Subject: Micah Williams
I am examining and proposing a major treatment for one of two Micah William pastels (19 inch vertical rip) on strainers. I treated a Williams' pastel when much younger, but have no recent access to early 19th century American pastels, or art historic studies of such items. I've worked on plenty of chalk-over-photo, on paper, on paper on canvas and on cardboard but no recent early 19th century American pastels on strainers. The two pastels (husband and wife) are both are 21 x 25 21 1/16 x 25 1/8 inches), with newsprint dated 1824-26. Micah Williams was active 1790-1833. Both pastels have 4-layer supports (attached around the edges only): (1) main, (2) soft brown paper, (3) soft brown paper #2 and (4) newspaper (one has 2-layers of newsprint). This "layer structure" is attached to the 1/2 inch thick by 2 inch wide historic strainer with some moderately-weak adhesive; separation from strainer seems possible in tests; one was separated in 1965 (see below). The reverse of the pastel's main support seems to have regions of chalk (white pigment) applied to the reverse. Well, that's the way it looks now, I could be wrong. I haven't taken the layer structure completely apart because I'm still examining, with approval to test, but without approval to proceed, so this is just a guess based on the area of the face and neck exposed on reverse. My question is with the appearance on the front. Where the regions of white (seen on reverse) abut the regions of brown deterioration (seen on reverse, especially in the hair) there are thin "white" lines of demarcation (thin gaps in the pastel media) on the front. The lines go around the face, outline parts of the hair and outline the white area of the male sitter's shirt where it abuts the black jacket. This suggests that the there may have been prepared "portrait" blanks ready to receive the face and shirt-front when sitter time was at a premium. This suggests a studio. A well respected Boston-area paper conservator (now passed on) treated one of the 3/4-view portraits in 1965. Someone made an informal attribution to Micah Williams on the "Conservation Report" style label. Both appear to have nearly identical construction and aesthetic countenance. They fall into the "aesthetic realm" of works attributed to Micah Williams. You can see where I'm going. It looks like studio work. Is it or isn't it? I'd like to have a phone conversation with anyone who has insight into this issue. I'd be happy to make the call, if you send an email with a couple of times, remembering I'm on the west coast. Tim Vitale Paper, Photographs and Electronic Media Conservator Film (still) Migration to Digital Format Digital Imaging and Facsimiles Preservation and Imaging Consulting Preservation Associates 1500 Park Avenue Suite 132 Emeryville, CA 94608 510-594-8277 Fax: 510-594-8799 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:44 Distributed: Saturday, February 23, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-44-019 ***Received on Friday, 15 February, 2008