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Vol.19 no1(2004) - 2004-01-01 - Implementing Preventive Conservation (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.19 no1(2004) - 2004-01-01 - Implementing Preventive Conservation Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2004 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Archéologie préventive
Architecture et climat
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- 21e siècle
Art -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Champignons microscopiques
Développement durable -- Dans l'art
Marétiaux -- Effets de la lumière
Monuments historiques -- Chauffage et ventilation
Monuments historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Musées -- Éclairage
Patrimoine culturel -- Entreposage
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionMots-clés : Conservation préventive Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Front cover: Detail of a French lithograph, Woman with Prayer Book, showing pronounced mold growth on the print's surface. Although this work—part of the collection of the Shelburne Museum in Vermont—was stored in a climate-controlled area, the tempered air was not properly circulated. During the summer months, the room's relative humidity reached levels high enough to support mold growth. Following the hiring of a conservator by the museum in 1982, the storage conditions of this and other paper artifacts were modified, and visible mold was removed from this particular print. Photo: © Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, VT.
Effective Preservation: From Reaction to Prevention
While many professions have become exceedingly narrow, preventive conservation has evolved to become one of the most interdisciplinary of fields. It uses knowledge from materials science, building science, chemistry, physics, biology, engineering, systems science, and management, as well as a host of technical fields. Decision making in this context can be exceedingly complex—which is why many in the profession are turning to risk management approaches that embrace uncertainty.
Sustainable Access: A Discussion about Implementing Preventive Conservation
Sarah Staniforth, Richard Kerschner, and Jonathan Ashley-Smith—three conservators who have devoted much time and thought to the application of preventive conservation—talk with the GCI's James Druzik and Jeffrey Levin about how the results of conservation research can be applied in a practical way.
Illuminating Alternatives: Research in Museum Lighting
One area where preservation risks can probably be more effectively managed is museum lighting. In 2002, new research on museum lighting helped prompt an experts meeting, organized by the GCI, that addressed questions involving the lighting of old master drawings. From that meeting's discussions, it was evident that there were a number of strategies that could improve the display lifetime of works of art on paper. The GCI is now pursuing a research program on the subject.
Climate Controls for Historic Buildings: A New Strategy
Many museums, libraries, and archives housed in hot and humid regions have sought to reduce the threat posed by biological infestation by controlling relative humidity through the use of air-conditioning systems. But use of these systems can result in other problems. For this reason, the GCI has been conducting research to identify and test alternative systems that are robust, sustainable, and simple to operate.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v19n1.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.19 no1(2004) - 2004-01-01 - Implementing Preventive Conservation [texte imprimé] . - 2004.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Archéologie préventive
Architecture et climat
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- 21e siècle
Art -- Mutilation, dégradation, etc.
Champignons microscopiques
Développement durable -- Dans l'art
Marétiaux -- Effets de la lumière
Monuments historiques -- Chauffage et ventilation
Monuments historiques -- Conservation et restauration
Musées -- Éclairage
Patrimoine culturel -- Entreposage
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionMots-clés : Conservation préventive Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Front cover: Detail of a French lithograph, Woman with Prayer Book, showing pronounced mold growth on the print's surface. Although this work—part of the collection of the Shelburne Museum in Vermont—was stored in a climate-controlled area, the tempered air was not properly circulated. During the summer months, the room's relative humidity reached levels high enough to support mold growth. Following the hiring of a conservator by the museum in 1982, the storage conditions of this and other paper artifacts were modified, and visible mold was removed from this particular print. Photo: © Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, VT.
Effective Preservation: From Reaction to Prevention
While many professions have become exceedingly narrow, preventive conservation has evolved to become one of the most interdisciplinary of fields. It uses knowledge from materials science, building science, chemistry, physics, biology, engineering, systems science, and management, as well as a host of technical fields. Decision making in this context can be exceedingly complex—which is why many in the profession are turning to risk management approaches that embrace uncertainty.
Sustainable Access: A Discussion about Implementing Preventive Conservation
Sarah Staniforth, Richard Kerschner, and Jonathan Ashley-Smith—three conservators who have devoted much time and thought to the application of preventive conservation—talk with the GCI's James Druzik and Jeffrey Levin about how the results of conservation research can be applied in a practical way.
Illuminating Alternatives: Research in Museum Lighting
One area where preservation risks can probably be more effectively managed is museum lighting. In 2002, new research on museum lighting helped prompt an experts meeting, organized by the GCI, that addressed questions involving the lighting of old master drawings. From that meeting's discussions, it was evident that there were a number of strategies that could improve the display lifetime of works of art on paper. The GCI is now pursuing a research program on the subject.
Climate Controls for Historic Buildings: A New Strategy
Many museums, libraries, and archives housed in hot and humid regions have sought to reduce the threat posed by biological infestation by controlling relative humidity through the use of air-conditioning systems. But use of these systems can result in other problems. For this reason, the GCI has been conducting research to identify and test alternative systems that are robust, sustainable, and simple to operate.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v19n1.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23363 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.19 no2(2004) - 2004-05-01 - Heritage Charters and Conventions (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.19 no2(2004) - 2004-05-01 - Heritage Charters and Conventions Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2004 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Centre international d'études pour la conservation et la restauration des biens culturels (ICCROM)
Congrès international des architectes et des techniciens des monuments historiques (02 ; 1964 ; Venise)
Conseil international des monuments et des sites (ICOMOS)
Dommages causés par les inondations -- Prévention
Musées -- Incendies et prévention des incendies
Office international des musées. Conférence (1931 ; Athènes)
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Asie -- Aspect religieux
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Conventions
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Normes
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Traités
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- Prévention
Peinture et décoration murales -- Conservation et restauration
Religion et sciencesIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Front cover: A 19th-century photograph of St. Mark's Square in Venice, taken decades before the development of major international heritage charters. In 1964, Venice was the site of the Second International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Buildings, which produced the Venice Charter. The charter—one of the most influential heritage documents of the 20th century—codified internationally accepted standards of conservation practice relating to architecture and sites. Photo: © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis.
Reflections on the Use of Heritage Charters and Conventions
In recent decades, there has been a considerable increase in the number of charters and conventions that have sought to set standards for the protection and conservation of cultural heritage around the world. Today, among some, there is a growing unease over these charters and conventions—the relevance and authority of which are sometimes contested. Yet, unquestionably, in a context of rapid social changes there has been tremendous progress in conservation during the last 40 years. It is important to remember these advances in order to have an enlightened view of the contributions made by these documents.
Principles, Practice, and Process: A Discussion about Heritage Charters and Conventions
In what ways have international charters and conventions dealing with cultural heritage contributed to conservation and preservation—and what are their limitations? Cevat Erder and Jane Lennon—two heritage specialists who have spent their professional lives dealing with both the principles and the practice of heritage conservation—talk with the GCI's François LeBlanc and Jeffrey Levin about the impact of these documents on the field of conservation.
Chartering Heritage in Asia's Postmodern World
A critique of heritage conservation in its modernist form might begin with the observation that many people in the world consider heritage objects and places to be part of a universe that is energized and animated by various forms of divine or supernatural power. How appropriate have the principles of conservation—as outlined in international charters that reflect an embrace of science and rationality—been in Asia, where, in a number of countries, religious structures and sites compose the majority of heritage properties listed on government inventories?
Preparing for Disaster: A New Education Initiative in Museum Emergency Preparedness and Response
The GCI is developing with ICOM and ICCROM an education initiative on integrated emergency management for museums and other cultural institutions. This collaboration will be undertaken within the broader framework of the Museums Emergency Program, initiated by ICOM in response to the need for museums to develop expertise in emergency preparedness and response. Its aim is to advance an awareness among museum personnel of the nature of disasters and of the ways to limit damage through preventive conservation measures and rapid intervention.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v19n2.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.19 no2(2004) - 2004-05-01 - Heritage Charters and Conventions [texte imprimé] . - 2004.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Centre international d'études pour la conservation et la restauration des biens culturels (ICCROM)
Congrès international des architectes et des techniciens des monuments historiques (02 ; 1964 ; Venise)
Conseil international des monuments et des sites (ICOMOS)
Dommages causés par les inondations -- Prévention
Musées -- Incendies et prévention des incendies
Office international des musées. Conférence (1931 ; Athènes)
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Asie -- Aspect religieux
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Conventions
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Normes
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Traités
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- Prévention
Peinture et décoration murales -- Conservation et restauration
Religion et sciencesIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Front cover: A 19th-century photograph of St. Mark's Square in Venice, taken decades before the development of major international heritage charters. In 1964, Venice was the site of the Second International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic Buildings, which produced the Venice Charter. The charter—one of the most influential heritage documents of the 20th century—codified internationally accepted standards of conservation practice relating to architecture and sites. Photo: © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis.
Reflections on the Use of Heritage Charters and Conventions
In recent decades, there has been a considerable increase in the number of charters and conventions that have sought to set standards for the protection and conservation of cultural heritage around the world. Today, among some, there is a growing unease over these charters and conventions—the relevance and authority of which are sometimes contested. Yet, unquestionably, in a context of rapid social changes there has been tremendous progress in conservation during the last 40 years. It is important to remember these advances in order to have an enlightened view of the contributions made by these documents.
Principles, Practice, and Process: A Discussion about Heritage Charters and Conventions
In what ways have international charters and conventions dealing with cultural heritage contributed to conservation and preservation—and what are their limitations? Cevat Erder and Jane Lennon—two heritage specialists who have spent their professional lives dealing with both the principles and the practice of heritage conservation—talk with the GCI's François LeBlanc and Jeffrey Levin about the impact of these documents on the field of conservation.
Chartering Heritage in Asia's Postmodern World
A critique of heritage conservation in its modernist form might begin with the observation that many people in the world consider heritage objects and places to be part of a universe that is energized and animated by various forms of divine or supernatural power. How appropriate have the principles of conservation—as outlined in international charters that reflect an embrace of science and rationality—been in Asia, where, in a number of countries, religious structures and sites compose the majority of heritage properties listed on government inventories?
Preparing for Disaster: A New Education Initiative in Museum Emergency Preparedness and Response
The GCI is developing with ICOM and ICCROM an education initiative on integrated emergency management for museums and other cultural institutions. This collaboration will be undertaken within the broader framework of the Museums Emergency Program, initiated by ICOM in response to the need for museums to develop expertise in emergency preparedness and response. Its aim is to advance an awareness among museum personnel of the nature of disasters and of the ways to limit damage through preventive conservation measures and rapid intervention.
GCI News: Projects, Events, Publications and Staff
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v19n2.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23362 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.20 no2(2005) - 2005-05-01 - Conservation Science (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.20 no2(2005) - 2005-05-01 - Conservation Science Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2005 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Archéométrie
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- Étude et enseignement
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- Innovations technologiques
Art et sciences
Interdisciplinarité -- Dans l'art
Matériaux organiques -- Analyse
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- Prévention
Peinture et décoration murales -- Conservation et restauration
Peinture et décoration murales -- Matériaux -- Analyse
Scientifiques
Technologie et artsIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Constanza Miliani, a researcher at the Instituto di Scienze e Tecnologie Molecolari CNR in Perugia, taking in situ measurements of the infared reflectance spectrum of fifteenth-century wall paintings by Filippo Lippi, as part of the Organic Materials in Wall Paintings project, which is being conducted by the GCI and a number of other scientific laboratories. Using the noninvasive technique of reflectance Fourier transform infared spectroscopy with fiber optics, she is able to classify the organic materials present on the surface of these paintings, which are located in Saint Stephen's Cathedral in Prato, Italy. Photo: Francesca Piqué.
The State of Conservation Science
Conservation science is a relatively new scientific endeavor, one that draws on a variety of other scientific disciplines. Has it, as some believe, come of age? What are the accomplishments and challenges that characterize the current state of the field?
A Diverse Discipline: A Discussion about Conservation Science
Aviva Burnstock of the Courtauld Institute of Art, Chris McGlinchey of the Museum of Modern Art, and Narayan Khandekar of the Harvard University Art Museums talk with Giacomo Chiari and Jeffrey Levin of the GCI.
Training and Education in Conservation Science
As interest in the profession grows, the various routes into conservation science—and the amount of education and training that should be required for people entering the field—have become topics of discussion and debate.
Science for the Conservation of Wall Paintings
A current GCI collaborative project with a number of research institutions is exploring a variety of ways to undertake the challenging task of analyzing organic materials in wall paintings—a task critical to the conservation of these works of art.
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v20n2.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.20 no2(2005) - 2005-05-01 - Conservation Science [texte imprimé] . - 2005.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Archéométrie
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- Étude et enseignement
Art -- Conservation et restauration -- Innovations technologiques
Art et sciences
Interdisciplinarité -- Dans l'art
Matériaux organiques -- Analyse
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- Prévention
Peinture et décoration murales -- Conservation et restauration
Peinture et décoration murales -- Matériaux -- Analyse
Scientifiques
Technologie et artsIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
Constanza Miliani, a researcher at the Instituto di Scienze e Tecnologie Molecolari CNR in Perugia, taking in situ measurements of the infared reflectance spectrum of fifteenth-century wall paintings by Filippo Lippi, as part of the Organic Materials in Wall Paintings project, which is being conducted by the GCI and a number of other scientific laboratories. Using the noninvasive technique of reflectance Fourier transform infared spectroscopy with fiber optics, she is able to classify the organic materials present on the surface of these paintings, which are located in Saint Stephen's Cathedral in Prato, Italy. Photo: Francesca Piqué.
The State of Conservation Science
Conservation science is a relatively new scientific endeavor, one that draws on a variety of other scientific disciplines. Has it, as some believe, come of age? What are the accomplishments and challenges that characterize the current state of the field?
A Diverse Discipline: A Discussion about Conservation Science
Aviva Burnstock of the Courtauld Institute of Art, Chris McGlinchey of the Museum of Modern Art, and Narayan Khandekar of the Harvard University Art Museums talk with Giacomo Chiari and Jeffrey Levin of the GCI.
Training and Education in Conservation Science
As interest in the profession grows, the various routes into conservation science—and the amount of education and training that should be required for people entering the field—have become topics of discussion and debate.
Science for the Conservation of Wall Paintings
A current GCI collaborative project with a number of research institutions is exploring a variety of ways to undertake the challenging task of analyzing organic materials in wall paintings—a task critical to the conservation of these works of art.
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v20n2.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23359 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.22 no1(2007) - 2007-01-01 - Environmental Management (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.22 no1(2007) - 2007-01-01 - Environmental Management Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2007 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Air -- Humidité
Architecture et climat
Églises -- Amsterdam (Pays-Bas) -- 17e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Fundação Casa de Rui Barbosa
Musées -- Accueil des publics -- Aspect environnemental
Musées -- Gestion des collection -- Rio de Janeiro (Brésil) -- Aspect environnemental
Patrimoine culturel -- Effets des conditions météorologiques
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Aspect environnemental
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
A condition assessment team carrying out a survey of the Our Lord in the Attic Museum in Amsterdam. This historic building was the site of a clandestine Roman Catholic church in the mid-1660s and is today a museum, as well as once again a place of religious worship. In a collaborative project, the GCI and the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage are working with the museum's director and staff to study the impact of visitors on the indoor environment of the building, on its interiors, and on its collections. Information from the project's research will be used in developing a preventive conservation case study. Photo: Paul Ryan.
From the Outside In: Preventive Conservation, Sustainability, And Environmental Management
In the search for solutions that promote not only the conservation of material culture but also the conservation of the global environment, stewards of cultural heritage should review current approaches to environmental control and revisit traditional building design and use, as part of environmental management strategies for collections.
Passive Design, Mechanical Systems, and Doing Nothing: A Discussion about Environmental Management
Ernest Conrad, a U.S. engineer involved in the design of climate control systems; Tim Padfield, a consultant in preventive conservation who has worked at institutions in Europe and the United States; and Franciza Toledo, a private researcher and consultant in preventive conservation in Brazil, talk with Shin Maekawa and Jeffrey Levin of the Getty Conservation Institute.
Collections Care, Human Comfort, and Climate Control: A Case Study at the Casa de Rui Barbosa Museum
After researching alternative climate control strategies for establishing safe environments for collections in hot and humid regions, the GCI is now collaborating with the Casa de Rui Barbosa Museum in Rio de Janeiro to test the applicability of the GCI's climate control strategy in a setting where human comfort is an important consideration.
Our Lord in the Attic: A Preventive Conservation Case Study
The GCI's Education and Science departments are working with colleagues in the Netherlands to develop a preventive conservation case study on an unusual historic house museum in the center of Amsterdam—a seventeenth-century canal house that holds a surprise in its attic: a Catholic church.
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v22n1.p [...] [n° ou bulletin]Vol.22 no1(2007) - 2007-01-01 - Environmental Management [texte imprimé] . - 2007.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Air -- Humidité
Architecture et climat
Églises -- Amsterdam (Pays-Bas) -- 17e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Fundação Casa de Rui Barbosa
Musées -- Accueil des publics -- Aspect environnemental
Musées -- Gestion des collection -- Rio de Janeiro (Brésil) -- Aspect environnemental
Patrimoine culturel -- Effets des conditions météorologiques
Patrimoine culturel -- Conservation et restauration -- Aspect environnemental
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Table of Contents
Newsletter Cover
A condition assessment team carrying out a survey of the Our Lord in the Attic Museum in Amsterdam. This historic building was the site of a clandestine Roman Catholic church in the mid-1660s and is today a museum, as well as once again a place of religious worship. In a collaborative project, the GCI and the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage are working with the museum's director and staff to study the impact of visitors on the indoor environment of the building, on its interiors, and on its collections. Information from the project's research will be used in developing a preventive conservation case study. Photo: Paul Ryan.
From the Outside In: Preventive Conservation, Sustainability, And Environmental Management
In the search for solutions that promote not only the conservation of material culture but also the conservation of the global environment, stewards of cultural heritage should review current approaches to environmental control and revisit traditional building design and use, as part of environmental management strategies for collections.
Passive Design, Mechanical Systems, and Doing Nothing: A Discussion about Environmental Management
Ernest Conrad, a U.S. engineer involved in the design of climate control systems; Tim Padfield, a consultant in preventive conservation who has worked at institutions in Europe and the United States; and Franciza Toledo, a private researcher and consultant in preventive conservation in Brazil, talk with Shin Maekawa and Jeffrey Levin of the Getty Conservation Institute.
Collections Care, Human Comfort, and Climate Control: A Case Study at the Casa de Rui Barbosa Museum
After researching alternative climate control strategies for establishing safe environments for collections in hot and humid regions, the GCI is now collaborating with the Casa de Rui Barbosa Museum in Rio de Janeiro to test the applicability of the GCI's climate control strategy in a setting where human comfort is an important consideration.
Our Lord in the Attic: A Preventive Conservation Case Study
The GCI's Education and Science departments are working with colleagues in the Netherlands to develop a preventive conservation case study on an unusual historic house museum in the center of Amsterdam—a seventeenth-century canal house that holds a surprise in its attic: a Catholic church.
GCI News: Projects, Events, and Publications
Updates on Getty Conservation Institute projects, events, publications, and staff.
MastheadEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/pdf/v22n1.p [...] Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23404 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.29 no2(2014:fall) - 2014-09-01 - Collection environments (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
[n° ou bulletin]
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Titre : Vol.29 no2(2014:fall) - 2014-09-01 - Collection environments Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2014 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Construction durable
Humidité -- Lutte contre
Musées -- Accueil des publics -- Aspect environnemental
Musées -- Collections -- Effets du climat
Musées -- Gestion des collections
Musées -- Méthodes de conservation
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Fall 2014 • Collection Environments
Download PDF Version (6.03 MB, 32pp) (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
A portion of a cabinet attributed to Jan van Mekeren, Amsterdam, ca. 1695, now in the Rijksmuseum. The vertical crack—caused by shrinkage in the oak construction—was subject to conservation after this photograph was taken in 1995. Photo: ©Rijksmuseum.
A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR
By Timothy P. Whalen
FEATURE ARTICLE
PRECAUTION, PROOF, AND PRAGMATISM
Evolving Perspectives on the Museum Environment
By Foekje Boersma, Kathleen Dardes, and James Druzik
CONSERVATION RESEARCH INTO THE MUSEUM CLIMATE
The Current Landscape
By Stefan Michalski
CLIMATE EFFECTS ON MUSEUM OBJECTS
The Need for Monitoring and Analysis
By Paul van Duin
GREEN MUSEUMS
A LEED Primer for Preservation Professionals
By Rachael Perkins Arenstein and Scott Raphael Schiamberg
PRAGMATISM AND RISK
A Discussion about Collection Environments
KEY RESOURCES
A list of key resources related to collection environments
GCI NEWS
Projects, events, and publications
Kasbah of Taourirt Conservation
Eames House Conservation Management Plan
XRF Boot Camp for Conservators
MOSAIKON Regional Training
Lacquer Workshop at the Louvre
Photograph Workshop in Budapest
Scholar Applications Now Being Accepted
2014–15 Conservation Guest Scholars
Postdoctoral Fellowship Opportunity
Graduate Internship Program
2014–15 GCI Graduate Interns
Charles Selwitz, 1927–2014
Historical Perspectives in the Conservation of Works of Art on PaperEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/29_2/ [n° ou bulletin]Vol.29 no2(2014:fall) - 2014-09-01 - Collection environments [texte imprimé] . - 2014.
est un bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter / Jeffrey Levin
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Construction durable
Humidité -- Lutte contre
Musées -- Accueil des publics -- Aspect environnemental
Musées -- Collections -- Effets du climat
Musées -- Gestion des collections
Musées -- Méthodes de conservation
Patrimoine culturel -- Détérioration -- PréventionIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Fall 2014 • Collection Environments
Download PDF Version (6.03 MB, 32pp) (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
A portion of a cabinet attributed to Jan van Mekeren, Amsterdam, ca. 1695, now in the Rijksmuseum. The vertical crack—caused by shrinkage in the oak construction—was subject to conservation after this photograph was taken in 1995. Photo: ©Rijksmuseum.
A NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR
By Timothy P. Whalen
FEATURE ARTICLE
PRECAUTION, PROOF, AND PRAGMATISM
Evolving Perspectives on the Museum Environment
By Foekje Boersma, Kathleen Dardes, and James Druzik
CONSERVATION RESEARCH INTO THE MUSEUM CLIMATE
The Current Landscape
By Stefan Michalski
CLIMATE EFFECTS ON MUSEUM OBJECTS
The Need for Monitoring and Analysis
By Paul van Duin
GREEN MUSEUMS
A LEED Primer for Preservation Professionals
By Rachael Perkins Arenstein and Scott Raphael Schiamberg
PRAGMATISM AND RISK
A Discussion about Collection Environments
KEY RESOURCES
A list of key resources related to collection environments
GCI NEWS
Projects, events, and publications
Kasbah of Taourirt Conservation
Eames House Conservation Management Plan
XRF Boot Camp for Conservators
MOSAIKON Regional Training
Lacquer Workshop at the Louvre
Photograph Workshop in Budapest
Scholar Applications Now Being Accepted
2014–15 Conservation Guest Scholars
Postdoctoral Fellowship Opportunity
Graduate Internship Program
2014–15 GCI Graduate Interns
Charles Selwitz, 1927–2014
Historical Perspectives in the Conservation of Works of Art on PaperEn ligne : http://www.getty.edu/conservation/publications_resources/newsletters/29_2/ Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 23482 GETTY Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Exclu du prêt Vol.30 no2(2015:septembre) - 2015-09-01 - 30th Anniversary (Bulletin de Conservation perspectives : the Getty Conservation Institute newsletter)
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