How would you describe
your job to someone standing behind you in the
grocery checkout line?
I am a conservator of art on paper. I repair damaged
objects ranging from Walt Disney animation cells
to Rembrandt drawings, postage stamps to wallpaper,
and celestial globes to Japanese woodblock prints.
As a conservator I am also responsible for determining
and maintaining safe storage environments that
slow down natural aging of art objects. Finally
I conduct research concerning chemical degradation
processes of paper and media such as ink or watercolor.
What is your educational
background?
After finishing Hageveld atheneum in Haarlem,
the Netherlands I finished the four-year graduate
program at the National Conservation School in
Amsterdam. What path did you take to get where
you are now? I have held internships with private
conservators in The Netherlands and France and
with the British Museum in London. For three years
I was a Mellon Fellow for the Paper Conservation
Department at the National Gallery of Art in Washington
DC. Before my current position as a Senior Paper
Conservator at the Library of Congress I worked
at the Baltimore Museum of Art and the Boijmans
Museum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
How did you get your current
job?
I applied to this job after colleagues at the
Library of Congress inquired whether I would be
interested in the job.
What do you consider to
be your key career decisions?
The most important career decision has been to
accept the Mellon Fellowship at the National Gallery
of Art in Washington DC. It required me to move
from the Netherlands to the US but I have never
regretted my decision. The Mellon Fellowship enabled
me to conduct research into paper degradation
and have the results published by the National
Gallery. My experience at the Gallery has proven
to be a great asset both in treatment experience
and in setting up your research projects. I also
believe that having worked at the Gallery made
me a serious candidate for any position I subsequently
applied.
What is your ultimate
career goal?
Let me first say that I am very content with my
current position. I can combine conservation treatments
with conservation research, which, to my mind,
is the best part of being a conservator. However,
within the next fifteen years I hope to manage
a (paper) conservation department in a major museum.
What kinds of people do
well in your company/organization?
Most conservators are highly skilled professionals.
They keep up to date on the latest developments
in the field by attending conferences and workshops
and reading conservation journals. Those conservators
who can handle both the daily workload and find
time to conduct research and present and/or publish
their findings are among the most respected in
the field.
What scientific backgrounds
does your company look for?
All conservators must have a thorough knowledge
of chemistry usually through a BS. Conservation
scientists usually have a master's degree in chemistry
and often a post-graduate degree. What is your
typical day like? A conservator in the Library
of Congress usually works on various projects
at any given time. Presently I am repairing a
Walt Disney drawing of the Seven Dwarfs from the
Snow White animation movie, flattening rolled-up
Ray and Charles Eames architectural drawings and
researching early 20th century photographic reproduction
techniques. In between these projects I need to
make time to have our environmental monitoring
system in our off-site storage facility in Landover
working again, design a conservation report database
and make preparations to give an inpainting (retouching)
workshop in Switzerland.
What do you like about
your job? What don't you like?
To breathe new life into an object that can best
be described as a total wreck is one of the best
things of my job. You get a real sense of your
work when you're comparing the before and after
treatment photographs. I would be very hard pressed
to find something I do not like about my job.
Working for an exhibition deadline and treating
all objects in time for an opening can be a stressful
experience. But when everything is hanging on
the wall and the exhibition is a success most
is forgotten.
What have been your most
interesting projects or opportunities?
My most recent project has been a study into the
degradation of iron gall ink, a process known
as ink corrosion. Iron gall ink was the writing
ink of preference from the late Middle Ages to
the early 20th century. Documents like the Declaration
of Independence have been written in this type
of ink. Unfortunately the high acidity and the
excess amount of iron in the ink make it rather
unstable, sometimes causing the ink to "eat" its
way through the paper or vellum support. A safe
treatment that stops the corrosion but does not
change the appearance of the ink is still being
investigated.
If you had it all to do
over again, what would you do differently about
your career?
Very little. I am frightfully content with the
direction my career has taken me.
Who are your role models?
No idea
What do you do when you're
not at work?
I try to collect 19th century German toy stone
building blocks, called Richter's Anchor building
blocks, of which I never have seem to have enough.
The blocks were made from a mixture of clay, sand
and linseed oil. The blocks come in over 2000
different shapes, enabling you to replicate any
type of building. They were so popular that at
the end of the 19th century Anchor blocks were
the biggest export product of Germany. Not bad
for a toy.
What is the most rewarding
thing about what you do?
Knowing that my efforts help in protecting our
cultural heritage for future generations is an
amazing thing.
What advice do you have
for others who want a job like yours?
Start a career in conservation as early as possible.
You will need to gain experience before you can
get accepted to any of the conservation graduate
schools. By the time you've finished school, various
internships and/or fellowships you might have
invested three to six years into this line of
work. Knowing that salaries in art conservation
never keep up with comparable professions in other
sectors you have to be very sure about your decision
to enter the conservation field. Most conservators
love their work which makes monetary compensation
perhaps less important.
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