José António Falcão


José António Falcão is a reputed Portuguese art historian, museum curator and educator. Born Lisbon 1969.

Biography

Leading expert in the field of religious art, Falcão is the head the Departamento do Património Histórico e Artístico da Diocese de Beja since its foundation, in 1984. “Conservador-chefe de museus”, he was also the organizer of the diocesan museums network of Beja.
As a museum professional, he worked in relevant institutions as Museu de Évora, Museu Calouste Gulbenkian and was successively curator and director of Casa dos Patudos, the José Relvas former residence in Alpiarça, the most important house museum in Portugal.
José António Falcão is a well known authority in the field of Christian heritage. He has conducted extensive study into the churches and treasures of Southern Portugal and is one of the leading researchers of the “modern generation” of Portuguese art historians to study and disseminate research about the sacred art of the Alentejo.
He published several books on this subject-matter: As Vozes do Silêncio , Entre o Céu e a Terra and As Formas do Espírito . Other essays published created bridges between Eastern and Western spiritual traditions and their reflections on aesthetic and artistic creations. His pioneering contributions to the scientific study of the artistic civilization of the Southwestern Iberian Peninsula gave evidence for the preservation of a large number of monuments and works of art.
Great connoisseur of Catholic art and architecture, José António Falcão is widely considered one of the "fathers" of the religious heritage movement in Portugal. He has also played a very significant role in training young curators and conservators in Portuguese and Spanish universities.
José António Falcão is a corresponding member of the Academia Nacional de Belas-Artes and Academia Portuguesa da História. He served, for many years as president of the Real Sociedade Arqueológica Lusitana. He is now chairman of the Associação Portuguesa de Museus da Igreja Católica and deputy general secretary of Europae Thesauri.

José António Falcão and the revival of Portuguese religious heritage

The Alentejo is, of all the regions of Portugal, the one which was able to preserve most strongly its ancestral roots, resisting with courage, thanks to the idiosyncrasies of its people, the assaults of the attempts at standardization of the landscape, towns and traditions. The head of this large area is Évora, but its heart is in Beja. It is towards the South, between the ocean and the border with Andalucia that one may best tune the strings of the Alentejan soul. The territory corresponding to the diocese of Beja stands out, for geographical and historical reasons: the old Pax Iulia, capital of an administrative division of the Roman Empire, the conventus pacensis, and later the centre of a taifa, under Islamic rule, and, finally, from the transition from the Middle Ages to the Modern Age, the seat of a dukedom connected to the royal household.
It is a unique area in which Atlantic and the Mediterranean, the Northern and the Southern, Eastern and Western influences meet. This makes it an area open to the world, a crucible of different peoples, cultures and civilizations, which has also deeply marked the religious life of its communities. Baixo Alentejo is proud to be the possessor of a large amount of sacred art of very different kinds, a clear reflection of the area's past. Unlike what has happened in other parts of the country, this set of values was preserved almost intact until the second half of the 20th century – a fact that has much to do with a paradoxical quality of the people of the Alentejo, who are progressive politically but conservative in their tastes and traditions. From then onwards, however, the situation has become rather more complicated.
In the 1950s, restoration work was carried out in historical buildings, with no understanding, much of appealing in vain to the authority of the post-Vatican II reforms. Later, new problems appeared, particularly thefts and illegal sales. Though the revolution of 25 April 1974 in general respected churches and chapels, there occurred, nevertheless, abuses, demolitions and illegitimate appropriations. Worse was the swing of the pendulum that followed, permitting the rebuilding of churches without technical support. Thefts also increased. This situation reached its climax at the beginning of the 1980s, with the disappearance of a famous and widely venerated Gothic painting. The recently appointed Bishop of Beja, Dom Manuel Franco Falcão, realized that it was necessary to preserve, at diocesan level, a threatened cultural identity. In 1984 he established the Department of Historical and Artistic Heritage, entrusting it with the mission of fighting for the preservation of the memoria ecclesiæ.
, and Mrs. Maria José Ritta - Beja, Portuguese National Day.
Beja, the second largest but least populous diocese of the country, did not itself have the means to preserve its own monuments and works of art. Nevertheless, a small group of volunteers took up the challenge und the direction of Prof. José António Falcão and created ex nihilo a department for the preservation of the area's religious heritage. Working in partnership with local and national institutions – something initially viewed with suspicion and now seen as perfectly normal – this group set up a pioneering project in order to save the sacred art of Baixo Alentejo. During the course of twenty-five years, the destitution was totally transformed. Amongst the initiatives undertaken, particularly significant are the conservation of churches and the restoration of their artistic treasures, including masterpieces of the diocesan heritage; the creation of a network of museums; the organization of exhibitions in Portugal and abroad; the cultivation of cultural training and promotion; the publication of studies and documentaries; collaboration with the media; the initiation of tourist walks; and the establishment of a festival of sacred music.
The Department of Historical and Artistic Heritage quickly became aware that the chief enemy of sacred art is ignorance. This led it to oppose the "closed doors" strategy still current in the minds of some, an attempt to win audiences who could enjoy the benefits of this heritage – which will survive only if it is shared. The truth is that we are trustees of something that belongs to us, but which belongs also to everyone. Our aim is that future generations, without end, may understand this, each one in its own way. This understanding of such a profound truth led to a collaboration with specialists in the art of contemporary music. Brought to fruition over a long period of time, the project dreamed and organized by José António Falcão has given the happiness of a much-desired gathering around the table where our mutual agape is celebrated. By pouring new wine into old bottles, we believed – thank to the splendid rescue effort of Beja’s heritage team – that the past, the present and the future are no more than different facets of a hope whose limits transcend our own time and space.

Selected bibliography