Subject: Drawings in sketchbooks
We at the West Virginia University Art Collection are interested in receiving opinions from conservators regarding the ethics of dealing with works of art in sketchbooks. We have an extensive collection of pen and ink, and pencil drawings by David Hunter Strother, who was the best known illustrator in mid 19th century America. He worked primarily for Harper's Magazine. The collection is not only of artistic value, with portraiture and landscapes forming the bulk of the works, but parts of it are of great historical value as well. For instance, many drawings record the siege of Harpers Ferry and the trial of John Brown, as Strother was there at the time. Many of the drawings are in sketchbooks which vary widely in condition. Some bindings are completely broken with pages virtually falling out, others are at a stage where at least some of the pages are being held together, although not to the book cover. Some are relatively secure. There is also a problem with the sketchbooks in that many of the drawings have been done face-to-face, and pencil is rubbing off onto facing drawings. In some sketchbooks drawings have been clipped to look like photos, and glued onto the book's pages. These problems coupled with the extreme difficulty involved in accessing, preserving, and viewing the works because of the state of the bindings and the extreme fragility of the paper has led us to consider preserving many of the works individually in acid-free folders, keeping a record of which works constituted a complete sketchbook. We welcome comments and suggestions regarding the issue of whether or not it is appropriate to take sketchbooks apart for the above cited reasons, especially form persons who have dealt with a similar situation. Thanks, Gale Simplicio Collections Manager WVU Art Collection *** Conservation DistList Instance 9:67 Distributed: Thursday, March 28, 1996 Message Id: cdl-9-67-003 ***Received on Wednesday, 27 March, 1996