Subject: Drawing stuck to glass
Our Conservation Department has been asked to treat a large drawing (25 3/4 x 38 1/2 inches) from our collection which which is stuck to glass. The drawing, done in 1980 by the late Aldo Rossi (architect), was executed in graphite and coloured chalk or pastel on translucent paper. It was then coated with a transparent resin which has become extremely darkened and discoloured, leaving it streaked and disfiguring where it was applied more heavily and formed pools and drips. The resin appears to have embrittled the paper. The resin does not form a coating on the media--it has penetrated and mixed with it. The drawing was acquired last year, in its original frame, in which it was sandwiched between two sheets of glass with a piece of translucent white paper behind the glass on the back. There are many small areas across the whole surface of the front where the drawing has become adhered to the glass. There are also enough areas where the drawing has already pulled away from the glass to make it apparent that it would be easy to separate the drawing from the glass--but not without damage to the drawing. The resin has, in those place, sheered away from the paper and stayed attached to the glass, leaving bare white patches on the paper. Wherever the resin is mixed with media (in many places) it would take the media with it when it sheered away from the paper. I have spoken to the dealer from whom we acquired the drawing. He says it was not unusual for Rossi to glaze his drawings, spraying them with fixatives and "other things". I had wondered, given the fact that the drawing was sandwiched between glass, if there was a possibility that Rossi was using the resin to make the paper more translucent, but the dealer does not think so. He says Rossi just liked a sheen on the surface. I would like to hear from other conservators about their experiences with drawings which have become stuck to glass. Have you tried to remove them? How and with what success? Have you left them on attached to the glass? If so, how have you stored them to prevent damage to the drawing should the glass break. Although my first instinct was to try to remove the drawing (perhaps using solvent vapours to soften the resin) I am now considering just leaving the drawing stuck to the glass, placing it on a rigid support panel (perhaps attaching it temporarily to that support) and storing it flat. If anyone has encountered an Aldo Rossi drawing that was glazed in this way, I'd be interested in hearing from them too. Karen Potje Chef du Service de la conservation/restauration Centre Canadien d'Architecture *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:38 Distributed: Tuesday, November 20, 2001 Message Id: cdl-15-38-017 ***Received on Monday, 19 November, 2001