Subject: Exhibition maintenance
In April 2001 the new Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde (National Museum of Ethnology) in The Netherlands was opened with about 3000 objects on permanent display, representing about 2% of the total museum collection. The objects are displayed by cultural area and represent cultures from all over the world. The exhibition rooms are set up with controlled environmental conditions including low light levels and without the use of any off-gassing materials. Nevertheless there are light-sensitive paper and textile objects which shall be exchanged on a regular basis. In each of the different cultural areas there are between 10 and 80 objects which require replacement regularly. We are now starting to set up an exhibition maintenance scheme which will include the planning of the exchange of the objects as well as cleaning of the exhibition space. We plan a rotating system for the paper and textile objects that will permit a display of about 6 months per object over a timespan of 5 years. We would be very interested to hear of exhibition maintenance programmes in other museums and what the experiences are regarding the effectiveness and feasibility of such programmes. What do other museums regard as an acceptable exposure time for light-sensitive materials? We also saw the following book review in the last JAIC, "Exhibit conservation guidelines" by T.Raphael and are hoping to be able to purchase the book soon. Margrit Reuss Objects conservator National Museum of Ethnology The Netherlands *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:20 Distributed: Tuesday, August 28, 2001 Message Id: cdl-15-20-010 ***Received on Monday, 27 August, 2001