Subject: Site-specific art and conservation ethics
A West Coast paintings conservator has been accused of unethical behavior and the "destruction" of artwork in an interesting case in the state of Washington. Under contract with the state, the conservator removed site- specific contemporary mural panels from the state capitol building in Olympia so that they could be placed in storage indefinitely. (Removal was prompted by complaints about the murals' style and imagery. The 12-year history of the installation, curtaining-over, uncovering, and removal of the murals is fascinating, but too long for this posting.) The murals, by Michael Spafford, were titled "The Twelve Labors of Hercules." "Destruction" is alleged because the murals were designed for the setting in which they had been installed--the shape of the panels and the meaning of the images were conceived for one site only: architectural lunettes in the capitol's House chambers. The artwork, it is said, did not consist solely of the painted panels, but of the painted panels in a particular arrangement in a specific place. Unethical behavior is charged because of the destruction as defined above, and because removal of the mural panels was contrary to the wishes of the artist, Michael Spafford. Spafford understood in his contract with the state that the murals would be permanent, and he stated publicly that he preferred to have them destroyed rather than removed and exhibited elsewhere. However, after years of costly litigation and flip-flopping by the state legislature and courts, I infer that Spafford did, in the end, agree to removal, crating, and storage. The draft revision of the AIC Code of Ethics (Section II) states: "All actions of the conservation professional must be governed by an informed respect for the aesthetic, conceptual, and physical character of cultural property and the people who created it." and the standing Code reads: "All professional actions of the conservator are governed by unswerving respect for the esthetic, historic and physical integrity of the object" (Part One, IIA). The contention of those accusing the conservator of unprofessional behavior is that the job was done simply for the approximately $100,000 fee, disregarding the ethical and fundamental art-protection issues of the situation. The conservator said in interviews that the controversy surrounding the mural removal was "political" and that his concerns were for the artwork. His accusers replied that he did not understand the artwork if he thought dismantling it was protecting it, and that he should not be working on art he did not understand. Reactions, please! Were conservation ethics violated? *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:22 Distributed: Monday, August 23, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-22-001 ***Received on Sunday, 22 August, 1993