Subject: AIC Code of Ethics revision
re Gary Frost's comments on the draft Code of Ethics: Gary, I very much appreciated your comments ... For me, listening to the discussion on the proposed Code in Denver was a personal shock, as I realized that for the first time in my 27 years of (I believe ethical) conservation practice, the Code might actually have some relevance to what I do, instead of being something I have to hide away in a drawer; with a few additions/modifications, it might even be something I could show to colleagues or Museum Directors to explain a particular choice of action. That shock was followed by a wave of strange relief, as I realized that I might not be a second-class citizen after all, that perhaps I didn't have to feel like an outlaw anymore. Library/Archive work is not the only field where Gary's points apply: in historic site conservation we also make repros to preserve unique objects, and we have for years taken into account the informational value of an object as a three-dimensional document, and distinguish multiple, replaceable objects from unique, non-replaceables, tailoring the amount of treatment we do accordingly. (I have used "clean only"; "clean and stabilize"; "clean, stabilize and restore" since 1972 for archaeological materials.) We also may have to alter an object (say, paint a side table a different color) to make it serve its interpretive intent. Sure, we could make a repro of a commercially-produced 1920's bedside table, but it would cost $500, compared to the $20 the Curator paid in the Junque Shoppe. I used to argue about preserving the historic integrity of the object, while the Curator maintained that I had to keep my purism relevant. Now I think she was right. Some of us have developed fairly sophisticated ways to "tier" the collection and decide whether a given object belongs in Category 1: rare, irreplaceable, unique (probably not to be displayed, as in Natural History Type Specimen); Category 2: may not be replaceable, or only at great expense of time and money (like most art work) (displayable only in a controlled environment); Category 3 (displayable in an uncontrolled environment like an open display in a museum or historic site; object must be replaceable; slow consumption acceptable); or Category 4, consumables (eg repro brooms, some historic/natural history materials. (This is obviously more complex, and I will happily send a draft of one system to whomever sends me $.50 to cover xeroxing. And how much time is it worth to document individual steam tractors (with analytical samples, if you please) which have been produced by a known company which maintains archives of manufacturing specifications? I would certainly document a piece of archaeological iron from a period which had no written documents, but I don't think I could justify the same level of documentation for a horn-handled fork from an 18th c. fur trade site excavation. And hey, you guys in libraries think you got unique problems? Try excavated material from a large dig: hundreds of thousands of individual pieces of things, which may be numbered and pieced together _someday_ , but for the moment reside in little paper bags and pill vials...(we'll leave aside for the moment the archaeological belief system that deterioration is an act of God, and that being inevitable, shouldn't be accorded resources to prevent...) A sad consequence of our adherence to the single object-approach taught in the official art-oriented training programs, is the avoidance of conservators by many field archaeologists. As described by a senior archaeologist during a panel in the Objects Group at the Denver AIC meeting: he earns $14/hr, and bills out at $20+. When he has 2 days and $1200 to salvage an entire site from a bulldozer, why should be spend half of it to a conservator to mend one pot whose shape he already recognizes from the sherds? Morrow's phrase (thanks, Lynn) describing "a collections conservator as a professional conservator who 'manages a high-volume, production-oriented operation and develops strategies for conserving large collections of general research materials in their original format....'" certainly applies as well to conservators of archaeological and historic collections. I recently surveyed 38,000 historic objects in one week, and of course took a "collections conservation" approach of categorizing rehousing and environmental improvements to be done by staff and volunteers: treatments may never happen. So I suspect that if we actually counted the numbers of things being worked on, and ran some kind of dollar formulation which included cost to acquire AND frequency of user-interaction AND cost to process and maintain, we might find that the work of the art conservators is outnumbered by that of the conservators of library and archival material, historic museum objects, and anthropological and archaeological collections. But I am not suggesting an "us or them" approach: quite the contrary! In fact, I am saddened by what I think Gary is suggesting, that L&A conservators should jump ship. I would suggest instead that now is the time for all good conservators to come to the aid of their profession and make the Code useful to all of us. We might find in the process that we gain new respect from our curatorial colleagues who have found us less and less relevant, since they have had for a long time to prioritize collections and the effort they invest in them. I think it is not a coincidence that fine arts labs across the country are being required to take in outside work to support their salaries, like cafeterias and gift shops, and unlike curators... This is a wonderful opportunity for us to take stock of how we do what we do, and how we can be more effective and less isolated from the decision-making centers of the institutions we work in and for. Comments? p.s., I also agree with Richard Cox about the necessity of enforcement, but we have to start again, slowly: we threw out 15 years of work on certification at the business meeting in Vancouver; my analysis is that no-one would trust anyone else enough to give it a try. Anybody want to try a pilot? pps Lynn Jones, thank you for a most eloquent description: I cannot think of a collection, "fine" or not, which would not benefit from this approach. Lisa Mibach *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:11 Distributed: Tuesday, July 13, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-11-001 ***Received on Saturday, 10 July, 1993