. Anonymous

    The Lake District National Park in the United Kingdom is currently being considered for

    nomination to the World Heritage List partially on the grounds of its inspirational qualities, as

    an associative cultural landscape (Department for Culture Media and Sport 2003). Its

    inspirational qualities are related to the associations that exist between the Lake District and

    Wordsworth and other Lake Poets, and writers such as Beatrix Potter and John Ruskin.6

    Other places that could also be given consideration in the category of inspirational

    landscapes, and have been mooted in World Heritage circles for inscription, include the

    Montaigne Saint Victoire, France, the mountain Cezanne painted many times.

    6

    At the time of writing, the Lake District will be the first landscape to be evaluated by the World HeritageCommittee for these types of inspirational values and the determination of this nomination will probably set a

    precedent in World Heritage practice.

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    Montaigne Sainte Victoire by Paul Cezanne 1902-1904

    Also, Mount Fujiyama, Japan, painted by Katsushika Hokusai , which has been the focus of

    much art work.

    Mount Fujiyama by Katsushika Hokusai: 1829-1833

    A requirement of the Operational Guidelines (UNESCO 2000) is for cultural places

    nominated to, and included on, the List to meet the test of authenticity. If authenticity is takento mean genuine, one can question what this means for inspirational landscapes. They are,

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    by their definition, associated with artistic and literary works of outstanding universal value

    that are often of some antiquity and where the values of the place are intangible. Can an

    inspirational landscape be authentic in the 21st

    century if it was the inspiration of an artistic

    production in the 19th

    century? Perhaps the interpretation of authenticity in this case should

    mean that a landscape is genuine in its spirit or feeling, i.e. that it is still inspirational today

    and this will necessarily be linked to the maintenance and protection of its physical attributes.

    In order to identify whether a landscape is still inspirational, cultural indicators need to be

    identified. Unlike spiritual values, which although intangible can have quantifiable,

    verifiable, on the ground indicators to illustrate those beliefs are still held - such as conducting

    ceremony - intangible values associated with inspirational landscapes are not easy to provide

    such indicators for. In order to demonstrate that an inspirational landscape is still authentic,

    still inspirational - using the World Heritage Convention methodology - perhaps the Lake

    District and Montaigne Sainte Victoire would still be being painted, by famous artists and

    other landscapes would still be written about by famous poets. Alternatively, perhaps the

    logical indication of a landscape still being inspirational should be related to indicators such

    as the numbers of visitor to such a place. The inspirational qualities of the Lake District to a

    21st

    century tourist, amateur painter, bushwalker, or potholer might be the same physical ones

    as those that inspired Wordsworth although the manifestation of that inspiration is different.

    If, however, it is the association of a landscape with a famous cultural production that is of

    paramount importance, it raises an interesting question in relation to the future management

    of inspirational landscapes. Should views and vistas as painted by famous artists be

    conserved or restored, or is this taking it all a bit too far? Rosenthal (Rosenthal 1994) in his

    article The Landscape of Nostalgia the Landscape of Decline examines Constables

    landscape of the Hay Wain which the National Trust has now cleared from its overgrown state

    to restore the vista that Constable painted.

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    What will be managed and preserved will be the landscapes that are considered by current

    societies - and the World Heritage Committee - to be of outstanding universal value, using

    cultural indicators that will, no doubt, include artistic cultural productions.

    It is problematic to try and identify cultural indicators that illustrate the currency of intangible

    heritage values of inspirational landscapes. By their very nature, intangible values are

    mutable, and change over time. Thus the values that a given society invests in a place are

    non-static. One generation may celebrate a certain type of landscape where as another may

    loathe it. For example, before the appreciation of rugged, foreboding mountain scenery, with

    the birth of the picturesque, mountainous areas, such as the Lake District that Wordsworth

    wrote about, were considered to be frightening, dark, evil places. Not only may our

    appreciation of landscape change over time but our appreciation of certain artists and their

    work may also change. Once again this highlights questions of viability in identifying an

    inspirational landscape solely through its association with an artist and their cultural

    production and suggests that such productions should be used as indicators, not identifiers, of

    inspirational landscapes.

    The question of the mutability of intangible heritage values is not one that is confined to the

    consideration of inspirational landscapes. It is one that confronts heritage managers at all

    places where the heritage values are those ascribed by a particular society at a particular time

    and which have no material manifestation. The currency of a heritage listing for such values

    will always be questionable unless quantifiable, verifiable, indicators can be identified

    through which to monitor them. The suggestion here, therefore, is that it is not possible to

    protect the intangible heritage values of an inspirational landscape but only record their

    continuation. It is a challenge for heritage managers to find ways of identifying and

    developing cultural indicators for the non-material values of these landscapes in order to

    ascertain when the values for which the landscapes were inscribed are under threat, or no

    longer extant. This posits a wider question as to whether the World Heritage List should be

    reviewed on a cyclical basis to ensure the authenticity of its inscriptions and the currency of

    their intangible values.

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    Conclusion:

    a work of art has meaning and interest only for someone who possesses the cultural

    competence that is, the code, into which it is encoded`

    ( Bourdieu 1993:7)

    This quotation from Bourdieu encapsulates the problems of identifying artistic cultural

    productions and their makers as the sole way of identifying the inspirational qualities of

    landscapes. The theories of Bourdieu are suggested as ones that could be useful to help

    provide a critical analysis of the application of the Convention in relation to landscapes

    associated with artistic productions. This paper has shown that, within the World Heritage

    arena, the identification of artists of outstanding universal value, and their cultural

    productions, is fraught with methodological problems and that these artists and their

    productions should perhaps be used as indicators not identifiers ofinspirational landscapes.

    It has been suggested that artistic associations, which are subject to taste and fashion, should

    be used as one type of cultural indicator, together with others, that can show a contemporary

    societys appreciation of a landscape and the reasons that a particular physical landscape is

    valued for its outstanding inspirational qualities. Following on from this, it has been

    suggested that it is the present physical landscape - which may have been represented in

    artistic productions of the past - which holds value for our contemporary society. It is,

    therefore, the intangible heritage value of inspirational landscapes, located through the

    physical place, which must be managed according to current, not past, visions and

    representations of it. This can be achieved using cultural indicators that reflect contemporary

    values. As with the management of any cultural heritage place, once the inspirational,

    intangible, values of a place are no longer extant in what ever way that might be quantified -

    then it may be time to consider the relevance of the keeping such a place on the World

    Heritage List.

    The identification ofinspirational landscapes for inscription on the World Heritage List is an

    issue that requires the application of intellectual rigour and a strong theoretical basis. It also

    requires further detailed and urgent consideration by the World Heritage Committee and

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    ICOMOS, as its Advisory Body in advance of the nomination of an inspirational landscape

    to the World Heritage List.

    References

    Australian Heritage Commission. 2002. "Research and Assessment Project 'Inspirational

    Landscapes' Terms of Reference." Unpublished.

    Bourdieu, P. 1993. The Field of Cultural Production Essays on Art and Literature, 1993

    edition. Cambridge: Polity Press in association with Blackwell Publishers.

    Cleere, H. 1995. "The Evaluation of Cultural Landscapes," in Cultural Landscapes of

    Universal Value. Edited by Bern Von Droste. Harold Plachter. Mechtild Rossler.

    New York: Gustav Fischer.

    . 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes, the Global Strategy and Criterion

    (vi), 24th January 2002.." Edited by O. Beazley: Unpublished.Department for Culture Media and Sport. 2003. "World Heritage Sites. The Tentative List of

    The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland," DCMS.

    Domicelj, J. 2002. "Interview on the Inscription of Hiroshima, Criterion (vi) and the Global

    Strategy, 27th July 2002." Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra: Unpublished.

    Fowler, P. 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes and the Application of

    Cultural Criterion (vi) in Relation to the Meeting at La Petite Pierre, Templin and

    Vienna." Edited by O. Beazley. London: Unpublished.

    ICOMOS. 1996.Lushan National Park No 778, Evaluation Report. ICOMOS.

    . 1999. The Australian ICOMOS Burra Charter.

    Jacques, D. 2002. "Interview on Associative Cultural Landscapes and the World Heritage

    Convention." Edited by O. Beazley. London: Unpublished.

    Lennon, J. 2002. "Interview on the World Heritage Convention, The Asia Pacific Regional

    Workshop on Associative Cultural Landscapes." Edited by O. Beazley. Melbourne:

    Unpublished.

    Rosenthal, M. 1994. "The Landsape of Nostalgia, The Landscape of Decline," in Unknown.

    Simpson, J. Editor. 2004. Oxford English Dictionary: Oxford University Press.

    Sullivan, S. 2003. "Interview on the Inscription of Hiroshima, Cultural Criterion (vi) the

    Global Strategy and Inspirational Landscapes." Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra:

    Unpublished.

    Taylor, K. 2002. "Interview in the Templin Cultural Landscape Meeting 1993, The Asia

    Pacific Regional Workshop on Associative Cultural Landscapes, Sydney 1995."Edited by O. Beazley. Canberra: Unpublished.

    UNESCO. 1972. Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural

    Heritage. UNESCO.

    . 2000. "Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage

    Convention." Paris: UNESCO.

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