Beth Heller Conservation
Fixing paper so it lives longerArchive for art
Two Cool Opportunities
I have some interesting friends. Here are two opportunities presented by four of them:
Tish Brewer and Shannon Driscoll teach a series of classes in Dallas under the name Paper Nerds. The next one is this sunday, august 2nd from 1 to 4ish. Here is their description:
“this workshop will explore fold and envelope book structures. the variations are endless and the opportunity for creativity is boundless. these handmade books are a great way to organize all of your small odds and ends. each envelope page or pocket can hold something different such as ephemera, mementos, photographs, and other keep sakes. learn to make a business card holder with decorative papers. “
Next up, we have Jan Elftmann and Kelly Lyles, who are taking people to China:
“Get connected to China’s thriving Contemporary Art Scene, September 18-29th. Kelly Lyles will be taking 24 artists (or arts appreciators) to Beijing, Shanghai, Zhouzhuang, and Hangzhou, on a VIP networking trip to meet our Chinese Peers (artists and curators). We’ll visit galleries, Museum, art academies and residencies, and of course all the spectacular historical sights of the world’s largest country, Forbidden City, Great Wall, etc, w/ VIP treatment entire time, since we’re actually guests of the Chinese Government. No waiting in lines, we’re guests of honour at Banquets. This is through ‘World Trade Exchange’, by invitation of the Chinese government, so it’s a resume builder as well as educational (& of course FUN!). Everyone who’s come with WTE (including Arts commission & Archie Bray Foundation) has said “life-changing”. There’s many testimonials on their website…“
partial deposit ASAP, in order to procure Visas in time
or go to the WTE Phone: (425) 890-3184 http://www.wte-usa.com/
Persistence of Vision Toys
Someday, when my bindery is set up, I want to experiment with these art/book/film forms. In the meantime, here is food for dreaming. Also, don’t forget Diorama-O-Rama in Dallas, May 23rd!

Above is a case containing a selection of our "persistence of vision" toys. In left of the front row is a Mechanical Cinema toy that spins to show movement by combining the images on two sides of the card. Next is a 19th century Phenakistoscope with a selection of reels. On the right in that row is a Praxinoscope, a drum with a center of mirror facets. Back left is an early 20th century variation of the Phenakistoscope, the Motion Picture Show or Ludoscope. Back right is a large Zoetrope (wheel of life) on a base. (from website http://brightbytes.com/collection/per_vis.html)
Tomorrow’s Ephemera Today
Something called Paper Camp took place this past weekend in London, and some very interesting experiments were performed. This person blogged about it. I kind of wish I had been there, but my brain might have exploded from all the creativity, so it’s probably safer that I wasn’t.
However. Prepare to deal with this in the conservation lab of the future. Or of next week.
Language of the Birds: Book-related art
Brian Goggin with Dorka Keehn
2006-2008 (in progress)
(A site specific sculptural installation for a new public plaza on the NW corner of Broadway where Grant and Columbus Streets intersect, San Francisco)
Ooooh. Microscopy.
I miss having a microscope. Here are the National Geographic Best Microscopic Images. This one is Japanese Paper



Well, Boy Howdy, It’s Been A Month
All kinds of things going on here at the AAC, so I’ve fallen down on the job of blogging and I just couldn’t get back up till now.
For those who want to know what it’s like to work in a 2-person library/archive, here you go…just imagine all of the things I’m about to mention happening simultaneously:
Snowden Becker was here for a month, working on our 8mm and 16mm film. She re-cored and rehoused 80 reels, showed me how to do it, and taught a well-attended workshop to Colorado-based archivists. Also, baked some great cupcakes.
Snowden worked away in the corner of the little-used mailroom that I have targeted for a stealth take-over for conservation use. While she slaved, I tidied up to get ready for delivery of 200 framed photographic prints, which will double our collection of framed stuff. While we initially had budgeted a reasonable amount to create a new storage system for said stuff, it has now been determined that we will make one out of fencing materials and chewing gum. I’ve been working with the team to design one – and will post to PADG once we’ve got something useful. Thanks to all from that list who made suggestions!
I also purchased a small book press, which expands my conservation lab to include more than just a canvas bag full of bone folders and PVAc. See above – stealth takeover of space.
Gary and I, with the help of some dedicated volunteers, moved and rearranged 4 storage areas worth of archives to prepare for construction of a new rare book room. The new room will eventually contain the 30,000 rare and scarce books donated to us by a private collector, which will start to arrive in a couple of months. As you can see, I take a hands-on approach to our renovation projects!
In the midst of the chaos, I found some paperwork which suggests that we have some valuable artwork hiding in storage, so now seemed a good time to get an inventory, and seek appraisal and authentication. This past week was spent moving and unpacking paintings that had been stored in horrible conditions since the library was moved from New York 15 years ago. 
Turns out, we’ve got two large Gabriel Loppe oils, one Colin Campbell Cooper in poor condition, 3 Belmore Browns, and possibly some Turners. Who knew? No one, apparently. See some of them on our Flickr page.
I submitted a grant for the Connecting to Collections Bookshelf the first month I got here, and the books just arrived. They’ve been quite handy. I have spent quite a bit of time with A Legal Primer on Managing Museum Collections, as we are working on a fairly block-buster-ish maps exhibit. We will have some incredible maps from a private collector, as well as a modern maps component supported by National Geographic.
Let’s see, what else…Oh, yeah, got the comments back on our NHPRC Basic Archives grant, and getting ready to submit that on the first of the month. Part of the grant will address our institutional archives, which are disorganized. I’ve been attempting to plow through them to find information about the paintings, and have found many interesting tidbits in the process. F’rinstance, the 1916 letter inaugurating the Association of Mountaineering Clubs of North America – nice timing, since we’re having that gathering in the building in two weeks.
While one of our volunteers has been lollygagging around in Alaska, I’ve been working with the other two on a multitude of ever-expanding projects. More images have been uploaded to Flickr, including the first of the lantern slides. The summit registers are now organized enough that we can answer research requests. You can see one of the volunteers, Adam, has been working overtime on the issue of preventing route guides from being lost while checked out and used by our patrons:
He’s drilled a hole through one of his books (not ours!) and hooked it to his harness with a carabiner. Hmmmm – maybe that would keep the books from plunging down mountains and being returned to us a little dinged and dusty….
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, I’m busy meeting with potential donors, meeting with the fundraising committee to answer the ever popular question “how can the library generate revenue” (see HERE for a nice answer), getting PastPerfect and an accessioning procedure up and running, and all the daily operations of a library. Whew! I wonder what’ll happen next month? Oh… right, we’ve got climbing conferences coming up…The International Climber’s Meet, The Craggin’ Classic, and the International Editors of Climbing Journals and Websites conference – all in October, about the same time the new compact shelving arrives! Never a dull moment in this job.
AIC Angels Rock the Mountains
Everyone else has blogged about it, so I better get on it: The 2008 AIC Angels Project was a roaring success. These people refused cookies, tours of the rare books room, water and bathroom breaks – they were unbelievable preservation demons, sticking to the task at hand. I want to clone them and keep the results.
You can read about it at the AAC Library Blog, High Places, or the BWAMM Blog, or see pictures as they come in, on our Flickr page

I send my undying gratitute to, in no particular order:
Diligent unfurlers of shredded peak registers, removers of candy inserts, identifiers of mortuary certificates and possible human remains in ash form:
Karen Jones, Collections Conservator, Jefferson County Public Library, CO (and author of ingenious AIC Poster on making broken ledger bindings into ledger enclosures!)
Greg Bailey, Conservation Technician, University of Connecticut Libraries
Jennifer Cruickshank, Conservator, Maryland State Archives
Vicki Lee, Senior Conservator, Maryland State Archives
Laura Bedford, UT Austin Kilgarlin Center Conservation Student
Bev Perkins, Objects Conservator
Heroic removers of horrible backings, discarders of hideous frames, Photodocumentarians extraordinaires:
Jamye Jamison, Book and Paper Conservator, Zukor Conservation, San Fran
Alicia Bjornson, Resource Interpretive Specialist, The Hancock House, NJ State Parks
Nora Lockshin, Paper Conservator, Smithsonian Center for Archives Conservation, DC
Elizabeth Williams, Preservation Specialist, The Hollinger Corporation
Jenn Cruickshank (again)
Explorers of the depths of storage and the heights of museum exhibitions (we have our own crevasse, y’know!):
Bev Perkins (again)
MJ Davis, WASHI, Vermont
Helen Alten, Northern States Conservation Center
and
Innovators of the art of daveyboard origami and book cradle modular construction:
Katherine Kelly, Collections Care Conservator, Iowa State University
Andrea Knowlton, Assistant Conservator for Special Collections, Wilson Library, University of N. Carolina- Chapel HIll
Susan Lunas, Book Conservator, Eugene, OR
Senders of unexpectedly enormous amounts of free supplies:
John Dunphy, University Products
Elizabeth Williams, The Hollinger Corporation
Bob Henderson, Metal Edge, Inc.
Jake Salik, Talas
Janice Comer, Archival Products
I didn’t even approach other vendors, who I sure would have contributed too, given the chance, but these folks gave SO much!
And, of course, the support of Library Director, Gary Landeck, CMC Creative Coordinator Chris Case, CMC events manager Carla Preston, and everyone else at the AAC and CMC who made this happen!
Seriously, folks, if you have the chance to participate in the AIC Angels project, either as a volunteer or as a host institution, DO IT!
Go To Dallas
Originally uploaded by tapescraper
If you find yourself in or near Texas on May 25th, you should check out Shannon Phillips’ and Tish Brewers’ Paper Works By Paper Nerds cyanotype workshop. They are both graduates of the Kilgarlin Center and they’ve set up a paper conservation studio in Dallas. I visited the shop in March, on my de-texing tour, and it’s a happy, creative place in an up-and-coming art district. I would check it out if I were you. Which I’m not, and I did already.







