Subject: Communication of conservation information
On OSG-L Katie Holbrow <Katie.Holbrow [at] clark__williams__edu> writes >I think a new adhesives and consolidants issue would be fantastic. >In re your query about who might contribute: >Using a nebulizer to deliver fine coats of resin for consolidation of >powdery paint was presented by Dave Arnold at the Wooden Artifacts >section of AIC in Norfolk. He is currently working on contract at >Harper's Ferry for Martin Burke; you could probably track him down >there. The prototype for the nebulizer method was invented by Stephan Michalski (using an ultrasonic mister) at the Canadian Conservation Institute and presented at the course given by the GCI in 1989 on "The Consolidation of Poorly Bound Pigments", and subsequently in various publications and poster sessions. (My own technique (1980) of multiple (25-30) coatings of AC33 (Rohm and Haas aqueous dispersion of ethyl acrylate methylmethacrylate) using a chromatographic sprayer was also presented informally at the GCI course. I am sorry to have missed Mr. Arnold's talk, as one of the problems Mr. Michalski reported was accurate distribution and flow maintenance with solutions other than dilute gelatine, and I would be interested to know how Mr. Arnold dealt with this. I do not at all mean to detract from Mr. Arnold's work, but I do believe that when it comes to questions of publication and attribution it is important that we acknowledge the original authors of useful methods, as it seems that our institutional memory is rapidly shrinking. It seems strange to me that we now have the best academically trained generations of conservators, and better access to bibliographical information than ever before, but less memory of what we have learned (e.g. the irreversibility of soluble nylon) and of the fundamental properties of materials than would ever have been professionally tolerated 20 years ago. Have we become careless because we have so many resources? I am becoming very concerned about the number of queries on OSG-L and the DistList from people working as professionals who are asking embarrassingly elementary questions. Perhaps it is just that the current "economic climate" is forcing everyone to work faster and with less background research and testing; this seems highly likely to me, but if others agree, then we need to stop and examine the implications this has on our claim to be conservators rather than restorers. I am not suggesting that we curtain casual discussion, or discussion about adaptations or observations which would not have been published, as the Net is becoming a viable substitute for the discussions we used to have with colleagues in hallways at AIC but can no longer afford. However, I think we owe it to each other to ask *after* we have done the basic homework, and not before. I guess I have graduated to Old Fogey status, but I would certainly like to see a return to the day when no one would presume to bring up a question or comment about the use of a resin (product) without being able to also state the chemical name, manufacturer, molecular weight, glass transition temperature, solubility parameters, and toxicity of the same (and what practical difference these make...) The Net gives us wonderful opportunities (which Mr.Robert Organ foresaw in the early '70s when he proposed a national conservation institute of conservators located all over the country where they could do the most good, but connected by computers; this was considered very frightening at the time), but we must not allow ease of communication to substitute for our own professional obligation to keep our knowledge up to date and accurate. Perhaps we need to have some serious thinking and discussion about how we may need to change communication and information dissemination, since the methods we have used since the '70s seem to be less effective than they were at disseminating the information we need. We have always tried to uphold the highest standards of professional publication in the JAIC; yet the Journal has difficulty getting enough articles, and we have ever more newsletters (which must be fulfilling some kind of need), and yet still fundamental information is not being transferred. Are there some types of information or ways of expressing it that conservators need that are not being met by JAIC? Is it just that we don't want to bother with the lengthy publication process? Or does the kind of information useful to conservators differ in some way from that useful to conservation scientists? Some of the time? All of the time? I will submit this to the DistList, as I think that this discussion is more appropriate to the broader range of specialty areas there, and I hope that interested OSG members will add to the discussion there. Lisa Mibach Heritage Resource Management 1-29 Cambridge St. North Ottawa, ON K1R 7A4 CANADA 613-234-6544 ph/fax *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:88 Distributed: Friday, May 1, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-88-003 ***Received on Wednesday, 29 April, 1998