 Soylent
Soylent         
          Baden
Baden         
         there is an epistemic challenge undermining the full interest of art-value to justify art restoration. — Soylent
Attitudes towards restored works of art is not that the object has become de-valued through restoration but rather that value has been restored. — Soylent
 Soylent
Soylent         
          Baden
Baden         
         My worry is that art restoration cannot be justified as an interpretive exercise because there are tremendous epistemic challenges that obscure the judgement of value from the restorer. — Soylent
Perhaps we should view restored art works as distinct from the original and having a merit of their own, but that doesn't seem to be the case (e.g., when people visit the Louvre and see the Mona Lisa, they act as though they are seeing a work painted by Da Vinci). — Soylent
The superficial aspects may have been restored, but the nuance of value in the painting is lost in restoration — Soylent
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