Subject: Carved wooden relief
In reply to Michael Cogswell's question about storage/treatment of the Nigerian wooden hand-carved relief. Don't oil it. Oil will only darken the surface, will probably not penetrate to any great extent and will do nothing to stop structural cracking. Application of surface coatings to ethnographic material is rarely a good idea. As well as doing little for stabilization, applying a material to your object that is not original brings up a lot of ethical questions I won't go into here. I'll give you one idea for low-tech, possibly better storage of your statue. I'm sure there are many other objects conservators out there who can give you alternatives. You have identified the likely reason for the cracking of your statue, cycling of temperature and humidity. However, you say the statue is boxed and temp/humidity is supposed to stay at 65F/45%. I'll assume it doesn't. So what you want to do is create a microenvironment, a local environment that will cycle much slower. The easiest way to do this is to surround your object with a lot of cellulosic "stuff".Several boxes, cotton wool (but don't put the wool in contact with your object), acid free tissue paper, the more cellulosic material the better. Also, if you make the outside box a stable plastic tight lidded box that will be another barrier for humidity fluctuations. This technique won't of course work for entire collections but if you've only got one object it might be a viable alternative. See Piechota, Dennis 1978 "Storage containerization: archaeological textile collections," Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 18(1):10-18. for a description of the effectiveness of a cellulosic container around your object to protect it from temp/humidity fluctuations. Good luck. Jessie Johnson Texas Memorial Museum *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:58 Distributed: Thursday, February 10, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-58-001 ***Received on Friday, 4 February, 1994