Subject: Conservation principles
I have been much interested in this discussion, as Messrs. Hassard, Gottsegen, and Sossani have developed it. In my own institution, interventive conservation is regarded as a luxury, which I can indulge maybe two days a week. I have one assistant, of experienced technician grade, and myself do the admin, materials ordering, and preservation planning. We are gearing up to a major move, and my first priority is to ensure that all our documents are packaged to withstand the ministrations of the movers. I still find time for some bookbinding, paper and parchment repair, and I have recently instructed several trainees from different offices in the repair of wax and shellac seals. And I do hope to take an hour sometime soon to sharpen my knives. But it is a problem: we are necessarily specialising non-specialists, expert consultants to our institutions, and it's all too easy to lose proficiency if you lose the time to practice. Shortage of skills is a serious problem, and has been addressed, with some success, by the Society of Archivists' Conservation Training Scheme. This is a small in-service scheme, run by the Society, and largely administered voluntarily by its instructors and committee. It provides trainees with 24 weeks of one-to-one, on-the-bench training by experienced conservators working in institutions, usually county record offices. Instructors have their specialities, and, because it's such a small world, trainees tell each other which are best for which subjects. I have never been qualified to teach bookbinding, and would not undertake to teach map repair; although permitted to teach paper and parchment repair as well as seals, my last half-dozen trainees have all been in that subject (and my office is running out of broken seals!) because I love working with wax, and know how to get a good result. I really enjoy these placements; apart from anything else, they ensure that I keep up to standard myself. I'm allowed six weeks of training time per year, and, as the conversation doesn't stop at seals, I usually learn something too; for instance, I've just been given an invitation to visit the Hydrographic Office in Somerset, and see how they repair tracings. The Society's scheme is not internationally accredited, but so far it hasn't needed to be. Its catchment area is in local and national record offices in Great Britain, and there are enough trainees and (just) enough instructors to provide training for these establishments. As Mr. Hassard has noted, a diploma does not always mean practical proficiency, and the Training Scheme prides itself in refreshing parts diplomas can't always reach. As well as craft skills in a special subject, each placement helps develop experience of archival materials, of different sorts of damage and methods of treatment, knowledge of problems and solutions unique to different offices, and a network of friends and colleagues that can last a lifetime. As to minimum intervention and reversible repairs, I can only say that having seen the stress placed on heavily silked and repaired paper documents of the 1950s, which were done by good craftsmen using what was then cutting-edge knowledge, I have no great opinion of my own infallibility. I would rather do less and use less, trying to foresee future structural problems and reversal needs as well as saving time for the vast number of tasks that are part of my job. Deborah Rohan Conservator, Cambridgeshire Archives Service, RES 1009, Shire Hall, Castle Street, Cambridge CB3 0AP +44 1223 717297 *** Conservation DistList Instance 20:2 Distributed: Monday, July 3, 2006 Message Id: cdl-20-2-007 ***Received on Monday, 26 June, 2006