Subject: Preservation databases
In response to Gretchen's item, same subject, we have used a database successfully for 12 years to keep account of data on a) about 1,000 baseline photographs; b) emergency stabilization treatments on 17 sculptures; c) an extensive inspection of the sculptures in 1988-1989; and d) many thousands of conservation treatments applied to the sculptures of the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia, a National Historic Landmark in Los Angeles. The site is managed by the Cultural Affairs Department (CAD). Although the Watts Towers are a Unit of the State of California Historic Park System and a city Cultural Heritage Monument, the conservation work and its database are both 'stand-alone' and independent of other city or state conservation work and databases. If the database is of possible use to you, read on. If you have a small budget and some control over changes to software and hardware, our system may be of interest. However, you must take an oath that 1)'the enemy of the good is the better'; 2) software and hardware changes must be avoided; and 3) never forget the 5 1/4" disk, 33 1/3 " records, slide rules, gramophones and punched cards. As a conservation engineer, I have worked under contract to CAD for 12 years. In setting up the conservation data system in 1987, we were (luckily) constrained by existing computer hardware and software available to the city government--all inexpensive and available with good documentation. The system we chose included use of the relational database Paradox (copyright), the spreadsheet program Lotus (copyright), and the word processing program Word Perfect (copyright). The Watts Towers consist of 17 sculptures, three taller than 55 feet. The sculptural surfaces cover 15,000 square feet and most are decorated with different sized colorful tiles, glass, pottery pieces and sea shells. We have a set of about 1,000 photographs all on color microfiche. The photographs are accurate images (on a four-foot by four-foot square grid) of each area of each surface of each of the set of 17 sculptures. The photographs on microfiche are used by printing out one 4' by 4' image on 8 1/2" by 11" paper for each area about to be worked by the Cultural Affairs staff. We store all the results of the work on ZIP cassettes (100M each), including color photographs and text. We have only part-time clerical people and as-needed staff conservation helpers so the databases are the ultimate responsibility of conservator Zuleyma Aguirre and me. If you need more information contact me at as768 [at] lafn__org. Bud Goldstone conservation engineering *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:7 Distributed: Thursday, July 2, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-7-011 ***Received on Thursday, 25 June, 1998