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137 points colinprince | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.199s | source
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akkartik ◴[] No.44506571[source]
The 'but why?' link is fascinating: https://www.britishmuseum.org/blog/not-fade-away-preventive-...
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vasco ◴[] No.44506653[source]
> This means that if these prints are displayed for three months at 50 lux, they should be stored in the dark for at least a year before they are displayed again

> While these measures will not stop fading from occurring altogether, they will ensure that these world-famous prints fade so slowly that they will be seen by countless generations of visitors to the Museum in the future.

This trade-off is interesting, are we maximizing for number of people watching works? Or are we purely maximizing time? Because its not obvious to me that more people will see a work if it lasts 1000 more years but spends 80% of that time in storage, vs lasting 100 more years spending 0% of the time in storage.

Also lets say you go to the museum today and are lucky that it happens to be on display. But your friend travels to see it, it happens to be in 80% storage time, then the friend goes back home and dies without seeing it so that some future person that doesn't exist yet even can see it later without fading. Why is the future person more important than the current person, in a sense?

Storing it assumes a lot, that humanity will survive, that people will be interested in seeing it, that some fire isn't going to destroy their storage, etc. Meanwhile real life people would've seen it already. I don't have an answer, just questions though.

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dylan604 ◴[] No.44513522[source]
As these are prints themselves, are we gaining anything by seeing these prints vs other prints? It's not like viewing an original Monet or anything where the thing being viewed was the work created by the artist's hands. While these prints might have been made by the artist, they are still not the originals.

When visiting DC, do we really think the Constitution under all of that glass is the actual Constitution? POTUS seems to think he has the actual, so there's conflict right there. For a document as beloved as the Constitution, why would you ever risk the original?

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southernplaces7 ◴[] No.44515317[source]
>When visiting DC, do we really think the Constitution under all of that glass is the actual Constitution?

That's a damn good question actually, and for many other works in other places, like, say, the Magna Carta, or the Declaration of Independence. To the Wikipediamobile ADHDMan!

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dylan604 ◴[] No.44515417[source]
Why do you think Wikipedia wouldn't be lying about the same thing?
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1. southernplaces7 ◴[] No.44515833[source]
I can't be sure, no, but I can't think of a single reason why they would lie about something so banal as whether the displayed "originals" are really that. In any case, they do provide their sources.

For example, if you go to the Wikipedia page on the Taj Mahal, they plainly explain that the tombs that tourists see daily, of the Mughal emperor and his wife, aren't the real tombs. Those are down in the basement, below the fake ones.