[CPProt.net] Museum Artifacts in U.S. in Danger
MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Wed Dec 7 12:32:34 CET 2005
Survey: Museum Artifacts in U.S. in Danger
By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer
Tue Dec 6, 6:58 PM ET
Millions of rare artifacts in museums and libraries across the United States
are slowly disintegrating because of improper storage, according to a survey
said to be the largest-ever look at the condition of such collections.
Damage is occurring at institutions of all sizes, but is worse at small-town
museums and historical societies, said the report, to be made public Tuesday
at the New York Public Library.
The survey of conditions at 3,370 museums, libraries and archives found that
many lacked the basic environmental controls that prevent photographs from
losing color, keep rare books from crumbling to dust and protect military
uniforms from being devoured by insects.
A quarter were deemed potentially vulnerable to damaging fluctuations in
temperature, light and humidity. About 65 percent had already sustained
damage to their collections.
Only one in five institutions had a paid staff dedicated to caring for
stored materials, and fewer than one in three had an up-to-date assessment
of the overall condition of their collection. Eighty percent of the
institutions lacked a plan detailing how their objects might be saved if a
natural disaster occurs, the survey said.
"There is an urgent need for a better environment for collections of all
kinds," said Debra Hess Norris, chairwoman of the conservation advocacy
group Heritage Preservation and head of the art conservation department at
the University of Delaware.
"It's hard to raise money for something as boring as storage, but it's
important, so we've got to do it," said Kristen Overbeck Laise, who directed
the project.
The survey, performed by the Heritage Preservation and the Institute of
Museum and Library Services, attempted to give the most detailed snapshot to
date of the conditions under which an estimated 4.8 billion artifacts are
stored at 30,000 institutions across the country.
Preservation experts have long lamented the lack of attention given to
conserving such material.
Julie Reilly, director of the Gerald R. Ford Conservation Center at the
Nebraska State Historical Society said it isn't uncommon to find
institutions holding treasured artifacts as if they were family relics
tucked away in attics and basements.
Many don't catalog their inventory, so they aren't always sure what
treasures they might have on hand, she said. Basic rules, such as keeping
all items at least four inches off the floor so they aren't ruined by a
minor water leak, are often ignored.
Photographs, diaries and other documents, she said, are routinely stored in
cardboard boxes and manila envelopes or wrapped in newspaper - all materials
that contain acids that eat away at paper products.
Reilly once came across a museum whose prize item was an 11-foot-wide map of
early settlement trails and homesteads.
In an attempt at conservation, curators had laminated the map, and in doing
so sealed its fate. Adhesives in the protective plastic, she said, would
eventually soak through the paper, turning it dark and brittle.
"We have really important parts of our national heritage all over the
country, and a great deal of it is in these small museums that aren't
particularly well funded and aren't particularly professionally run," she
said.
"And you think, 'This tiny little town in Nebraska, why is this important?'
But there are things in these collections that are historically
significant."
Part of the problem is that the best storage methods can sometimes be
expensive or labor intensive.
At the University of Hawaii at Manoa, for example, conservators battling
mold and paper-devouring beetles load 30,000 books from the school's library
into large freezers every year. The cold kills pests.
Teams of students also rub books with vibrating massagers to shake loose bug
remnants, which, if left undisturbed, may attract more insects.
The collection's most valuable bit of conservation planning, though, paid
off last November, when heavy rain flooded the library with as much as eight
feet of water.
Damage was heavy, but the library quickly implemented a previously drafted
disaster plan that included instructions on how to move artifacts out of the
building and immediately freeze wet material.
"Because we had a plan in place, we were able to be extremely effective and
stabilize and save materials that really were likely to have been more
damaged because of mold," said Lynn Ann Davis, head of preservation for the
collection.
The report did not offer estimates on how much it might cost to properly
preserve the 270 million books, journals and newspapers, 189 million
scientific specimens, 153 million photographs, 13.5 million historic objects
and 4.7 million works of art it said were in need of immediate care.
___
On the Net:
Heritage Health Index Report: http://www.heritagehealthindex.org/
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