Subject: Conservation Awards winners
The Conservation Awards 2007 winners announced The battle to look after hundreds of years of British history was recognised last night at a ceremony at the British Museum. People and projects who have done most to ensure the preservation of valuable heritage items won deserved acclaim at the Conservation Awards 2007, which are supported by Sir Paul McCartney. The top two awards, which come with a glass trophy and UKP15,000, went to contrasting projects--the miraculous preservation of a 400 year old silk jacket, and a unique university project in the north-east that will ensure the proper preservation of precious documents across the region. Judging Chair Dame Liz Forgan, said: "It is only possible to enjoy and learn from our past because of the ingenuity, dedication and hard work that go into ensuring heritage items are kept and looked after with meticulous care and in the right environment. The winners of these Awards are an inspiration to others." The miraculous preservation of a 400 year old silk doublet won the Award for Conservation. The fragile man's jacket dating from the 1620s had been painstakingly conserved in a 300-hour operation based on detailed analysis of the material and the way it had been made. Broadcaster Dan Cruickshank presented the award to Tuula Pardoe of the Scottish Conservation Studio and Sue Payne, curator at Perth Museum, where the doublet is on show for the first time ever. The project was up against stiff competition from the multi-Award winning ss Great Britain and a National Trust project to restore an Elizabethan table carpet. And a trailblazing scheme to spread advice on how to look after book and paper collections across the north-east ensured that Durham University Library picked up the Collections Care Award. The project, with funding from the Museums Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) North East, helped 50 organisations across the region equip themselves with the know-how to preserve vital documents, books and manuscripts in buildings ranging from a castle tower to an industrial unit. MLA Chair Mark Wood presented the award to Liz Branigan, resident conservator at Durham University Library and Sheila Hingley, Head of heritage collections. Other winners were: Rachel Morrison and The Courtauld Institute of Art won Student Conservator of the Year for research into cleaning unvarnished paintings. Loyd Grossman presented The National Archives, Kew, with the Digital Preservation Award for the 'Active preservation at the National Archives: PRONOM and DROID' project. Professor Norman Tennent and Dr James Nobbs won the Anna Plowden Award for inventing a computerised technique to improve colour-matching in ceramic conservation, presented by Baroness Sharp of Guildford. The Conservation Awards are the UK's leading awards for the preservation of cultural heritage. They are sponsored by Sir Paul McCartney and supported by key organisations in conservation and collections care: the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA), English Heritage, the Institute of Conservation (Icon) and the National Preservation Office. The Digital Preservation Coalition and the Anna Plowden Trust sponsor the awards in their names. For more information see <URL:http://www.conservationawards.org.uk>. Pictures of the winning projects are available from <URL:http://www.picselect.com> under English Heritage/Conservation Awards. Separate press releases on other Awards are available from the website. For details of the Digital Preservation Award, please see <URL:http://www.dpconline.org>. 2007 Awards Judges: Chair: Dame Liz Forgan, Chair, Heritage Lottery Fund; George Ferguson, Chairman, Acanthus Ferguson Mann Architects; Maev Kennedy, Arts Correspondent, The Guardian; Gillian Lewis, formerly Head of Conservation, National Maritime Museum; Georgina Nayler, Director, The Pilgrim Trust; Alice Rawsthorn, Design Critic, International Herald Tribune; Rosalind Savill, Director, The Wallace Collection; Anna Southall, Vice-Chair, Big Lottery Fund. The Digital Preservation Award has its own expert panel of judges, while the Anna Plowden Trust Award is judged by the Trustees. Susan Hughes Administrator, Conservation Awards 2007 3rd Floor, Downstream Building 1 London Bridge London SE1 9BG +44 20 7326 0995 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:24 Distributed: Saturday, September 29, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-24-001 ***Received on Friday, 28 September, 2007