Subject: Slides of storage conditions
We are presently conducting at our museum a Board / Staff strategic planning process which is intended to identify the key priorities for our future work and the development of a five year plan. Staff's feeling is that collections care and management has suffered for many many years in the interest of an aggressive exhibits schedule which has routinely monopolized personnel and financial resources. It is our hope that we will be able to convince our Board to pay attention to the care and storage of our collection as an institutional priority. Present storage is insufficient and conditions are deplorable in many ways. Because none of them are particularly knowledgeable about proper storage or collections management, obviously Board education is our challenge. In a series of preliminary meetings to plan for an upcoming Board/Staff retreat it has become clear that they do not have the background knowledge needed to really hear what we are saying. Our experience has been that "pictures are worth a thousand words" and consequently have been doing a lot of photodocumentation of existing storage both on-site and at off-site locations to help them understand what we are concerned about. We are planning a slide lecture of sorts at our upcoming january 20 retreat. However in selecting slides thus far which to us illustrate the absolute worst of conditions (physical damage to objects, collections stacked on top of each other, pigeons flying in warehouse spaces, objects in the aisles/stacked to the ceiling in boxes crushing under their own weight, etc.) it has become clear that what looks terrible to us, doesn't necessarily look bad to them. Primarily because they don't know any better. So finally to the reason for my message: we need slide images of "Model Storage Conditions" to use as a contrast, so they can see what things ought to look like. Simply describing them won't do it--we need pictures. Is there anybody out there with am artifact storage area they are proud of who would be willing to send us a few slides *before January 20th*? Ideally, it would be one housing a general history collection (furniture, dec arts, photos, toys, paintings, tools, etc) more so than a natural history collection or strictly fine arts. Also, if anyone has advice for how to make "non-museum" Board members (primarily investment bankers, physicians, and marketing people) get excited about artifact storage and collections care, please share. *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:36 Distributed: Wednesday, January 3, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-36-017 ***Received on Friday, 22 December, 2000