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"Whenever a grave was discovered or a burial mound
was found, earpieces, bracelets, breastplates, toads and small
snakes were gathered up, and whoever had made the 'find' then
took the gold items in their knapsacks to the mint or the bank,
where they were weighed and the equivalent in paper money was
handed over, after which the gold was melted down. Not even
the ladies were allowed the extravagance of keeping indigenous
curiosities for brooches or earrings", lamented Germán
Arciniegas in his "Secrets of El Dorado" at
a time when any gold that was found in Colombia used to be melted
down - well into the 20th century, before 1939, that is.
It was that year that a visionary by the name of Julio Caro
advised the Banco de la República Board to halt this
plundering of the nation's heritage and to start keeping the
objects that grave plunderers had been taking to galleries and
art dealers for years. "Much better for them to be kept
here than to be melted down or to leave the country, get dispersed
and fall into private hands", thought the man whose
name was to go down in history.
From that moment on, the incipient collection - which was still
not looked upon as such - began to take shape. But it had no
home. Until 1947 it was displayed in the Bank's boardroom. Beside
it, the bust of Bolívar, a clear sign of the eagerness
to exalt two precise periods in the nation's history: the pre-Hispanic
past and the birth of the republic.
Afterwards, it was visiting diplomatic delegations who were
able to marvel at its beauty. Between 1947 and 1959, the obligatory
visit to view the pre-Hispanic marvels was a source of great
pride to bankers.
However, a question then began to be asked: why not show these
magnificent and hitherto unknown objects to Colombians as well?
An exhibition room was accordingly set up from 1959 to 1968
in the basement of the Banco de la República's new building,
and the general public were allowed to view the objects. And
it was at this point that a whole new chapter started for the
museum.
"There was still no realisation that it was a museum.
That basement was an enormous corridor something like fifty
metres long, with showcases all along it, from which a number
of representative objects were hung in a purely decorative fashion
- complete with curtains behind them. There was some arrangement
by archaeological area, but people still did not know what a
museum was. Nor did we, either", recalls Germán
Samper, the architect who, with his firm Esguerra, Sáenz
& Samper, designed the building that has housed the Gold
Museum until now and which won the National Architecture Award
in 1970.
Therefore, when one floor in a projected new Bank building
was going to be set aside "so that the jewels could
be housed better", he knew that the basement idea could
not be repeated higher up, and that those objects were more
than jewels. Together with his partners, he sought the advice
- "secretly" - of Luis Duque Gómez,
who was Director of the Colombian Anthropology Institute at
the time. "This is our chance, the time to show the
country the riches of our past!", Duque Gómez
apparently exclaimed, and he recommended that they talk to the
people who were then designing the Mexican Museum of Anthropology.
These three men therefore set out, without knowing how to tell
the manager of the Banco de la República that what they
needed was not one floor but a whole building, because what
they were planning was a museum rather than a store for valuable
objects. A week was enough to convince them that they had to
establish a scientific museum, and that it was therefore essential
to form a scientific team that would study what the objects
had meant to the cultures that made them. There was a need to
rid gold of its decorative sense and understand that behind
it lay a vast context that was waiting to be investigated. Then,
they realised that specialist professionals were needed, people
who could translate those meanings into the way the objects
were to be arranged and displayed - museologists, in other words.
They were also clear that a museum's raison d'être is
to show things to the public, to stir up opinion, and above
all, to be useful and didactic.
A tremendous challenge, because it was one of the first purpose-built
museums, and with all that thought behind it. They went beyond
their call of duty as builders and created a concept. They saw
architecture as the ideal way to express and contain ideas about
the past.
That building, a perfect prism, became the symbol of modern
architecture in the country.
Four floors where the varied contexts and applied technologies
of the objects were displayed, a labyrinth of small rooms that
invited an intimate contemplation of the objects on display,
and one large room which brought all that splendour together
and exhibited it like a flash of light that dazzled because
of its very richness - the famous "Salón Dorado".
An effective experience, one that has brought the whole country
and millions of visitors from abroad together over a period
of thirty six years, around one single idea of identity.
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