Subject: Long-term monitoring of historic furniture
My thanks to all respondents (and I encourage further response). Those of you who contacted me off the list, I will be contacting you shortly if I haven't already. From the tenor of some of the responses that appeared on the list, perhaps it would be useful if we could filter some concerns that have already been expressed: 1. We are planning to monitoring the response of the building fabric to the new HVAC system. The owner institution is well aware of the potential threat that heating and humidifying the building during the winter would pose, and is taking steps to provide an appropriate HVAC control algorithm and to monitor the condition of the building fabric on a continuing basis. The intention, as I understand it, it to monitor the environment in the rooms, and the building fabric, with s system that is capable of withstanding main power failure. I will be happy to discuss this subject further outside the distlist, but I don't want to consume bandwidth unnecessarily--my interest here is in the furniture question. 2. We are concerned here with visible damage (cracking, lifting of veneer, compression shrinkage, failure of adhesive and separation of component pieces, etc.) that accumulates in late-eighteenth century furniture in response to changes in relative humidity and/or temperature. Some of the furniture on the site has accumulated damage which has been identified as owing to previously uncontrolled environmental fluctuation. This damage has been conserved. However, as I mentioned in my original post, there is no permanent furniture conservation facility at Mount Vernon and the furniture is inspected by a knowledgeable furniture specialist only infrequently. The possibility that further damage will occur during commissioning of the HVAC system, by handling of the furniture, or by some other cause must be considered. 3. We will be working on appropriate responses to failure of environmental control and endeavoring to have the system fail safe (and restart safe as well--a factor which is often neglected, in my experience). However, after the response has occurred, the question would remain: what, if any, damage has been done to the objects? 4. My question still stands: are there any protocols for recording the condition of furniture (or related objects) which are sufficiently repeatable to allow an assessment of progressive damage in specific pieces of furniture over a long period of time? JP Brown Environmental Conservator *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:29 Distributed: Tuesday, September 22, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-29-004 ***Received on Friday, 18 September, 1998