[NHCOLL-L:5646] Care of Leather and Skin Materials online course begins October 3
Helen Alten
helen at collectioncare.org
Tue Sep 13 13:00:00 EDT 2011
MS224: Care of Leather and Skin Materials
Instructor: Helen Alten
Dates: Oct 3 through Oct 28, 2011
Location: online at www.museumclasses.org
Description:
Prior to the invention of plastics, skin materials were the flexible
covering used for most objects - from bellows to books, carriages to
desktops. Furs and skins are in almost every museum's collection, be it
Natural History, History or Art. Caring for leather and skin materials
demands an understanding of how and why they deteriorate. Care of
Leather and Skin Materials offers a simplified explanation of the
origin, chemistry and structure of leathers and skins. Students learn to
identify leathers and surface finishes, determine their extent of
deterioration, write condition reports, and understand the agents of
deterioration that are harmful to leather and skins both in storage and
on exhibit. Topics include preparing hide and skin materials for storage
and exhibit, the use of archival materials and which ones might harm
skin proteins, housekeeping techniques for large objects or books on
open display, and three-dimensional supports for leather and skin to
keep them from distorting. Integrated pest management and historical
treatments will be covered, with a unit on hazardous materials applied
to older skins and leather that might prove a danger to staff.
Logistics:
Participants in Care of Leather and Skin work through sections on their
own. Materials and resources include online literature, slide lectures
and dialog between students and the instructor through online forums.
Care of Leather and Skin runs four weeks. To reserve a spot in the
course, please pay at http://www.collectioncare.org/tas/tas.html If you
have trouble please contact Helen Alten at helen at collectioncare.org
The Instructor:
Helen Alten, is the Director of Northern States Conservation Center and
its chief Objects Conservator. For nearly 30 years she has been involved
in objects conservation, starting as a pre-program intern at the
Oriental Institute in Chicago and the University Museum of the
University of Pennsylvania. She completed a degree in Archaeological
Conservation and Materials Science from the Institute of Archaeology at
the University of London in England. She has built and run conservation
laboratories in Bulgaria, Montana, Greece, Alaska and Minnesota. She has
a broad understanding of three-dimensional materials and their
deterioration, wrote and edited the quarterly Collections Caretaker,
maintains the popular www.collectioncare.org web site, lectures
throughout the United States on collection care topics, was instrumental
in developing a state-wide protocol for disaster response in small
Minnesota museums, has written, received and reviewed grants for NEH and
IMLS, worked with local foundations funding one of her pilot programs,
and is always in search of the perfect museum mannequin. She has
published chapters on conservation and deterioration of archeological
glass with the Materials Research Society and the York Archaeological
Trust, four chapters on different mannequin construction techniques in
Museum Mannequins: A Guide for Creating the Perfect Fit (2002),
preservation planning, policies, forms and procedures needed for a small
museum in The Minnesota Alliance of Local History Museums' Collection
Initiative Manual, and is co-editor of the penultimate book on numbering
museum collections (still in process) by the Gilcrease Museum in
Oklahoma. Helen Alten has been a Field Education Director, Conservator,
and staff trainer. She began working with people from small, rural, and
tribal museums while as the state conservator for Montana and Alaska.
Helen currently conducts conservation treatments and operates a
conservation center in Charleston, WV and St. Paul, MN.
--
Brad Bredehoft for Helen Alten
Northern States Conservation Center
www.collectioncare.org
www.museumclasses.org
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