Subject: Lectures on preservation science
Two Library of Congress Topics in Preservation Science lectures "Preservation Tools and Training in the Digital Age: NEDCC in the 21st Century" by Ann Russell, Director, Northeast Document Conservation Center, Andover, MA Library of Congress Whittall Pavilion Thomas Jefferson Building Washington, DC 20540 May 8, 2008 10:30-12 The presentation will begin with a brief review of current challenges in the preservation field. The speaker will describe the Northeast Document Conservation Center's (NEDCC) new initiative to produce new training and tools to address these challenges. These include the development of a new methodology to survey the preservation needs of digital collections; a new online course entitled Preservation 101; and dPlan, the online disaster tool. Also on the horizon is CoStep, a guide to cooperative statewide disaster planning. In closing the speaker will offer recommendations about needs for leadership and funding to advance preservation in the digital age. "Recent Trends in Preservation of Intangible Cultural Heritage" by Chandra Reedy, Professor, University of Delaware Center for Historic Architecture and Design, and Director, Laboratory for Analysis of Cultural Materials May 20, 2008, 2:30-4 Library of Congress Madison Building Mumford Room Washington, DC 20540 The UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage dates back to only 2003. Yet, it is already having a major impact, globally and within the preservation community of the United States. This movement explicitly recognizes that material culture is intertwined with ideas, memories, knowledge, skills, creativity, spirituality, emotions, traditions, and other intangible qualities. As much as possible, preservation of these intangible aspects of material culture, in conjunction with the objects they are associated with, is a goal of modern preservation efforts. Dr. Reedy will discuss highlights of the 2003 Convention, and its context within overall preservation efforts of UNESCO (such as Memory of the World and the World Heritage Convention) and within past efforts of the conservation and preservation communities in the United States. Recent global efforts and current directions of the work in this field will be reviewed, followed by a discussion about how and why intangible data can and should be preserved in close association with material culture when dealing with library materials, works of art, utilitarian objects, spiritual and ritual objects, buildings and monuments, or landscapes For more information visit <URL:http://www.loc.gov/preserv/tops/schedule.html> Carole Zimmermann, MLS, MGA Education and Training Specialist Library of Congress Preservation Research and Testing Division 101 Independence Ave. SE Washington, DC 20540-4560 202-707-1029 Fax: 202-707-1525 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:58 Distributed: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-58-001 ***Received on Wednesday, 30 April, 2008