Dematerializing Riegl’s Modern Cult of Monuments

Authors

  • Nikola Beim University of Applied Arts Vienna

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/ear.2025.9693

Keywords:

Monument, Cult, Technology, Preservation, Digitalization, Ruin

Abstract

This paper delves into the transformation of memory and heritage in the digital age, interpreting Alois Riegl’s pivotal 1903 work, “The Modern Cult of Monuments,” through the lens of today’s digital technologies. Riegl’s axiological examination, foundational in the field of heritage preservation, is reevaluated to explore how digital documentation reinterprets historical and age values of monuments, aligning with his philosophy of ‘touchless’ preservation. This research proposes a novel paradigm for representing and engaging with monuments within the digital sphere that I term “Cult Beyond the Digital.”

Furthermore, the paper argues for the contemporary relevance of Riegl’s methodologies in architecture, particularly those linked to non-contact recording methods that result in the creation of intangible heritage. The paper speculates on future preservation strategies, especially as emerging AI technologies promise the potential to reconstruct missing historical data and enhance monument preservation efforts.

By examining the interaction between technological advancements and monument preservation, the study revisits and expands Riegl’s theory, offering a forward-looking perspective on the discipline in the digital and beyond the digital era, aligning with the theme “Beyond the Visible” by exploring how architectural processes such as aging are documented by contemporary digital tools to protect our heritage and memory. This invisible force of time leaves architecture with traces that can be seen as a continuous “unmaking” or dematerializing of its physical forms. The age value of monuments was considered the monument’s most essential value of the twentieth century, according to Riegl. Extending his theory to our time, the age value is surpassed by what I call a “timeless” value that represents digitally documented monuments over time. They, as digital data, shift their properties from the material world to the digital realm. By doing so, the main protagonist of this architectural “unmaking” is not an architect but the environment itself. 

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Published

27-Jan-2025 — Updated on 27-Jan-2025

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