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| Les médias nous informent : juin 2011 |
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| Stop Press
Recueil d’articles de presse sur des sujets liés au patrimoine. Les points de vue exprimés dans ces derniers n’engagent évidemment que leurs auteurs.

26 juin
- Thailand pulls out of World Heritage Convention
MCOT, Thaïlande
Thailand announced its departure from the World Heritage Convention with immediate effect on Saturday, after the World Heritage Committee failed to heed its request seeking postponement of the Cambodia's unilaterally-proposed Preah Vihear Temple management plan, as Thailand fears that it may threaten national sovereignty.

23 juin
- Ramallah museum to show Picasso for first time
The Independent, Royaume-Uni
A Ramallah art museum has become the first in the West Bank to take delivery of an artwork by Picasso, which will go on view to the public for a month, beginning on Friday.

22 juin
- A Crusader town emerges under an old Israeli port
Associated Press
Off the track beaten by most Holy Land tourists lies one of the richest archaeological sites in a country full of them: the walled port of Acre, where the busy alleys of an Ottoman-era town cover a uniquely intact Crusader city now being rediscovered.

21 juin

20 June

17 juin
- Hiraizumi rêve d'un classement par l'Unesco
Le Monde, France
Pour Hiraizumi, la 35e session du comité du Patrimoine mondial de l'Unesco organisée à Paris du 19 au 29 juin revêt un sens particulier. La petite ville de 8 500 habitants de la préfecture d'Iwate, dans le nord-est du Japon, postule pour une inscription de ses richesses culturelles - des temples bouddhistes et des jardins des XIe-XIIe siècles - à l'inventaire du Patrimoine mondial.

14 juin
- Restoring Rubens' Cain Slaying Abel
The Independent, Royaume-Uni
An epic campaign of restoration of Rubens' masterpiece is underway at the Courtauld Institute of Art. The Independent Online talks to the restorers and reveals the progress in pictures

13 juin

12 juin

8 juin

6 juin

3 juin
- Mauritanian craftsmen struggle to save heritage
AFP, France
Video: Traditional craftwork is central to Mauritania's cultural heritage. But in recent years, the local market has been flooded with imported products, making it harder for craftsmen to make ends meet.

2 juin
- British embassy art burned
The Art Newspaper
Paintings in the British embassy in Tripoli were almost certainly destroyed last month, when the building was set on fire by pro-Gaddafi protesters.
- A Heritage in Ruins
New York Times, Etats-Unis
Helmand has been the setting of some of the fiercest fighting in the Afghan war, yet strangely, damage to monuments like the Bost Arch has increased even as the security situation has improved.
- Academics rally to save Aboriginal art
New Zealand Herald, Nouvelle-Zélande
Australia has more ancient rock art than any other country, but half the sites could disappear in the next 50 years without better measures to document and protect them, experts warned yesterday.
- Selling heritage to China
The Australian, Australie
There's an irony in one of the world's oldest civilisations seeking heritage advice from Brisbane, the city where the wrecker's ball swung freely during the Joh Bjelke-Petersen years. But Ruan Yisan, who was in Brisbane recently for lectures and workshops, had reasons to visit.
mise à jour :
01.07.2011
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