Educators Convene to Share Ideas on Teaching the Next Generation in Historic Preservation

This story came to the AIC office from Brian Clark at Roger Williams University. 

Tour of an historic building in Providence
Conference participants toured historic properties in Providence during the two-day event.

BRISTOL, R.I., Sept. 14, 2012 – How the next generation of historic preservationists is educated has profound implications across the preservation world, especially given that effective education means a greater likelihood of qualified professionals. But while the U.S. is home to an array of quality preservation programs at colleges and universities, there has been surprisingly little conversation among educators about how best to teach those who will comprise the preservation workforce in the future.

On Sept. 8 and 9, more than 75 educators from not just the U.S. – but from the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Australia, Brazil, Mexico and more – convened in Providence, R.I., to discuss best practices at a conference titled “Preservation Education: Sharing Best Practices and Finding Common Ground.” The conference was hosted by the School of Architecture, Art and Historic Preservation at Roger Williams University with support from Clemson University, the College of Charleston, the University of Florida and the University of Georgia.

After two days of discussion and debate, a set of key ideas emerged. Jeremy C. Wells, assistant professor of historic preservation at Roger Williams and the conference chair, says the ideas focused on everything from embracing technology and encouraging innovation to linking the built and natural environments, integrating with other disciplines and building partnerships with K-12 education, real estate professionals and more.

Wells also noted that the attendees agreed that without a more concise definition of what the “discipline” of historic preservation is, there would continue to be difficulty in defining what students should be accountable for as far as skill sets and knowledge are concerned.

“We need better understanding and consensus around our view of the world,” he said. “There is even some discomfort with the term historic preservation itself. Does preservation imply stasis – that things never change? Would conservation more accurately represent our approach? We need to envision a future in which we build consensus on these questions, among preservation practitioners and educators alike.”

NEH grants for preserving collections in sustainable ways

Guidelines have been posted for the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Sustaining Cultural Heritage Collections grants.  U.S. nonprofit museums, libraries, archives, and educational institutions can apply for grants to plan and implement preservation strategies that pragmatically balance effectiveness, cost, and environmental impact. Projects should be designed to be as cost effective, energy efficient, and environmentally sensitive as possible, and they should aim to mitigate the greatest risks to collections rather than to meet prescriptive targets.

Apply for planning grants of up to $40,000 (with an option of up to $50,000) to bring together interdisciplinary teams that might reevaluate environmental parameters for collections and examine passive (nonmechanical) and low-energy alternatives to conventional energy sources and energy-intensive mechanized systems for managing collection environments.  Testing, modeling, or project-specific research may help applicants better understand collection environments and formulate sustainable preservation strategies; therefore, with planning grants you might measure energy consumption; use blower door tests to identify air leaks in buildings; create mock-ups of lighting options; test natural ventilation methods; conduct thermal imaging of buildings; test the effect of buffered storage enclosures on moderating fluctuating environmental conditions; re-commission small-scale climate control systems; or adjust the operating protocols for climate control systems.

Apply for implementation grants of up to $350,000 to manage interior relative humidity and temperature by passive methods; install heating, ventilating, and air conditioning systems; install storage systems and rehouse collections; improve  security and the protection of collections from fire, flood, and other disasters; and upgrade lighting systems and controls to achieve levels suitable for collections that are energy efficient. Projects that seek to implement preventive conservation measures in sustainable ways are especially encouraged.

Deadline: December 4, 2012

Guidelines: www.neh.gov/grants/guidelines/SCHC.html

FAQs: www.neh.gov/files/grants/sustaining-cultural-heritage-faqs_2012.pdf

Program officers are available to discuss project ideas and read draft proposals. Please contact the division for more information by emailing preservation [at] neh__gov or calling 202-606-8570.

Laura Word
Senior Program Officer
Division of Preservation and Access
National Endowment for the Humanities

Queen’s University Program in Art Conservation Seeks Alumni News for Yearly Newsletter

Please send your news, either professional or personal, for our yearly Art Conservation Program Newsletter.  Previous newsletters can be found on our website: www.queensu.ca/art/artconservation/Alumni.html

Contributions (approximately 50 words) need to be received by 20 September 2012. Send to am26 [at] queensu__ca We all look forward to hearing from you.

Alison Murray
Associate Professor
Art Conservation Program

Georgia Archives Receives Grant to Support Sustaining Georgia’s Permanent Records

The Georgia Archives is pleased to announce receipt of a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to implement methods for achieving stable environmental storage conditions for its permanent records while reducing energy consumption and thus costs. “This project will help the Georgia Archives continue to reduce energy usage and serve as a model of sustainability for other institutions during these times of budget cutbacks” said project manager, Christine Wiseman, Preservation Services Manager at the Georgia Archives.

The award is from NEH’s Division of Preservation and Access in the category of Sustaining Cultural Heritage Collections.  The grant funds support expanding upon energy saving measures at the Georgia Archives initiated over the past two years by updating and further automating the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system (HVAC) and by implementing lighting upgrades.  The fundamental goal of the project is to increase energy savings efforts, while continuing to maintain storage conditions necessary for the long term preservation of Georgia’s permanent and historical records.

Archives staff will track and monitor environmental conditions as well as energy usage, and gather data that will be of use of other cultural organizations.

Be sure to subscribe to the project blog, Sustaining Georgia’s History, One Environmental Upgrade at a Time, to get timely updates. See  www.sustaingeorgiahistory.wordpress.com and click on link to subscribe. The project begins October 1, 2012 and runs for three years.

For more information, contact project manager, Christine Wiseman <cwiseman [at] sos__ga__gov> or visit www.georgiaarchives.org.

The Georgia Archives is a division of the Office of Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp.  The mission of the Georgia Archives is to identify, select, preserve, and make accessible records that constitute Georgia’s recorded history; to increase the efficiency of State Government through effective records management; and to improve the quality of records and archives management throughout the state.

Christine Wiseman
Preservation Services Manager
Georgia Archives
5800 Jonesboro Road
Morrow, GA 30260
678-364-3761

New ICON Ceramics and Glass Group Forum

Feel free to ask questions about materials and techniques that you’re encountering for the first time, or for advice on specific objects

If you’re struggling to locate a specific material or piece of equipment and want to know where other conservators go shopping, just ask.

Or if you know about job opportunities, student placements or internships that you feel would be interesting to the members feel

free to share them here.

iconcgg.proboards.com/index.cgi

‎26th Annual National Archives Preservation Conference: “2012 A Preservation Odyssey: Paths to the Future”

2012 A Preservation Odyssey: Paths to the Future
26th Annual National Archives Preservation Conference

www.archives.gov/preservation/conferences/2012

Date: The conference will be held on Friday, October 19, 2012

Cost: $125.00 standard and $75.00 for students

Location:
National Archives Building
William McGowan Theater
7thStreet and Constitution Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20504

About the Conference

2012 A Preservation Odyssey: Paths to the Future

The conference will address how new challenges and opportunities are shaping preservation strategies. Within this framework, speakers will focus on conservation, reformatting, storage technology, and the ways in which these program activities are evolving toward new solutions. A session on education and outreach will highlight innovative methods to share information and engage users through social media and training.

We expect the conference to draw attendees from diverse fields including collections care and preservation management, administration of archives, historical collections, libraries and museums; archivists, curators and librarians; and conservators and preservation specialists and students in all these areas.

NARA’s 26th Annual Preservation Conference, 2012 A Preservation Odyssey will explore:

Environment and Storage Technology

Conservation: Big and Small

Reformatting

Outreach
Please visit the Program Schedule web page for the speaker’s list and exhibitors that will be participating.

For further information please contact the Conference Coordinator:

Richard Schneider
301-837-3617
richard.schneider@nara.gov

 

 

 

With proper maintenance, this could have all been avoided

Much has been written about the eldery Spanish woman who, distressed by the condition of a 19th century fresco in her local church in Borja near Zaragosa, repainted it with the knowledge of her local clergy (The New York Times, August 24, 2012, “Despite Good Intentions, A Fresco in Spain is Ruined“, by Raphael Minder).
It is not clear whether there would have been such an uproar if the decendants of the artist had not recently proposed making a donation for its upkeep, bringing the repainting to wider attention. This incident highlights both the need for widespread public education about how conservation should be carried out and the necessity for institutions which are guardians of works of art to have continually replenished maintenance funds.

An unexpected source of information about conservators

The Weddings/Celebrations pages of the Sunday New York Times might be one of the last places one would expect to serve as a source of information about conservation. However, the August 26, 2012 “Vows” column writeup of the wedding of Joseph Godla, Chief Conservator of the Frick Collection and Charlotte Vignon, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at the Frick informed countless numbers of people who may have been unaware of conservation that conservators have a passion for their work, do such things as crawl beneath pieces of furniture to examine their construction and determine authenticy, and have many, varied skills.