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Conservation and restoration of cultural property

The conservation and restoration of cultural property focuses on protection and care of cultural property (tangible cultural heritage), including artworks, architecture, archaeology, and museum collections.[1] Conservation activities include preventive conservation, examination, documentation, research, treatment, and education.[2] This field is closely allied with conservation science, curators and registrars.

Removal of adherent surface deposits by physical chemical means (by cotton swab) at Church of Sucevița Monastery, burial chamber, in Suceava, Romania
Conservation of the Horses of Saint Mark (Venice)

Definition edit

 
Revision and conservation of the Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc (Czech Republic) in 2006

Conservation of cultural property involves protection and restoration using "any methods that prove effective in keeping that property in as close to its original condition as possible for as long as possible."[3] Conservation of cultural heritage is often associated with art collections and museums and involves collection care and management through tracking, examination, documentation, exhibition, storage, preventive conservation, and restoration.[4]

The scope has widened from art conservation, involving protection and care of artwork and architecture, to conservation of cultural heritage, also including protection and care of a broad set of other cultural and historical works. Conservation of cultural heritage can be described as a type of ethical stewardship.

It may broadly be divided into:

Conservation of cultural property applies simple ethical guidelines:

  • Minimal intervention;
  • Appropriate materials and reversible methods;
  • Full documentation of all work undertaken.

Often there are compromises between preserving appearance, maintaining original design and material properties, and ability to reverse changes. Reversibility is now emphasized so as to reduce problems with future treatment, investigation, and use.

In order for conservators to decide upon an appropriate conservation strategy and apply their professional expertise accordingly, they must take into account views of the stakeholder, the values, artist's intent, meaning of the work, and the physical needs of the material.

Cesare Brandi in his Theory of Restoration, describes restoration as "the methodological moment in which the work of art is appreciated in its material form and in its historical and aesthetic duality, with a view to transmitting it to the future".[5][6]

History and science edit

Key dates edit

Some consider the tradition of conservation of cultural heritage in Europe to have begun in 1565 with the restoration of the Sistine Chapel frescoes, but more ancient examples include the work of Cassiodorus.[7]

Brief history edit

An early video showing some activities in a conservation laboratory at the Rijksmuseum
 
A temporary windowed partition along restoration work area in the cloister of the Church of St. Trophime, Arles

The care of cultural heritage has a long history, one that was primarily aimed at fixing and mending objects for their continued use and aesthetic enjoyment.[8] Until the early 20th century, artists were normally the ones called upon to repair damaged artworks. During the 19th century, however, the fields of science and art became increasingly intertwined as scientists such as Michael Faraday began to study the damaging effects of the environment to works of art. Louis Pasteur carried out scientific analysis on paint as well.[9] However, perhaps the first organized attempt to apply a theoretical framework to the conservation of cultural heritage came with the founding in the United Kingdom of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1877. The society was founded by William Morris and Philip Webb, both of whom were deeply influenced by the writings of John Ruskin. During the same period, a French movement with similar aims was being developed under the direction of Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, an architect and theorist, famous for his restorations of medieval buildings.

 
Since 1998, Harvard University wraps some of the valuable statues on its campus, such as this "Chinese stele", with waterproof covers every winter, in order to protect them from erosion caused by acid rain.[10]

Conservation of cultural heritage as a distinct field of study initially developed in Germany, where in 1888 Friedrich Rathgen became the first chemist to be employed by a Museum, the Koniglichen Museen, Berlin (Royal Museums of Berlin). He not only developed a scientific approach to the care of objects in the collections, but disseminated this approach by publishing a Handbook of Conservation in 1898.[11] The early development of conservation of cultural heritage in any area of the world is usually linked to the creation of positions for chemists within museums. In British archaeology, key research and technical experimentation in conservation was undertaken by women such as Ione Gedye both in the field and in archaeological collections, particularly those of the Institute of Archaeology, London.

In the United Kingdom, pioneering research into painting materials and conservation, ceramics, and stone conservation was conducted by Arthur Pillans Laurie, academic chemist and Principal of Heriot-Watt University from 1900. Laurie's interests were fostered by William Holman Hunt.[12] In 1924 the chemist Harold Plenderleith began to work at the British Museum with Alexander Scott in the recently created Research Laboratory, although he was actually employed by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in the early years. Plenderleith's appointment may be said to have given birth to the conservation profession in the UK, although there had been craftsmen in many museums and in the commercial art world for generations.[13] This department was created by the museum to address the deteriorating condition of objects in the collection, damages which were a result of their being stored in the London Underground tunnels during the First World War. The creation of this department moved the focus for the development of conservation theory and practice from Germany to Britain, and made the latter a prime force in this fledgling field. In 1956 Plenderleith wrote a significant handbook called The Conservation of Antiquities and Works of Art, which supplanted Rathgen's earlier tome and set new standards for the development of art and conservation science.

In the United States, the development of conservation of cultural heritage can be traced to the Fogg Art Museum, and Edward Waldo Forbes, its director from 1909 to 1944. He encouraged technical investigation, and was Chairman of the Advisory Committee for the first technical journal, Technical Studies in the Field of the Fine Arts, published by the Fogg from 1932 to 1942. Importantly he also brought onto the museum staff chemists. Rutherford John Gettens was the first of such in the US to be permanently employed by an art museum. He worked with George L. Stout, the founder and first editor of Technical Studies. Gettens and Stout co-authored Painting Materials: A Short Encyclopaedia in 1942, reprinted in 1966. This compendium is still cited regularly. Only a few dates and descriptions in Gettens' and Stout's book are now outdated.[14]

George T. Oliver, of Oliver Brothers Art Restoration and Art Conservation-Boston (Est. 1850 in New York City) invented the vacuum hot table for relining paintings in 1920s; he filed a patent for the table in 1937.[15] Taylor's prototype table, which he designed and constructed, is still in operation. Oliver Brothers is believed to be the first and the oldest continuously operating art restoration company in the United States.

The focus of conservation development then accelerated in Britain and America, and it was in Britain that the first International Conservation Organisations developed. The International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (IIC) was incorporated under British law in 1950 as "a permanent organization to co-ordinate and improve the knowledge, methods, and working standards needed to protect and preserve precious materials of all kinds."[14] The rapid growth of conservation professional organizations, publications, journals, newsletters, both internationally and in localities, has spearheaded the development of the conservation profession, both practically and theoretically. Art historians and theorists such as Cesare Brandi have also played a significant role in developing conservation science theory. In recent years ethical concerns have been at the forefront of developments in conservation. Most significantly has been the idea of preventive conservation. This concept is based in part on the pioneering work by Garry Thomson CBE, and his book Museum Environment, first published in 1978.[16] Thomson was associated with the National Gallery in London; it was here that he established a set of guidelines or environmental controls for the best conditions in which objects could be stored and displayed within the museum environment. Although his exact guidelines are no longer rigidly followed, they did inspire this field of conservation.

Conservation laboratories edit

 
The Lunder Conservation Center. Conservation staff for both the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery are visible to the public through floor-to-ceiling glass walls that allow visitors to see firsthand all the techniques that conservators use to examine, treat and preserve artworks within a functioning conservation Laboratory.

Conservators routinely use chemical and scientific analysis for the examination and treatment of cultural works. The modern conservation laboratory uses equipment such as microscopes, spectrometers, and various x-ray regime instruments to better understand objects and their components. The data thus collected helps in deciding the conservation treatments to be provided to the object.

Ethics edit

The conservator's work is guided by ethical standards. These take the form of applied ethics. Ethical standards have been established across the world, and national and international ethical guidelines have been written. One such example is:

Conservation OnLine provides resources on ethical issues in conservation,[18] including examples of codes of ethics and guidelines for professional conduct in conservation and allied fields; and charters and treaties pertaining to ethical issues involving the preservation of cultural property.

As well as standards of practice conservators deal with wider ethical concerns, such as the debates as to whether all art is worth preserving.[19]

Keeping up with the international contemporary scenario, recent concerns with sustainability in conservation have emerged. The common understanding that "the care of an artifact should not come at the undue expense of the environment"[20] is generally well accepted within the community and is already contemplated in guidelines of diverse institutions related to the field.[21][22][23]

 
 
Castle gate of Krnov before (2001) and after (2009) restoration
 
Preserved historical quarter in Beirut Central District

Practice edit

Preventive conservation edit

Many cultural works are sensitive to environmental conditions such as temperature, humidity and exposure to visible light and ultraviolet radiation. These works must be protected in controlled environments where such variables are maintained within a range of damage-limiting levels. For example, watercolour paintings usually require shielding from sunlight to prevent fading of pigments.

Collections care is an important element of museum policy. It is an essential responsibility of members of the museum profession to create and maintain a protective environment for the collections in their care, whether in store, on display, or in transit. A museum should carefully monitor the condition of collections to determine when an artifact requires conservation work and the services of a qualified conservator.

 
Work of preventive conservation in a rock wall with prehistoric paintings at the Serra da Capivara National Park. The work consists of filling the cracks to prevent the fragmentation of the wall.

Interventive conservation and restoration edit

 
Furniture conservation – Re-glueing loose element of solid nut marriage chest (probably Italy, 19th century)
 
Antique conservation – Re-painting of the frame by museum employee

A teaching programme of interventive conservation was established in the UK at the Institute of Archaeology by Ione Gedye, which is still teaching interventive conservators today.[24]

A principal aim of a cultural conservator is to reduce the rate of deterioration of an object. Both non-interventive and interventive methodologies may be employed in pursuit of this goal. Interventive conservation refers to any direct interaction between the conservator and the material fabric of the object. Interventive actions are carried out for a variety of reasons, including aesthetic choices, stabilization needs for structural integrity, or cultural requirements for intangible continuity. Examples of interventive treatments include the removal of discolored varnish from a painting, the application of wax to a sculpture, and the washing and rebinding of a book. Ethical standards within the field require that the conservator fully justify interventive actions and carry out documentation before, during, and after the treatment.

One of the guiding principles of conservation of cultural heritage has traditionally been the idea of reversibility, that all interventions with the object should be fully reversible and that the object should be able to be returned to the state in which it was prior to the conservator's intervention. Although this concept remains a guiding principle of the profession, it has been widely critiqued within the conservation profession[25] and is now considered by many to be "a fuzzy concept."[26] Another important principle of conservation is that all alterations should be well documented and should be clearly distinguishable from the original object.[17]

An example of a highly publicized interventive conservation effort would be the conservation work conducted on the Sistine Chapel.

Example of an archaeological discovery and restoration of a mural painting edit

Example of the restoration of an oil painting edit

Sustainable conservation edit

Recognising that conservation practices should not harm the environment, harm people, or contribute to global warming, the conservation-restoration profession has more recently focused on practices that reduce waste, reduce energy costs, and minimise the use of toxic or harmful solvents. A number of research projects,[27][28] working groups,[29] and other initiatives have explored how conservation can become a more environmentally sustainable profession.[30][31] Sustainable conservation practices apply both to work within cultural institutions[29] (e.g. museums, art galleries, archives, libraries, research centres and historic sites) as well as to businesses and private studios.[32]

Choice of materials edit

Conservators and restorers use a wide variety of materials - in conservation treatments, and those used to safely transport, display and store cultural heritage items. These materials can include solvents, papers and boards, fabrics, adhesives and consolidants, plastics and foams, wood products, and many others. Stability and longevity are two important factors conservators consider when selecting materials; sustainability is becoming an increasingly important third.[33] Examples of sustainable material choices and practices include:

  • Using biodegradable products or those with less environmental impact where possible;
  • Using 'green solvents' instead of more toxic alternatives, or treatment strategies that use much smaller amounts of solvents - for example, semi-rigid aqueous gels, emulsions or nano materials;[34][35]
  • Preparing smaller amounts of material (e.g. adhesives) to avoid waste;
  • Observing recommended disposal protocols for chemicals, recyclable materials and compostable materials, particularly to avoid contamination of waterways;
  • Choosing protective work wear that can be washed or cleaned and reused, rather than disposable options;
  • Tracking stock quantities to avoid over-buying, especially for materials with expiration dates;
  • Using durable materials for packing that may be washed and re-used, such as Tyvek or Mylar;[36][37]
  • Repurposing consumables such as blotting paper, non-woven fabrics, and polyester film when they are no longer fit for their original purpose;
  • Using locally produced products whenever possible, to reduce carbon footprints;
  • Reusing packaging materials such as cardboard boxes, plastic wrap and wooden crates;[38]
  • Using standard sizes of packaging and package designs that reduce waste;

These decisions are not always straightforward - for example, installing deionised or distilled water filters in laboratories reduces waste associated with purchasing bottled products, but increases energy consumption. Similarly, locally-made papers and boards may reduce inherent carbon miles but they may be made with pulp sourced from old growth forests.

Another dilemma is that many conservation-grade materials are chosen because they do not biodegrade. For example, when selecting a plastic with which to make storage enclosures, conservators prefer to use relatively long-lived plastics because they have better ageing properties - they are less likely to become yellow, leach plasticisers, or lose structural integrity and crumble (examples include polyethylene, polypropylene, and polyester). These plastics will also take longer to degrade in landfill.

Energy use edit

Many conservators and cultural organisations have sought to reduce the energy costs associated with controlling indoor storage and display environments (temperature, relative humidity, air filtration, and lighting levels) as well as those associated with the transport of cultural heritage items for exhibitions and loans.

In general, lowering the temperature reduces the rate at which damaging chemical reactions occur within materials. For example, storing cellulose acetate film at 10 °C instead of 21 °C is estimated to increase its usable life by over 100 years.[39] Controlling the relative humidity of air helps to reduce hydrolysis reactions and minimises cracking, distortion and other physical changes in hygroscopic materials. Changes in temperature will also bring about changes in relative humidity. Therefore, the conservation profession has placed great importance on controlling indoor environments. Temperature and humidity can be controlled through passive means (e.g. insulation, building design) or active means (air conditioning). Active controls typically require much higher energy use. Energy use increases with specificity - e.g. in will require more energy to maintain a quantity of air to a narrow temperature range (20-22 °C) than to a broad range (18-25 °C). In the past, conservation recommendations have often called for very tight, inflexible temperature and relative humidity set points. In other cases, conservators have recommended strict environmental conditions for buildings that could not reasonably be expected to achieve them, due to the quality of build, local environmental conditions (e.g. recommending temperate conditions for a building located in the tropics) or the financial circumstances of the organisation. This has been an area of particular debate for cultural heritage organisations who lend and borrow cultural items to each other - often, the lender will specify strict environmental conditions as part of the loan agreement, which may be very expensive for the borrowing organisation to achieve, or impossible.

The energy costs associated with cold storage and digital storage are also gaining more attention. Cold storage is a very effective strategy to preserve at-risk collections such as cellulose nitrate and cellulose acetate film, which can deteriorate beyond use within decades at ambient conditions. Digital storage costs are rising for both born-digital cultural heritage (photographs, audiovisual, time-based media) and to store digital preservation and access copies of cultural heritage. Digital storage capacity is a major factor in the complexity of preserving digital heritage such as video games,[40] social media, messaging services, and email.

Other areas where energy use can be reduced within conservation and restoration include:

  • Exhibition lighting - e.g. using lower-energy LED lighting systems and light sensors that switch lights on only when visitors are present;[41]
  • Installation of green energy capture systems in cultural organisations, such as solar photovoltaic plates, wind energy systems, and heat pumps;[42]
  • Improving the energy performance of cultural buildings by installing insulation, sealing gaps, reducing the number of windows and installing double-glazing:[42]
  • Using microclimates to house small groups of climate-sensitive objects instead of seeking to control the environmental conditions of the whole building.[42]

Country by country look edit

United States edit

Heritage Preservation, in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a U.S. federal agency, produced The Heritage Health Index. The results of this work was the report A Public Trust at Risk: The Heritage Health Index Report on the State of America's Collections, which was published in December 2005 and concluded that immediate action is needed to prevent the loss of 190 million artifacts that are in need of conservation treatment. The report made four recommendations:[43]

  • Institutions must give priority to providing safe conditions for the collections they hold in trust.
  • Every collecting institution must develop an emergency plan to protect its collections and train staff to carry it out.
  • Every institution must assign responsibility for caring for collections to members of its staff.
  • Individuals at all levels of government and in the private sector must assume responsibility for providing the support that will allow these collections to survive.[4]

United Kingdom edit

 
Conservation in Progress note, Victoria and Albert Museum (2014)

In October 2006, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, a governmental department, authored a document: "Understanding the Future: Priorities for England's Museums".[44] This document was based on several years of consultation aimed to lay out the government's priorities for museums in the 21st century.

The document listed the following as priorities for the next decade:

  1. Museums will fulfil their potential as learning resources (pp 7–10).
    • Museums will be embedded into the delivery of education in every school in the country.
    • Understanding of the effectiveness of museum education will be improved further and best practice built into education programmes.
    • The value of museums' collections as a research resource will be well understood and better links built between the academic community and museums.
  2. Museums will embrace their role in fostering, exploring, celebrating and questioning the identities of diverse communities (pp 11–14).
    • The sector needs to work with partners in academia and beyond to create an intellectual framework supporting museums' capacity to tackle issues of identity.
    • The museum sector must continue to develop improved practical techniques for engaging communities of all sorts.
  3. Museums' collections will be more dynamic and better used (pp 15–18).
    • Government and the sector will find new ways to encourage museums to collect actively and strategically, especially the record of contemporary society.
    • The sector will develop new collaborative approaches to sharing and developing collections and related expertise.
  4. Museums' workforce will be dynamic, highly skilled and representative (pp 17–22).
    • Museums' governing bodies and workforce will be representative of the communities they serve.
    • Find more varied ways for a broader range of skills to come into museums.
    • Improve continuing professional development.
  5. Museums will work more closely with each other and partners outside the sector (pp 23–26).
    • A consistent evidence base of the contribution of all kinds of museums to the full range of public service agendas will be developed.
    • There will be deeper and longer lasting partnerships between the national museums and a broader range of regional partners.
    • Museums' international roles will be strengthened to improve museum programmes in this country and Britain's image, reputation and relationships abroad.

The conservation profession response to this report was on the whole less than favourable, the Institute of Conservation (ICON) published their response under the title "A Failure of Vision".[44] It had the following to say:

No sector can look with confidence to the future if its key asset is worked harder and harder across an ever broadening range of objectives while the inputs required to sustain it are neglected.

It is of major concern to us that the only part of this section which makes any acknowledgement of the need for greater resourcing is the part which refers to acquisitions. The original consultation paper made quite extensive reference to the importance of collections, the role of new technologies, and cultural property issues, but this appears to have been whittled away in the present document.

Concluding:

When asked by the Commons Culture Media and Sport elect Committee CMS committee what he would like to see as a priority in the DCMS document arising from the 'Understanding the Future' consultation, Mr MacGregor responded 'I would like to see added there the need to conserve and research the collections, so that the collections can really play the role across the whole of the United Kingdom that they should.' So would we.

Further to this the ICON website summary report[45] lists the following specific recommendations:

  • A national survey to find out what the public want from museums, what motivates them to visit them and what makes for a rewarding visit.
  • A review of survey results and prioritisation of the various intrinsic, instrumental and institutional values to provide a clear basis for a 10-year strategy
  • HR consultants to be brought in from the commercial sector to review recruitment, career development and working practices in the national and regional museums.
  • A commitment to examine the potential for using Museum Accreditation as a more effective driver for improving recruitment, diversity, and career development across the sector.
  • DCMS to take full account of the eventual findings of the current Commons Select Committee enquiry into Care of Collections in the final version of this document
  • The adoption of those recommendations of the recent House of Lords inquiry into Science and Heritage which might affect the future of museums.

In November 2008, the UK-based think tank Demos published an influential pamphlet entitled It's a material world: caring for the public realm,[46] in which they argue for integrating the public directly into efforts to conserve material culture, particularly that which is in the public, their argument, as stated on page 16, demonstrates their belief that society can benefit from conservation as a paradigm as well as a profession:

conservators provide a paradigm not just for fixing things when they are broken, but for a wider social ethos of care, where we individually and collectively take responsibility and action.

Training edit

Training in conservation of cultural heritage for many years took the form of an apprenticeship, whereby an apprentice slowly developed the necessary skills to undertake their job. For some specializations within conservation this is still the case. However, it is more common in the field of conservation today that the training required to become a practicing conservator comes from a recognized university course in conservation of cultural heritage.[47]

The university can rarely provide all the necessary training in first hand experience that an apprenticeship can, and therefore in addition to graduate level training the profession also tends towards encouraging conservation students to spend time as an intern.

Conservation of cultural heritage is an interdisciplinary field as conservators have backgrounds in the fine arts, sciences (including chemistry, biology, and materials science), and closely related disciplines, such as art history, archaeology, and anthropology. They also have design, fabrication, artistic, and other special skills necessary for the practical application of that knowledge.

Within the various schools that teach conservation of cultural heritage, the approach differs according to the educational and vocational system within the country, and the focus of the school itself. This is acknowledged by the American Institute for Conservation who advise "Specific admission requirements differ and potential candidates are encouraged to contact the programs directly for details on prerequisites, application procedures, and program curriculum".[47]

In France, training for heritage conservation is taught by four schools : École supérieure d'art d'Avignon [fr], L'École supérieure des Beaux-Arts Tours, Angers, Le Mans, L'Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Institut national du patrimoine.[48]

Associations and professional organizations edit

Societies devoted to the care of cultural heritage have been in existence around the world for many years. One early example is the founding in 1877 of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in Britain to protect the built heritage, this society continues to be active today.[49] The 14th Dalai Lama and the Tibetan people work to preserve their cultural heritage with organizations including the Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts[50] and an international network of eight Tibet Houses.

The built heritage was at the forefront of the growth of member based organizations in the United States. Preservation Virginia, founded in Richmond in 1889 as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, was the United States' first statewide historic preservation group.[51]

Today, professional conservators join and take part in the activities of numerous conservation associations and professional organizations with the wider field, and within their area of specialization. In Europe, E.C.C.O. European Confederation of Conservator-Restorers Organisations was established in 1991 by 14 European Conservator-Restorers' Organisations. Currently representing close to 6.000 professionals within 23 countries and 26 members organisations, including one international body (IADA), E.C.C.O. embodies the field of preservation of cultural heritage, both movable and immovable.

These organizations exist to "support the conservation professionals who preserve our cultural heritage".[52]

This involves upholding professional standards, promoting research and publications, providing educational opportunities, and fostering the exchange of knowledge among cultural conservators, allied professionals, and the public.

International cultural property documents edit

Year Document Sponsor Text (English where available)
1931 Athens Charter International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Monuments text
1931 Carta Di Atene Conferenza Internazionale di Atene text 2009-05-23 at the Wayback Machine (Italian)
1932 Carta Italiana del restauro Consiglio Superiore Per Le Antichità e Belle Arti text 2009-05-23 at the Wayback Machine (Italian)
1933 Charter of Athens IV CIAM text
1956 New Delhi Recommendation IX UNESCO ,
1962 Paris Recommendation XII UNESCO
1964 Venice Charter II International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Monuments ,
1964 Paris Recommendation XIII UNESCO
1967 Norms of Quito OAS text (Spanish),
1968 Paris Recommendation XV UNESCO
1972 Paris Convention XVII UNESCO text
1972 Paris Recommendation XVII UNESCO
1972 Carta Italiana del Restauro text 2009-05-23 at the Wayback Machine (Italian)
1972 Stockholm Declaration UNEP text
1974 Santo Domingo Resolution, Dominican Republic Interamerican Seminar on the Conservation and Restoration of the Architectural Heritage of the Colonial and Republican Periods – OAS (Portuguese), text[permanent dead link] (Portuguese)
1975 Declaration of Amsterdam Congress on the European Architectural Heritage
1975 European Charter of the Architectural Heritage Council of Europe
1976 Charter on Cultural Tourism, Brussels International Seminar on Contemporary Tourism and Humanism text
1976 Nairobi Recommendation XIX UNESCO
1977 Machu Picchu Charter (Portuguese), text[permanent dead link] (Portuguese), (Spanish), ref (Spanish)
1981 Burra Charter ICOMOS
1982 Florence Charter ICOMOS: Historic Gardens text,
1982 Nairobi Declaration UNEP text 2009-02-18 at the Wayback Machine
1982 Tlaxcala Declaration ICOMOS
1982 México Declaration World Conference on Cultural Policies – MONDIACULT text,
1983 Declaration of Rome ICOMOS
1987 Carta della conservazione e del restauro degli oggetti d'arte e di cultura (Italian)
1987 Washington Charter ICOMOS text, text
1989 Paris Recommendation XXV UNESCO text
1990 Lausanne Charter ICOMOS / ICAHM text, text
1994 Nara Document UNESCO / ICCROM / ICOMOS text, text
1995 European Recommendation Council of Europe, Committee of Ministers text (Rec(95)3E),

text (Rec(95)9E)

1996 Declaration of San Antonio ICOMOS
1997 Declaration of Sofia XI ICOMOS or XXIX UNESCO
1997 Carta de Mar del Plata Mercosur text[permanent dead link] (Portuguese), text[permanent dead link] (Portuguese), (Spanish), text[permanent dead link] (Spanish)
2000 Cracow Charter (Italian)
2002 Declaration of Cartagena de Indias, Colômbia Conselho Andino, OAS text
2003 Paris Recommendation XXXII UNESCO text
2017 Delhi Declaration ICOMOS[53] text (English)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sullivan, Ann Marie (2016). "Cultural Heritage & New Media: A Future for the Past". The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law. 15: 604.
  2. ^ "Definition of a Profession". International Council of Museums - Committee for Conservation. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  3. ^ Walston, S. (1978). . ICCM Bulletin. 4 (1): 9. doi:10.1179/iccm.1978.4.4.002. Archived from the original on 2016-03-23. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  4. ^ a b Szczepanowska, Hanna M. (2013). Conservation of cultural heritage: key principles and approaches. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415674744.
  5. ^ "What is Art Conservation?". South Florida Art Conservation. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  6. ^ Brandi, Cesare (1963). Teoria del restauro. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura.
  7. ^ Pergoli Campanelli, Alessandro (2013). Cassiodoro alle origini dell'idea di restauro. Milano: Jaca book. p. 140. ISBN 978-88-16-41207-1.
  8. ^ Pye, E, 2001. Caring for the Past: Issues in Conservation for Archaeology and Museums. London: James and James
  9. ^ Stoner, Joyce Hill (2005). "Changing Approaches in Art Conservation: 1925 to the Present". Scientific Examination of Art: Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. p. 41. doi:10.17226/11413. ISBN 978-0-309-09625-6.
  10. ^ "Art Under Wraps". Harvard Magazine. 1 March 2000. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  11. ^ Gilberg, Mark. (1987). . Journal of the American Institute for Conservation. 26 (2): 105–120. doi:10.2307/3179459. JSTOR 3179459. Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2010-05-25.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-07-14.
  13. ^ "Departments". The British Museum. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  14. ^ a b Stoner, Joyce Hill. "Changing Approaches in Art Conservation: 1925 to the present". The publication exists in two editions. The earlier one is "Scientific Examination of Art: Modern Techniques on Conservation and Analysis" and was published by the National Academy of Sciences in 2003. The later edition of the publication is "Arthur M. Sackler Colloquia: Scientific Examination of Art: Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis". It was published by the National Academies Press in 2005.
  15. ^ Patent# 2,073,802 U.S. "Art of Oil Painting Restoration" 2016-01-24 at the Wayback Machine, March 16, 1937. Patft1.uspto.gov. Retrieved on 2012-06-29.
  16. ^ Thomson, Garry (1986). The museum environment (2nd ed.). London: Butterworths, in association with the International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. ISBN 978-0-7506-2041-3.
  17. ^ a b "Our Code of Ethics". www.culturalheritage.org. AIC. August 1994.
  18. ^ "Ethical issues in conservation". Conservation OnLine (CoOL). Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  19. ^ Weil, Stephen E. (October 1989). "Too much Art?". ARTnews: 232. ISSN 0004-3273.
  20. ^ Hernandez, Christian (2013). "Responsible Stewardship: Exploring Sustainability within Conservation" (PDF). Annual Meeting. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  21. ^ "Environmental Guidelines – IIC and ICOM-CC Declaration | International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works". www.iiconservation.org. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  22. ^ "Environmental Guidelines". Australian Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material. from the original on 2021-01-20. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  23. ^ "E.C.C.O. Professional Guidelines (II) Code of Ethics" (PDF). Siège social: rue Coudenberg 70, BE-1000 Bruxelles, Belgique, Entreprise N° 0447.118.530 E.C.C.O. European Confederation of Conservator-Restorers' Organisations A.I.S.B.L. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
  24. ^ Pye, Elizabeth; Brommelle, Norman (January 1977). "A Tribute to Ione Gedye". The Conservator. 1 (1): 3–4. doi:10.1080/01400096.1977.9635631. ISSN 0140-0096.
  25. ^ Andrew Oddy and Sara Carroll (eds). 1999. Reversibility – Does it Exist? British Museum Occasional Paper Number 135. London: British Museum.
  26. ^ Muñoz Viñas, Salvador (2005). Contemporary theory of conservation. Oxford: Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 185. ISBN 978-0750662246.
  27. ^ Appendino, Federica (October 2017). "Balancing Heritage Conservation and Sustainable Development – The Case of Bordeaux". IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering. 245 (6): 062002. Bibcode:2017MS&E..245f2002A. doi:10.1088/1757-899x/245/6/062002. ISSN 1757-8981. S2CID 133496562.
  28. ^ Bartoletti, Angelica; Ferreira, Joana Lia (2020). "Sustainable strategies using supercritical carbon dioxide for the conservation of plastics: insight from the PlasCO2 project". Plastics in Peril: Focus on Conservation of Polymeric Materials in Cultural Heritage,16-19 November 2020. University of Cambridge.
  29. ^ a b "Working group on sustainability mandate 2020–2022" (PDF). International Council of Museums. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 9 May 2022.
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  34. ^ de Silva, Megan; Henderson, Jane (2011-03-01). "Sustainability in conservation practice". Journal of the Institute of Conservation. 34 (1): 5–15. doi:10.1080/19455224.2011.566013. ISSN 1945-5224. S2CID 191612605.
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Further reading edit

  • Sullivan, Ann Marie (1 January 2016). "Cultural Heritage & New Media: A Future for the Past". The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law. 15 (3). ISSN 1930-8140.
  • Charola, A. Elena; Koestler, Robert J., eds. (11 September 2019). "Pesticide Mitigation in Museum Collections: Science in Conservation (Proceedings from the MCI Workshop Series)". Smithsonian Contributions to Museum Conservation. Washington, D.C.: 1–72. doi:10.5479/si.19492359.1.1. Copies of this volume are available for free pdf download from the Smithsonian's digital library by clicking on the included link.
  • Koestler, Robert J.; Koestler, Victoria H.; Charola, A. Elena; Nieto-Fernandez, Fernando E., eds. (2003). Art, biology, and conservation: biodeterioration of works of art. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-1588391070.
  • Pergoli Campanelli, Alessandro, ed. (2015). La nascita del restauro : dall'antichità all'alto Medioevo (Primaizione italiana ed.). Milano: Jaca book. ISBN 9788816412996.
  • Sandis, Constantine, ed. (2014). Cultural heritage ethics : between theory and practice. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers. doi:10.11647/obp.0047. ISBN 978-1-78374-067-3.
  • Staniforth, Sarah, ed. (2013). Historical perspectives on preventive conservation. Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute. ISBN 978-1-60606-142-8.
  • Szczepanowska, H. M.; Jha, D.; Mathia, Th G. (25 February 2015). "Morphology and characterization of Dematiaceous fungi on a cellulose paper substrate using synchrotron X-ray microtomography, scanning electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy in the context of cultural heritage". Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry. 30 (3): 651–657. doi:10.1039/C4JA00337C. ISSN 1364-5544. Retrieved 9 May 2022.

External links edit

  • BCIN, the Bibliographic Database of the Conservation Information Network
  • CAMEO: Conservation and Art Materials Encyclopedia OnLine
  • Conservation OnLine (CoOL) Resources for Conservation Professionals
  • DOCAM — Documentation and Conservation of the Media Arts Heritage
  • ICOMOS Open Archive: EPrints on Cultural Heritage
  • Publications & Resources at the Getty Conservation Institute

conservation, restoration, cultural, property, conservation, restoration, cultural, property, focuses, protection, care, cultural, property, tangible, cultural, heritage, including, artworks, architecture, archaeology, museum, collections, conservation, activi. The conservation and restoration of cultural property focuses on protection and care of cultural property tangible cultural heritage including artworks architecture archaeology and museum collections 1 Conservation activities include preventive conservation examination documentation research treatment and education 2 This field is closely allied with conservation science curators and registrars Removal of adherent surface deposits by physical chemical means by cotton swab at Church of Sucevița Monastery burial chamber in Suceava Romania Conservation of the Horses of Saint Mark Venice Contents 1 Definition 2 History and science 2 1 Key dates 2 2 Brief history 2 3 Conservation laboratories 3 Ethics 4 Practice 4 1 Preventive conservation 4 2 Interventive conservation and restoration 4 2 1 Example of an archaeological discovery and restoration of a mural painting 4 2 2 Example of the restoration of an oil painting 5 Sustainable conservation 5 1 Choice of materials 5 2 Energy use 6 Country by country look 6 1 United States 6 2 United Kingdom 7 Training 8 Associations and professional organizations 9 International cultural property documents 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksDefinition edit nbsp Revision and conservation of the Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc Czech Republic in 2006 Conservation of cultural property involves protection and restoration using any methods that prove effective in keeping that property in as close to its original condition as possible for as long as possible 3 Conservation of cultural heritage is often associated with art collections and museums and involves collection care and management through tracking examination documentation exhibition storage preventive conservation and restoration 4 The scope has widened from art conservation involving protection and care of artwork and architecture to conservation of cultural heritage also including protection and care of a broad set of other cultural and historical works Conservation of cultural heritage can be described as a type of ethical stewardship It may broadly be divided into Conservation and restoration of movable cultural property Conservation and restoration of immovable cultural property Conservation of cultural property applies simple ethical guidelines Minimal intervention Appropriate materials and reversible methods Full documentation of all work undertaken Often there are compromises between preserving appearance maintaining original design and material properties and ability to reverse changes Reversibility is now emphasized so as to reduce problems with future treatment investigation and use In order for conservators to decide upon an appropriate conservation strategy and apply their professional expertise accordingly they must take into account views of the stakeholder the values artist s intent meaning of the work and the physical needs of the material Cesare Brandi in his Theory of Restoration describes restoration as the methodological moment in which the work of art is appreciated in its material form and in its historical and aesthetic duality with a view to transmitting it to the future 5 6 History and science editMain article Conservation science cultural property Key dates edit Main article List of dates in the history of conservation and restoration Some consider the tradition of conservation of cultural heritage in Europe to have begun in 1565 with the restoration of the Sistine Chapel frescoes but more ancient examples include the work of Cassiodorus 7 Brief history edit source source source source An early video showing some activities in a conservation laboratory at the Rijksmuseum nbsp A temporary windowed partition along restoration work area in the cloister of the Church of St Trophime Arles The care of cultural heritage has a long history one that was primarily aimed at fixing and mending objects for their continued use and aesthetic enjoyment 8 Until the early 20th century artists were normally the ones called upon to repair damaged artworks During the 19th century however the fields of science and art became increasingly intertwined as scientists such as Michael Faraday began to study the damaging effects of the environment to works of art Louis Pasteur carried out scientific analysis on paint as well 9 However perhaps the first organized attempt to apply a theoretical framework to the conservation of cultural heritage came with the founding in the United Kingdom of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1877 The society was founded by William Morris and Philip Webb both of whom were deeply influenced by the writings of John Ruskin During the same period a French movement with similar aims was being developed under the direction of Eugene Viollet le Duc an architect and theorist famous for his restorations of medieval buildings nbsp Since 1998 Harvard University wraps some of the valuable statues on its campus such as this Chinese stele with waterproof covers every winter in order to protect them from erosion caused by acid rain 10 Conservation of cultural heritage as a distinct field of study initially developed in Germany where in 1888 Friedrich Rathgen became the first chemist to be employed by a Museum the Koniglichen Museen Berlin Royal Museums of Berlin He not only developed a scientific approach to the care of objects in the collections but disseminated this approach by publishing a Handbook of Conservation in 1898 11 The early development of conservation of cultural heritage in any area of the world is usually linked to the creation of positions for chemists within museums In British archaeology key research and technical experimentation in conservation was undertaken by women such as Ione Gedye both in the field and in archaeological collections particularly those of the Institute of Archaeology London In the United Kingdom pioneering research into painting materials and conservation ceramics and stone conservation was conducted by Arthur Pillans Laurie academic chemist and Principal of Heriot Watt University from 1900 Laurie s interests were fostered by William Holman Hunt 12 In 1924 the chemist Harold Plenderleith began to work at the British Museum with Alexander Scott in the recently created Research Laboratory although he was actually employed by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research in the early years Plenderleith s appointment may be said to have given birth to the conservation profession in the UK although there had been craftsmen in many museums and in the commercial art world for generations 13 This department was created by the museum to address the deteriorating condition of objects in the collection damages which were a result of their being stored in the London Underground tunnels during the First World War The creation of this department moved the focus for the development of conservation theory and practice from Germany to Britain and made the latter a prime force in this fledgling field In 1956 Plenderleith wrote a significant handbook called The Conservation of Antiquities and Works of Art which supplanted Rathgen s earlier tome and set new standards for the development of art and conservation science In the United States the development of conservation of cultural heritage can be traced to the Fogg Art Museum and Edward Waldo Forbes its director from 1909 to 1944 He encouraged technical investigation and was Chairman of the Advisory Committee for the first technical journal Technical Studies in the Field of the Fine Arts published by the Fogg from 1932 to 1942 Importantly he also brought onto the museum staff chemists Rutherford John Gettens was the first of such in the US to be permanently employed by an art museum He worked with George L Stout the founder and first editor of Technical Studies Gettens and Stout co authored Painting Materials A Short Encyclopaedia in 1942 reprinted in 1966 This compendium is still cited regularly Only a few dates and descriptions in Gettens and Stout s book are now outdated 14 George T Oliver of Oliver Brothers Art Restoration and Art Conservation Boston Est 1850 in New York City invented the vacuum hot table for relining paintings in 1920s he filed a patent for the table in 1937 15 Taylor s prototype table which he designed and constructed is still in operation Oliver Brothers is believed to be the first and the oldest continuously operating art restoration company in the United States The focus of conservation development then accelerated in Britain and America and it was in Britain that the first International Conservation Organisations developed The International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works IIC was incorporated under British law in 1950 as a permanent organization to co ordinate and improve the knowledge methods and working standards needed to protect and preserve precious materials of all kinds 14 The rapid growth of conservation professional organizations publications journals newsletters both internationally and in localities has spearheaded the development of the conservation profession both practically and theoretically Art historians and theorists such as Cesare Brandi have also played a significant role in developing conservation science theory In recent years ethical concerns have been at the forefront of developments in conservation Most significantly has been the idea of preventive conservation This concept is based in part on the pioneering work by Garry Thomson CBE and his book Museum Environment first published in 1978 16 Thomson was associated with the National Gallery in London it was here that he established a set of guidelines or environmental controls for the best conditions in which objects could be stored and displayed within the museum environment Although his exact guidelines are no longer rigidly followed they did inspire this field of conservation Conservation laboratories edit nbsp The Lunder Conservation Center Conservation staff for both the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery are visible to the public through floor to ceiling glass walls that allow visitors to see firsthand all the techniques that conservators use to examine treat and preserve artworks within a functioning conservation Laboratory Conservators routinely use chemical and scientific analysis for the examination and treatment of cultural works The modern conservation laboratory uses equipment such as microscopes spectrometers and various x ray regime instruments to better understand objects and their components The data thus collected helps in deciding the conservation treatments to be provided to the object Ethics editThe conservator s work is guided by ethical standards These take the form of applied ethics Ethical standards have been established across the world and national and international ethical guidelines have been written One such example is American Institute for Conservation Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice 17 Conservation OnLine provides resources on ethical issues in conservation 18 including examples of codes of ethics and guidelines for professional conduct in conservation and allied fields and charters and treaties pertaining to ethical issues involving the preservation of cultural property As well as standards of practice conservators deal with wider ethical concerns such as the debates as to whether all art is worth preserving 19 Keeping up with the international contemporary scenario recent concerns with sustainability in conservation have emerged The common understanding that the care of an artifact should not come at the undue expense of the environment 20 is generally well accepted within the community and is already contemplated in guidelines of diverse institutions related to the field 21 22 23 nbsp nbsp Castle gate of Krnov before 2001 and after 2009 restoration nbsp Preserved historical quarter in Beirut Central DistrictPractice editMain articles Conservation and restoration of movable cultural property and Conservation and restoration of immovable cultural property Preventive conservation edit Main articles Risk management cultural property Collections maintenance and Preservation library and archive Many cultural works are sensitive to environmental conditions such as temperature humidity and exposure to visible light and ultraviolet radiation These works must be protected in controlled environments where such variables are maintained within a range of damage limiting levels For example watercolour paintings usually require shielding from sunlight to prevent fading of pigments Collections care is an important element of museum policy It is an essential responsibility of members of the museum profession to create and maintain a protective environment for the collections in their care whether in store on display or in transit A museum should carefully monitor the condition of collections to determine when an artifact requires conservation work and the services of a qualified conservator nbsp Work of preventive conservation in a rock wall with prehistoric paintings at the Serra da Capivara National Park The work consists of filling the cracks to prevent the fragmentation of the wall Interventive conservation and restoration edit nbsp Furniture conservation Re glueing loose element of solid nut marriage chest probably Italy 19th century nbsp Antique conservation Re painting of the frame by museum employee A teaching programme of interventive conservation was established in the UK at the Institute of Archaeology by Ione Gedye which is still teaching interventive conservators today 24 A principal aim of a cultural conservator is to reduce the rate of deterioration of an object Both non interventive and interventive methodologies may be employed in pursuit of this goal Interventive conservation refers to any direct interaction between the conservator and the material fabric of the object Interventive actions are carried out for a variety of reasons including aesthetic choices stabilization needs for structural integrity or cultural requirements for intangible continuity Examples of interventive treatments include the removal of discolored varnish from a painting the application of wax to a sculpture and the washing and rebinding of a book Ethical standards within the field require that the conservator fully justify interventive actions and carry out documentation before during and after the treatment One of the guiding principles of conservation of cultural heritage has traditionally been the idea of reversibility that all interventions with the object should be fully reversible and that the object should be able to be returned to the state in which it was prior to the conservator s intervention Although this concept remains a guiding principle of the profession it has been widely critiqued within the conservation profession 25 and is now considered by many to be a fuzzy concept 26 Another important principle of conservation is that all alterations should be well documented and should be clearly distinguishable from the original object 17 An example of a highly publicized interventive conservation effort would be the conservation work conducted on the Sistine Chapel Example of an archaeological discovery and restoration of a mural painting edit nbsp First archaeological search in the 19th century layer by French archaeologist and restorer Yves Morvan nbsp Painting of the 15th century cleared before restoration nbsp Painting after restoration Example of the restoration of an oil painting edit nbsp Bacchus the painting originating from the Workshop of Leonardo da Vinci seen here before restoration nbsp Bacchus after restoration with colors closer to original and details better visible again Sustainable conservation editRecognising that conservation practices should not harm the environment harm people or contribute to global warming the conservation restoration profession has more recently focused on practices that reduce waste reduce energy costs and minimise the use of toxic or harmful solvents A number of research projects 27 28 working groups 29 and other initiatives have explored how conservation can become a more environmentally sustainable profession 30 31 Sustainable conservation practices apply both to work within cultural institutions 29 e g museums art galleries archives libraries research centres and historic sites as well as to businesses and private studios 32 Choice of materials edit Conservators and restorers use a wide variety of materials in conservation treatments and those used to safely transport display and store cultural heritage items These materials can include solvents papers and boards fabrics adhesives and consolidants plastics and foams wood products and many others Stability and longevity are two important factors conservators consider when selecting materials sustainability is becoming an increasingly important third 33 Examples of sustainable material choices and practices include Using biodegradable products or those with less environmental impact where possible Using green solvents instead of more toxic alternatives or treatment strategies that use much smaller amounts of solvents for example semi rigid aqueous gels emulsions or nano materials 34 35 Preparing smaller amounts of material e g adhesives to avoid waste Observing recommended disposal protocols for chemicals recyclable materials and compostable materials particularly to avoid contamination of waterways Choosing protective work wear that can be washed or cleaned and reused rather than disposable options Tracking stock quantities to avoid over buying especially for materials with expiration dates Using durable materials for packing that may be washed and re used such as Tyvek or Mylar 36 37 Repurposing consumables such as blotting paper non woven fabrics and polyester film when they are no longer fit for their original purpose Using locally produced products whenever possible to reduce carbon footprints Reusing packaging materials such as cardboard boxes plastic wrap and wooden crates 38 Using standard sizes of packaging and package designs that reduce waste These decisions are not always straightforward for example installing deionised or distilled water filters in laboratories reduces waste associated with purchasing bottled products but increases energy consumption Similarly locally made papers and boards may reduce inherent carbon miles but they may be made with pulp sourced from old growth forests Another dilemma is that many conservation grade materials are chosen because they do not biodegrade For example when selecting a plastic with which to make storage enclosures conservators prefer to use relatively long lived plastics because they have better ageing properties they are less likely to become yellow leach plasticisers or lose structural integrity and crumble examples include polyethylene polypropylene and polyester These plastics will also take longer to degrade in landfill Energy use edit Many conservators and cultural organisations have sought to reduce the energy costs associated with controlling indoor storage and display environments temperature relative humidity air filtration and lighting levels as well as those associated with the transport of cultural heritage items for exhibitions and loans In general lowering the temperature reduces the rate at which damaging chemical reactions occur within materials For example storing cellulose acetate film at 10 C instead of 21 C is estimated to increase its usable life by over 100 years 39 Controlling the relative humidity of air helps to reduce hydrolysis reactions and minimises cracking distortion and other physical changes in hygroscopic materials Changes in temperature will also bring about changes in relative humidity Therefore the conservation profession has placed great importance on controlling indoor environments Temperature and humidity can be controlled through passive means e g insulation building design or active means air conditioning Active controls typically require much higher energy use Energy use increases with specificity e g in will require more energy to maintain a quantity of air to a narrow temperature range 20 22 C than to a broad range 18 25 C In the past conservation recommendations have often called for very tight inflexible temperature and relative humidity set points In other cases conservators have recommended strict environmental conditions for buildings that could not reasonably be expected to achieve them due to the quality of build local environmental conditions e g recommending temperate conditions for a building located in the tropics or the financial circumstances of the organisation This has been an area of particular debate for cultural heritage organisations who lend and borrow cultural items to each other often the lender will specify strict environmental conditions as part of the loan agreement which may be very expensive for the borrowing organisation to achieve or impossible The energy costs associated with cold storage and digital storage are also gaining more attention Cold storage is a very effective strategy to preserve at risk collections such as cellulose nitrate and cellulose acetate film which can deteriorate beyond use within decades at ambient conditions Digital storage costs are rising for both born digital cultural heritage photographs audiovisual time based media and to store digital preservation and access copies of cultural heritage Digital storage capacity is a major factor in the complexity of preserving digital heritage such as video games 40 social media messaging services and email Other areas where energy use can be reduced within conservation and restoration include Exhibition lighting e g using lower energy LED lighting systems and light sensors that switch lights on only when visitors are present 41 Installation of green energy capture systems in cultural organisations such as solar photovoltaic plates wind energy systems and heat pumps 42 Improving the energy performance of cultural buildings by installing insulation sealing gaps reducing the number of windows and installing double glazing 42 Using microclimates to house small groups of climate sensitive objects instead of seeking to control the environmental conditions of the whole building 42 Country by country look editUnited States edit Heritage Preservation in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services a U S federal agency produced The Heritage Health Index The results of this work was the report A Public Trust at Risk The Heritage Health Index Report on the State of America s Collections which was published in December 2005 and concluded that immediate action is needed to prevent the loss of 190 million artifacts that are in need of conservation treatment The report made four recommendations 43 Institutions must give priority to providing safe conditions for the collections they hold in trust Every collecting institution must develop an emergency plan to protect its collections and train staff to carry it out Every institution must assign responsibility for caring for collections to members of its staff Individuals at all levels of government and in the private sector must assume responsibility for providing the support that will allow these collections to survive 4 United Kingdom edit nbsp Conservation in Progress note Victoria and Albert Museum 2014 In October 2006 the Department for Culture Media and Sport a governmental department authored a document Understanding the Future Priorities for England s Museums 44 This document was based on several years of consultation aimed to lay out the government s priorities for museums in the 21st century The document listed the following as priorities for the next decade Museums will fulfil their potential as learning resources pp 7 10 Museums will be embedded into the delivery of education in every school in the country Understanding of the effectiveness of museum education will be improved further and best practice built into education programmes The value of museums collections as a research resource will be well understood and better links built between the academic community and museums Museums will embrace their role in fostering exploring celebrating and questioning the identities of diverse communities pp 11 14 The sector needs to work with partners in academia and beyond to create an intellectual framework supporting museums capacity to tackle issues of identity The museum sector must continue to develop improved practical techniques for engaging communities of all sorts Museums collections will be more dynamic and better used pp 15 18 Government and the sector will find new ways to encourage museums to collect actively and strategically especially the record of contemporary society The sector will develop new collaborative approaches to sharing and developing collections and related expertise Museums workforce will be dynamic highly skilled and representative pp 17 22 Museums governing bodies and workforce will be representative of the communities they serve Find more varied ways for a broader range of skills to come into museums Improve continuing professional development Museums will work more closely with each other and partners outside the sector pp 23 26 A consistent evidence base of the contribution of all kinds of museums to the full range of public service agendas will be developed There will be deeper and longer lasting partnerships between the national museums and a broader range of regional partners Museums international roles will be strengthened to improve museum programmes in this country and Britain s image reputation and relationships abroad The conservation profession response to this report was on the whole less than favourable the Institute of Conservation ICON published their response under the title A Failure of Vision 44 It had the following to say No sector can look with confidence to the future if its key asset is worked harder and harder across an ever broadening range of objectives while the inputs required to sustain it are neglected It is of major concern to us that the only part of this section which makes any acknowledgement of the need for greater resourcing is the part which refers to acquisitions The original consultation paper made quite extensive reference to the importance of collections the role of new technologies and cultural property issues but this appears to have been whittled away in the present document Concluding When asked by the Commons Culture Media and Sport elect Committee CMS committee what he would like to see as a priority in the DCMS document arising from the Understanding the Future consultation Mr MacGregor responded I would like to see added there the need to conserve and research the collections so that the collections can really play the role across the whole of the United Kingdom that they should So would we Further to this the ICON website summary report 45 lists the following specific recommendations A national survey to find out what the public want from museums what motivates them to visit them and what makes for a rewarding visit A review of survey results and prioritisation of the various intrinsic instrumental and institutional values to provide a clear basis for a 10 year strategy HR consultants to be brought in from the commercial sector to review recruitment career development and working practices in the national and regional museums A commitment to examine the potential for using Museum Accreditation as a more effective driver for improving recruitment diversity and career development across the sector DCMS to take full account of the eventual findings of the current Commons Select Committee enquiry into Care of Collections in the final version of this document The adoption of those recommendations of the recent House of Lords inquiry into Science and Heritage which might affect the future of museums In November 2008 the UK based think tank Demos published an influential pamphlet entitled It s a material world caring for the public realm 46 in which they argue for integrating the public directly into efforts to conserve material culture particularly that which is in the public their argument as stated on page 16 demonstrates their belief that society can benefit from conservation as a paradigm as well as a profession conservators provide a paradigm not just for fixing things when they are broken but for a wider social ethos of care where we individually and collectively take responsibility and action Training editMain article Conservation and restoration training See also Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property Training in conservation of cultural heritage for many years took the form of an apprenticeship whereby an apprentice slowly developed the necessary skills to undertake their job For some specializations within conservation this is still the case However it is more common in the field of conservation today that the training required to become a practicing conservator comes from a recognized university course in conservation of cultural heritage 47 The university can rarely provide all the necessary training in first hand experience that an apprenticeship can and therefore in addition to graduate level training the profession also tends towards encouraging conservation students to spend time as an intern Conservation of cultural heritage is an interdisciplinary field as conservators have backgrounds in the fine arts sciences including chemistry biology and materials science and closely related disciplines such as art history archaeology and anthropology They also have design fabrication artistic and other special skills necessary for the practical application of that knowledge Within the various schools that teach conservation of cultural heritage the approach differs according to the educational and vocational system within the country and the focus of the school itself This is acknowledged by the American Institute for Conservation who advise Specific admission requirements differ and potential candidates are encouraged to contact the programs directly for details on prerequisites application procedures and program curriculum 47 In France training for heritage conservation is taught by four schools Ecole superieure d art d Avignon fr L Ecole superieure des Beaux Arts Tours Angers Le Mans L Universite Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne Institut national du patrimoine 48 Associations and professional organizations editMain article Conservation associations and professional organizations Societies devoted to the care of cultural heritage have been in existence around the world for many years One early example is the founding in 1877 of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in Britain to protect the built heritage this society continues to be active today 49 The 14th Dalai Lama and the Tibetan people work to preserve their cultural heritage with organizations including the Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts 50 and an international network of eight Tibet Houses The built heritage was at the forefront of the growth of member based organizations in the United States Preservation Virginia founded in Richmond in 1889 as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities was the United States first statewide historic preservation group 51 Today professional conservators join and take part in the activities of numerous conservation associations and professional organizations with the wider field and within their area of specialization In Europe E C C O European Confederation of Conservator Restorers Organisations was established in 1991 by 14 European Conservator Restorers Organisations Currently representing close to 6 000 professionals within 23 countries and 26 members organisations including one international body IADA E C C O embodies the field of preservation of cultural heritage both movable and immovable These organizations exist to support the conservation professionals who preserve our cultural heritage 52 This involves upholding professional standards promoting research and publications providing educational opportunities and fostering the exchange of knowledge among cultural conservators allied professionals and the public International cultural property documents editYear Document Sponsor Text English where available 1931 Athens Charter International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Monuments text 1931 Carta Di Atene Conferenza Internazionale di Atene text Archived 2009 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Italian 1932 Carta Italiana del restauro Consiglio Superiore Per Le Antichita e Belle Arti text Archived 2009 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Italian 1933 Charter of Athens IV CIAM text 1956 New Delhi Recommendation IX UNESCO text text 1962 Paris Recommendation XII UNESCO text 1964 Venice Charter II International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Monuments text text 1964 Paris Recommendation XIII UNESCO text 1967 Norms of Quito OAS text Spanish text 1968 Paris Recommendation XV UNESCO text 1972 Paris Convention XVII UNESCO text 1972 Paris Recommendation XVII UNESCO text 1972 Carta Italiana del Restauro text Archived 2009 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Italian 1972 Stockholm Declaration UNEP text 1974 Santo Domingo Resolution Dominican Republic Interamerican Seminar on the Conservation and Restoration of the Architectural Heritage of the Colonial and Republican Periods OAS text Portuguese text permanent dead link Portuguese 1975 Declaration of Amsterdam Congress on the European Architectural Heritage text 1975 European Charter of the Architectural Heritage Council of Europe text 1976 Charter on Cultural Tourism Brussels International Seminar on Contemporary Tourism and Humanism text 1976 Nairobi Recommendation XIX UNESCO text 1977 Machu Picchu Charter text Portuguese text permanent dead link Portuguese text Spanish ref Spanish 1981 Burra Charter ICOMOS text 1982 Florence Charter ICOMOS Historic Gardens text text 1982 Nairobi Declaration UNEP text Archived 2009 02 18 at the Wayback Machine 1982 Tlaxcala Declaration ICOMOS text 1982 Mexico Declaration World Conference on Cultural Policies MONDIACULT text text 1983 Declaration of Rome ICOMOS text 1987 Carta della conservazione e del restauro degli oggetti d arte e di cultura text Italian 1987 Washington Charter ICOMOS text text 1989 Paris Recommendation XXV UNESCO text 1990 Lausanne Charter ICOMOS ICAHM text text 1994 Nara Document UNESCO ICCROM ICOMOS text text 1995 European Recommendation Council of Europe Committee of Ministers text Rec 95 3E text Rec 95 9E 1996 Declaration of San Antonio ICOMOS text 1997 Declaration of Sofia XI ICOMOS or XXIX UNESCO text 1997 Carta de Mar del Plata Mercosur text permanent dead link Portuguese text permanent dead link Portuguese text Spanish text permanent dead link Spanish 2000 Cracow Charter text Italian 2002 Declaration of Cartagena de Indias Colombia Conselho Andino OAS text 2003 Paris Recommendation XXXII UNESCO text 2017 Delhi Declaration ICOMOS 53 text English See also edit nbsp Society portal Conservation and restoration of rail vehicles The Georgian Group Wikipedia WikiProject Collections Care International Day For Monuments and SitesReferences edit Sullivan Ann Marie 2016 Cultural Heritage amp New Media A Future for the Past The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law 15 604 Definition of a Profession International Council of Museums Committee for Conservation Retrieved 18 August 2012 Walston S 1978 The Preservation and Conservation of Aboriginal and Pacific Cultural Material in Australian Museums ICCM Bulletin 4 1 9 doi 10 1179 iccm 1978 4 4 002 Archived from the original on 2016 03 23 Retrieved 2012 06 29 a b Szczepanowska Hanna M 2013 Conservation of cultural heritage key principles and approaches London Routledge ISBN 978 0415674744 What is Art Conservation South Florida Art Conservation 28 February 2014 Retrieved 10 May 2022 Brandi Cesare 1963 Teoria del restauro Rome Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura Pergoli Campanelli Alessandro 2013 Cassiodoro alle origini dell idea di restauro Milano Jaca book p 140 ISBN 978 88 16 41207 1 Pye E 2001 Caring for the Past Issues in Conservation for Archaeology and Museums London James and James Stoner Joyce Hill 2005 Changing Approaches in Art Conservation 1925 to the Present Scientific Examination of Art Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis Washington DC The National Academies Press p 41 doi 10 17226 11413 ISBN 978 0 309 09625 6 Art Under Wraps Harvard Magazine 1 March 2000 Retrieved 10 May 2022 Gilberg Mark 1987 Friedrich Rathgen The Father of Modern Archaeological Conservation Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 26 2 105 120 doi 10 2307 3179459 JSTOR 3179459 Archived from the original on 2011 10 08 Retrieved 2010 05 25 Brief biography of Professor AP Laurie Archived from the original on 2012 07 14 Departments The British Museum Retrieved 10 May 2022 a b Stoner Joyce Hill Changing Approaches in Art Conservation 1925 to the present The publication exists in two editions The earlier one is Scientific Examination of Art Modern Techniques on Conservation and Analysis and was published by the National Academy of Sciences in 2003 The later edition of the publication is Arthur M Sackler Colloquia Scientific Examination of Art Modern Techniques in Conservation and Analysis It was published by the National Academies Press in 2005 Patent 2 073 802 U S Art of Oil Painting Restoration Archived 2016 01 24 at the Wayback Machine March 16 1937 Patft1 uspto gov Retrieved on 2012 06 29 Thomson Garry 1986 The museum environment 2nd ed London Butterworths in association with the International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works ISBN 978 0 7506 2041 3 a b Our Code of Ethics www culturalheritage org AIC August 1994 Ethical issues in conservation Conservation OnLine CoOL Retrieved 10 May 2022 Weil Stephen E October 1989 Too much Art ARTnews 232 ISSN 0004 3273 Hernandez Christian 2013 Responsible Stewardship Exploring Sustainability within Conservation PDF Annual Meeting Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 10 May 2022 Environmental Guidelines IIC and ICOM CC Declaration International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works www iiconservation org Retrieved 2021 11 12 Environmental Guidelines Australian Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material Archived from the original on 2021 01 20 Retrieved 2021 11 12 E C C O Professional Guidelines II Code of Ethics PDF Siege social rue Coudenberg 70 BE 1000 Bruxelles Belgique Entreprise N 0447 118 530 E C C O European Confederation of Conservator Restorers Organisations A I S B L Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 10 May 2022 Pye Elizabeth Brommelle Norman January 1977 A Tribute to Ione Gedye The Conservator 1 1 3 4 doi 10 1080 01400096 1977 9635631 ISSN 0140 0096 Andrew Oddy and Sara Carroll eds 1999 Reversibility Does it Exist British Museum Occasional Paper Number 135 London British Museum Munoz Vinas Salvador 2005 Contemporary theory of conservation Oxford Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann p 185 ISBN 978 0750662246 Appendino Federica October 2017 Balancing Heritage Conservation and Sustainable Development The Case of Bordeaux IOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering 245 6 062002 Bibcode 2017MS amp E 245f2002A doi 10 1088 1757 899x 245 6 062002 ISSN 1757 8981 S2CID 133496562 Bartoletti Angelica Ferreira Joana Lia 2020 Sustainable strategies using supercritical carbon dioxide for the conservation of plastics insight from the PlasCO2 project Plastics in Peril Focus on Conservation of Polymeric Materials in Cultural Heritage 16 19 November 2020 University of Cambridge a b Working group on sustainability mandate 2020 2022 PDF International Council of Museums Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 9 May 2022 Climate Change and museum collections PDF The International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Work Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 9 May 2022 Sustainable Practice Sustainability in Conservation Retrieved 9 May 2022 Webinars Sustainability in Conservation Retrieved 9 May 2022 Sustainability in Conservation Saving Our Heritage and Our Planet International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works www iiconservation org 29 June 2019 Archived from the original on 2022 11 17 Retrieved 2022 11 17 de Silva Megan Henderson Jane 2011 03 01 Sustainability in conservation practice Journal of the Institute of Conservation 34 1 5 15 doi 10 1080 19455224 2011 566013 ISSN 1945 5224 S2CID 191612605 Di Turo Francesca Medeghini Laura January 2021 How Green Possibilities Can Help in a Future Sustainable Conservation of Cultural Heritage in Europe Sustainability 13 7 3609 doi 10 3390 su13073609 hdl 11573 1621413 Kraczon Kim Wuebold Justine 2021 Waste and Materials Collections Care Packing Storage amp Transport A Step By Step Guide for Sustainable Action Volume 1 KI Culture Retrieved 10 November 2021 O Dwyer Dervilla 2010 The Contribution of Conservators to Sustainability at the National Maritime Museum UK Studies in Conservation 55 3 2010 155 158 doi 10 1179 sic 2010 55 3 155 JSTOR 42751710 S2CID 194057860 Retrieved 10 November 2021 Fox Jefferey Ronai Lucilla Simple sustainability practices in Conservation What can you do AICCM Australian Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Material Retrieved 10 November 2021 Cold Storage of Film National Film and Sound Archive Preservation Handbook Archived from the original on 17 November 2022 Retrieved 17 November 2022 Bunting Geoffrey The Fate of Video Game Preservation Is in Your Hands Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved 2022 11 17 Saunders David 2020 Museum lighting a guide for conservators and curators Los Angeles ISBN 978 1 60606 637 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Southwick Caitlin 2021 Energy A Step By Step Guide for Sustainable Action Volume 1 KI Culture Retrieved 10 November 2021 A Public Trust at Risk The Heritage Health Index Report on the State of America s Collections PDF Washington DC Heritage Health Index 2005 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 a b Lammy David ed 2006 Understanding the Future Priorities for England s Museums October 2006 PDF ABC 5 Public report Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 10 May 2022 The Future of Museums A Failure of Vision Icon org uk Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 10 October 2008 Jones Samuel Holden John 2008 It s a material world caring for the public realm PDF London DEMOS ISBN 978 1 906693 07 7 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 10 May 2022 a b Become a Conservator American Institute for Conservation Retrieved 10 May 2022 Formation initiale Ministere de la Culture History of the SPAB Archived 2008 05 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2012 06 29 TIPA tibet net Central Tibetan Administration Retrieved 26 September 2019 APVA Preservation Virginia Archived 2008 06 13 at the Wayback Machine Apva org Retrieved on 2012 06 29 About AIC Overview Conservation us org Retrieved on 2012 06 29 Chartes et autres textes doctrinaux International Council on Monuments and Sites www icomos org Retrieved 2022 11 17 Further reading editSullivan Ann Marie 1 January 2016 Cultural Heritage amp New Media A Future for the Past The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law 15 3 ISSN 1930 8140 Charola A Elena Koestler Robert J eds 11 September 2019 Pesticide Mitigation in Museum Collections Science in Conservation Proceedings from the MCI Workshop Series Smithsonian Contributions to Museum Conservation Washington D C 1 72 doi 10 5479 si 19492359 1 1 Copies of this volume are available for free pdf download from the Smithsonian s digital library by clicking on the included link Koestler Robert J Koestler Victoria H Charola A Elena Nieto Fernandez Fernando E eds 2003 Art biology and conservation biodeterioration of works of art New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1588391070 Pergoli Campanelli Alessandro ed 2015 La nascita del restauro dall antichita all alto Medioevo Primaizione italiana ed Milano Jaca book ISBN 9788816412996 Sandis Constantine ed 2014 Cultural heritage ethics between theory and practice Cambridge UK Open Book Publishers doi 10 11647 obp 0047 ISBN 978 1 78374 067 3 Staniforth Sarah ed 2013 Historical perspectives on preventive conservation Los Angeles Getty Conservation Institute ISBN 978 1 60606 142 8 Szczepanowska H M Jha D Mathia Th G 25 February 2015 Morphology and characterization of Dematiaceous fungi on a cellulose paper substrate using synchrotron X ray microtomography scanning electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy in the context of cultural heritage Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry 30 3 651 657 doi 10 1039 C4JA00337C ISSN 1364 5544 Retrieved 9 May 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Conservation restoration BCIN the Bibliographic Database of the Conservation Information Network CAMEO Conservation and Art Materials Encyclopedia OnLine Conservation OnLine CoOL Resources for Conservation Professionals DOCAM Documentation and Conservation of the Media Arts Heritage ICOMOS Open Archive EPrints on Cultural Heritage Publications amp Resources at the Getty Conservation Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conservation and restoration of cultural property amp oldid 1219562371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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