Subject: A death
In Memoriam Agnes Timar-Balazsy, 1948-2001 ICCROM has learned with profound sorrow of the loss of a treasured friend and colleague, Agnes Timar-Balazsy, head of the Faculty of Object Conservation and of the Restorer Training Programs at the Hungarian National Museum. She died on 22 March 2001 in Budapest after a long illness. Agnes was a highly respected and much loved member of the international conservation community. Agnes' career in conservation started in 1966 as a conservator at the Conservation Department of the National Centre of Museums in Hungary. Her inquiring mind led her to studies in chemistry, obtaining an MA degree in chemical engineering from the Budapest Technical University in 1975. Throughout her life she carried out research, obtaining a Ph.D. in 1997 on investigation of historical dyes. She published extensively, consistently applying her solid scientific knowledge to practical conservation concerns. Her publication activities culminated in the landmark work "Chemical Principles of Textile Conservation" (Butterworth-Heinemann, 1998), co-authored with Dinah Eastop. She was deeply involved in the development conservation education in Hungary, being one of the key designers of the university-level degree in conservation offered by the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts and the Hungarian National Museum. She not only nurtured the development of national professional identity, but built bridges to the international community by organizing a variety of conferences and training events in her country. In 1997, the international ICCROM course on Scientific Principles of Textile Conservation was hosted by her institute in Budapest. Agnes was a dedicated and active member of various international professional associations. Her contribution was especially marked within the ICOM Conservation Committee, where she served as the coordinator of the Working Group of Textiles between 1990 and 1996, and as a member of the Directory Board since 1996, currently as a Vice Chairperson. Agnes contributed greatly to ICCROM activities over the past 15 years. She was a member of ICCROM Council since 1994, and a member of the Academic Advisory Committee since 1995. At the time of her death she was a Vice-Chairperson of the ICCROM Council. She will be remembered by hundreds of ICCROM participants as an exceptional teacher at both international and regional courses in Rome as well as in different parts of Africa, Europe and Latin America. Agnes was committed to inter-disciplinary practice in conservation and she paved the way to applied conservation science for colleagues from various disciplines and diverse cultural backgrounds. Her creative and poetic approach helped transform the way that science is taught in conservation and her legacy will continue to inspire ICCROM as well as the professional community worldwide. *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:54 Distributed: Friday, April 13, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-54-001 ***Received on Thursday, 12 April, 2001