Subject: Barriers
I am treating a series of large (6 feet wide and up to 20 feet high) acrylic paintings in the stairwell of a public library. As the works have suffered badly from the abuse of passers-by, I would like to shield the accessible portions (36" x 72") with some type of clear barrier. A plexiglas prototype was deemed to cause too much glare (the stairwell has large north-facing windows and is artificially lit on the sides). Non-reflective plexi of a sufficient thickness must be cell cast and is beyond the library's budget. So is Lexan--and I'm told it would be damaged by regular cleaning. My questions are: would non-reflective, tempered glass slotted into wooden brackets be too dangerous? Is there an alternative barrier material? Is there a non-yellowing film which would cut glare on the Plexi but not alter spectral transmission, considering that the protected and unprotected parts of the paintings have to "age" at the same rate? And no, the windows are not filtered, although I am trying to interest the library in such preventive measures. Sandy Easterbrook Easterbrook Conservation Services Saskatoon Canada 306-652-5181 *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:70 Distributed: Tuesday, April 16, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-70-016 ***Received on Thursday, 11 April, 2002