RUINED: A Heritage of War from UNESCO to NATO

Tanks and burned out cars with graffiti in an old European town square

Kyiv, 2024

Photo: Ankie Peterson

Saturday, Nov 22, 2025

3pm

Getty Center

Harold M. Williams Auditorium

Free

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About

How did global heritage become the new battlespace for 21st-century warfare? Nations and non-state actors alike increasingly use the ruins of the past to leverage legal, political, and territorial advantage. This talk examines the roles of two intersecting international organizations that seek to combat the fallout from ruin warfare and their respective aspirations for mission success. The first, UNESCO, established after the Second World War and dedicated to world peace through culture and co-operation, has inherited a ruinous legacy of war and destruction. The other is NATO, a Cold War military alliance that must now confront cultural heritage in both its protective and punitive missions. Within the international order, along a spectrum of peace and war, both are struggling to contain the conflictual status of cultural heritage. Heritage assets, once positioned as global goods throughout the 20th century, are being transformed into the weapons of war in the 21st. Charting these developments, Dr. Lynn Meskell asks: how have the celebrated sites of humanity’s collective past been instrumentalized into a new future of risk and ruin?

Sponsored by the Getty Research Institute Council, the annual Thomas and Barbara Gaehtgens Lecture series is dedicated to highlighting leading research in the field of global art history. Learn more about the series.

Visit the Getty Research Institute's Exhibitions and Events page for more free programs.

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