Subject: Conservation advocacy
To add to Jeremy Wells' plea for advocacy to the public (Conservation DistList Instance: 17:51 Thursday, January 29, 2004): Although we have a long history of public advocacy in conservation, ranging from efforts by individuals at schools, museums, antique shows, and for a wide variety of groups, through public lectures at AIC meetings, to web sites and an elegant book for collectors organized by Heritage Preservation (then NIC), and have spent a cumulatively enormous amount of time, we never seem to have reached "brand recognition" such that we don't have to explain to new acquaintances what a "conservator" is. Perhaps we should re-examine our methods, and analyze where people get their information and form their opinions. We may also have to find special funding for more ambitious efforts than we have used in the past. I recall that Heritage Preservation once considered using a series of ads in public interest television time, and this may be worth re-examining, now that we have collectively accumulated a number of professionally-produced films that could be used and added to. I firmly believe that the advice of an experienced public relations firm would help us to avoid repeating the same efforts that have not proven successful in the past; at their best, PR firms strive to disseminate accurate information about a topic to reach widespread recognition of a concept. I have also been impressed at the number of conservators who have individually arrived at the same conclusion, that a fictionalized television series might be the most effective way of reaching a mass audience. The success of forensic and police TV series seems to augur well for this approach. There are logistical obstacles to overcome (finding the right writers, selling the idea in the right places, etc), but I believe that we have collectively more than enough stories and senses of drama and humour to create a series that is as actively followed as is "the Sopranos". A series would allow us to cover a variety of topics (stolen art? forgeries?) and materials, complete with all the ethical dilemmas we delight in. We do need an organization to spearhead this, as none of us has the time to devote individually to follow through on all the work. We will know that we have succeeded when we are introduced to someone, say what we do, and hear "Oh really???" instead of getting that familiar blank look. Lisa Mibach *** Conservation DistList Instance 17:53 Distributed: Wednesday, February 4, 2004 Message Id: cdl-17-53-001 ***Received on Sunday, 1 February, 2004