Finanziamento dell’UE NextGenerationEU PRIN PNRR 2022 – UPCYCLING AND CULTURAL HERITAGE - M4C2 investimento 1.1 Avviso 1409/2022
Progetto CULT-UP is a project of cultural upcycling.
It proposes new strategies to promote a critical discourse on the "cultural management" of waste and to valorize the practice of
redesign/upcycling as a form of cultural heritage. The focus is on two types of "upcycled waste": inorganic (plastics) and organic
(textiles).
More generally, CULT-UP aims to stimulate critical reflection, examine case studies, collect best practices, and propose a "white
paper" to stakeholders on the strategies and benefits of upcycling.
Upcycling, as defined by Wilson (2016), differs from simple recycling (which many consider downgrading or even "downcycling" and
therefore has negative connotations) because it involves a transformation of the reused object that increases its value not only
economically or functionally, but also symbolically. Upcycling recalls the culture of reuse and "conservation" from the pre-consumer era, when "nothing was thrown away" and everything was repaired
The two research units will perform highly integrated and complementary tasks, but will focus on different aspects. In particular, the
UNIBO unit will deal with inorganic materials (plastics), while the UNITO unit will work mainly with organic materials (textiles). The
decision to focus on these two materials is based on some key differences: on the one hand, plastic, now identified as the main
enemy of an increasingly "plastic polluted" environment, is a material that is not degradable and is deposited in the environment,
changing it forever. On the other hand, textile materials represent changeable, reusable and to some extent biodegradable objects
that, by placing themselves in the realm of fashion (without exhausting themselves there), stimulate a reflection on the
paradigmatic changes that have taken place in this sector in recent years. Working with these different types of materials will allow
us to identify different ways of "afterlife" of recycled objects (not everything is recycled in the same way, different objects and
materials are reused or not in different ways depending on the different "object cultures").
We will approach upcycling from a double perspective: that of waste (what is recycled was previously stripped and deprived of any
meaning in the current "object system") and that of cultural heritage (often the recycling of the object consists in reintroducing it
into the cycle of meaning through its selection and preservation). The project addresses upcycling practices at the intersection of
"waste cultures" and "practices of memory".
Finally, CULT-UP theorizes the efficacy of a "cultural upcycling" that takes into account the semiotic value of the recovered object,
which is not to be considered as a mere symbolic overlay, but as a relationship between the past and the potential senses of the
object to be upcycled in the face of a constantly evolving "object system".