Subject: Reproduction of museum objects
Maria Esteva <patrimon [at] fundantorchas__retina__ar> writes >I would like to know if any conservator has experience or has dealt >with the procedures for reproduction of ceramic, stone and metal >objects from an archeological and ethnographic collection. We have recently replicated (to an accuracy of one tenth of a millimetre) an Egyptian limestone relief and two Roman marble reliefs using non-contact replication methods. The reliefs were scanned using a hand-held portable laser scanner, to obtain a three-dimensional map of the surface, and the information obtained used to control a precision cutting machine. The copies were cut directly into stone. In this way it was possible to produce a faithful copy of the surface (including the effects of weathering and deterioration down to the last crack!) in the same material, rather than a carver's interpretation of what the original surface would have looked like. The Roman reliefs mentioned here were on display on the outside of a garden temple in North West England and had become so badly polluted and decayed that if they hadn't been removed would have soon been lost for ever. The originals have been cleaned (by laser) and conserved and will now be displayed indoors while the replicas will be placed back on the outside of the temple. This technology has developed so far over the last ten years that the resolution of replication can virtually be tailored to the job - the higher the resolution though, the longer the machining time and the higher the cost! Each of these reliefs has probably cost us somewhere in the region of a few thousand pounds to produce. We have also recently made replicas of a plaster model (for a bronze sculpture, approximately 50cm tall) for the owner while the original is on long-term loan at a museum. This involved scanning the object by laser and then building up a copy by a process known as Laminated Object Manufacture. This process builds a model, layer-by-layer, using paper. Once the model has been produced a mold can be created and a copy of the original created in plaster (or whatever material is chosen). Again, resolution is determined by the money available! Once the replicas have been made they require the addition of 'patina', colour etc by a skilled conservator. Larger objects can also be produced by these methods by dividing the artwork (not physically!) into smaller more manageable parts. Non-contact replication methods such as these have great potential, especially for the production of high quality replicas of extremely fragile artworks. This technology also has implications in faking and it is therefore important that museums are aware of what is already possible! Martin Cooper Laser Technology National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside Conservation Centre Whitechapel Liverpool L1 6HZ +44 151-478 4904 Fax: +44 151-478 4990 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:27 Distributed: Wednesday, September 16, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-27-003 ***Received on Wednesday, 16 September, 1998