Subject: Cleaning pre-Columbian ceramics
Jerry Fahey <jfahey [at] siue__edu> writes >I'm preparing some small (3 to 7 inch) pre-Columbian ceramic figures >for a display. Some people refer to them as "flats". I was wondering >what would be the best way to clean them. Although I'm now a paper conservator, I spent two years in museum studies working with a lot of ethnographic and some archeological artifacts. I'll bet that the ethnographic and archeological conservators will agree that soil clinging to the surfaces of burial artifacts may have value to researchers, and as a rule should not be cleaned. Proper storage environments should protect the object from collecting modern museum dust. A gentle brush and low-powered vacuuming may be acceptable for museum dust (usually loaded with textile fibers, if you look under magnification). If the dirt is really in the interstices of the object and it appears to be from the use or burial of the object in its culture of origin, then the dirt is really part of the artifact. In any case, I think that wet-cleaning would not be recommended for something that isn't a glazed, high-fired ceramic (any ceramics experts to verify this?). I wish you luck. With ethnographic and archeological materials, err on the side of caution. Valinda Carroll *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:56 Distributed: Thursday, February 14, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-56-004 ***Received on Monday, 11 February, 2002