Subject: Infilling outdoor marble sculpture
Vanessa Wiggin <vanessa [at] artworksconservation__com> writes >I have been asked to quote on the retreatment of an outdoor >sculpture made of black and white marble. The sculpture is subject >to vibration due to its positioning and is heavily used by >skateboarders. This has resulted in extensive chipping to edges and >corners. The sculpture is located in a hot and sunny area. > >The losses were previously infilled with an epoxy resin and marble >dust mixture. While the result was aesthetically pleasing, the >infills began to fail almost immediately. Now two years later, >almost all the fills have been lost or are pulling away from the >stone. > >Can anyone suggest a more flexible fill material that will stand up >to these conditions? Discouraging all skateboarders is not >currently on the agenda. The original posting and subsequent responses have focussed on the use of epoxy resin. The original posting states that this has already failed after 2 years. Epoxy has a remarkable ability of declaring itself unsuitable for outdoor use. Had this material not failed so soon it would have continued to discolour and make its presence increasingly obvious. I am aware of the sculpture to which this treatment has been applied, having made an inspection of it myself for the client prior to the ill fated fills that are now failing. If the issue is that fills are being dislodged through skateboarding or other external forces then, simply stated, this does need to be put on the agenda. The conservator must insist on this and seek professional support to have the client understand that conservation is not an iron shroud that can in any way counteract such adverse use. If we allow a client to dictate such restrictions we are constantly forced to adopt inappropriately hard technologies to counteract a lack of responsibility to remove adverse impacts. This approach is akin to waterproofing a floor because the client will not fix the roof. But the main issue here is the use of epoxies in the outdoor environment. They simply are unsuitable when exposed to UV. I use epoxy quite extensively for outdoor repairs to stone and may have even recommended it in my notes to the owner of this object but certainly not as an exposed patching material. The object consists of a black and white marble and each of these can be readily matched using lime based repair materials, which themselves will remain compatible with the marble and not impose excessive strength. The two marbles present are reasonably monochrome but I have matched quite complex colour variations using pigmented lime based fills in the tradition of the scagliola technique, where the various colours are blended and pigmented throughout the entire depth of the fill. The only remaining issue to resolve is gloss level, which of course changes in time and separately for marble and fill. To achieve the initial gloss a UV colour stable acrylic is incorporated at low levels and does not act substantially as a binder. The surface is then fine sanded to produce the desired gloss level. Having built a scagliola fill permits such sanding without loosing surface colour. The fill can be reworked in future years to re-match changing gloss. Incorporating acrylic into lime mortars generally induces shrinkage cracks but these tend not to overly weaken the fill. In fact in some cases such cracks have been filled with contrasting colours to produce very convincing veining. I have recently inspected a fill in the described technique ten years after application. It is a complex marble and hence much easier to disguise but the results remain very acceptable with only a margin of discolouration at the join. Repair to a Carrara marble component on the same monument remains intact after ten years but has discoloured due to its increased support for biological growth. This repair is in the high moisture zone within a cornice and would benefit from more regular cleaning. In summary it is important for the conservator to lead the discussion on protection and there are ways on this particular object to modify it to some extent to reduce skateboard traffic. Having worked with the artist's other works before his death I know that modifications to the paving area around the marble forms would have been seen as a necessary and acceptable compromise. Keep epoxy away from light. Good luck, Andrew Thorn ARTCARE 614-1926-9326 Co-ordinator ICOM-CC Stone Working Group Assistant Co-ordinator ICOM-CC Mural, Mosaic, Rock Art Working Group *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:61 Distributed: Saturday, May 17, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-61-007 ***Received on Saturday, 17 May, 2008