3D Digital Documentation Summit

NCPTT in conjunction with the Intermountain Regional Office and the Presidio Trust will host a three day summit on digital documentation for the preservation of cultural heritage.

The Conference will be held July 10-12, 2012 at the Presidio in San Francisco, California. The program will feature two days of contributed papers and a poster session, followed by a third day of field demonstrations and exercises. We are soliciting oral and poster presentations that discuss topics which center on 3D digital documentation as used for conservation and preservation. This includes documentation for treatments, applications, future development directions, research, storage issues, and curation of produced data and images. NCPTT is also looking for firms that are interested in giving product and process demonstrations on-site.

Cost of the conference is:

  • $299 Registration (After June 7, 2012)
  • $199 Early Bird Registration (Until June 7, 2012)
  • $99 Student Registration (limited student seats are available on a first come first serve bases.  Student must provide photocopy of current student ID and a letter of interest. Student applications should be emailed to jason_church@contractor.nps.gov).

Registration will close on July 1, 2012

Checks can be written to 3D Digital Documentation Summit /NSU and mailed to NCPTT 645 University Parkway, Natchitoches, LA 71457.

Proposals for presentations should be submitted as abstracts. There are two categories of presentations:

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

Talks will be 25 minutes in duration, and 5 minutes for questions. Please submit an abstract of no less than 500 words (excluding figures and references). Abstract should contain: presenter’s full contact information (name, title, organization, address, phone, fax, email), and a 100-word maximum biography for the presenting author and each presenting co-author. We recommend no more than two presenters per paper. Suggested key issues, topics, and concepts of papers may address include but are not limited to:

Data Acquisition techniques;

  • 3D laser scanning
  • reflectance transformation imaging
  •  multispectral imaging
  • digital photogrammetry
  • Lidar
  • emerging technologies

Data Management with issues such as;

  • accessibility
  • curation
  • storage
  •  standards

Data Applications such as;

  • mapping
  • modeling
  • visualization
  • reconstruction

Abstract deadline is March 16, 2012.

Email notification of accepted presentations will be sent on April 2, 2012.  Presentations addressing similar topics will be combined into sessions.

Abstracts for peer review should be sent to: Jason Church (Jason_church@contractor.nps.gov), NCPTT, 645 University Parkway, Natchitoches, LA 71457

 

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Posters should be approximately 36 x 40 inches, landscape. Please submit an abstract of no less than 500 words (excluding figures and references). Abstract should contain: main presenter’s full contact information (name, title, organization, address, phone, fax, email). Suggested key issues, topics, and concepts of papers may address include but are not limited to:

Data Acquisition techniques;

  • 3D laser scanning
  • reflectance transformation imaging
  • multispectral imaging
  • digital photogrammetry
  • Lidar
  • emerging technologies

Data Management with issues such as;

  •  accessibility
  •  curation
  •  storage
  •  standards

Data Applications such as;

  • mapping
  • modeling
  • visualization
  • reconstruction

Abstract deadline is March 30, 2012.

Email notification of accepted poster presentations will be sent on April 9, 2012.

Abstracts should be sent to:

Jason Church (Jason_church@contractor.nps.gov), NCPTT, 645 University Parkway, Natchitoches, LA 71457

For further information, please visit the conference webpage.

AIC Member Research Trip to Cuba 2011

Plaza de San Francisco in Havana

When I first heard of AIC’s Members Research trip to Cuba, my initial reaction was ‘Why Cuba?’  Of all the places to experience conservation, what would a Caribbean island that has been isolated from the outside world have to offer?   Not knowing what to expect, and curious to learn more about a place that was restricted for Americans, I along with some 30 other AIC members, signed up and put myself in the hands of our fearless leader Rosa Lowinger.  Rosa, a well respected conservator (and author), was born in Cuba and relocated to the US following the embargo.  She was an ideal resource and had planned an ambitious schedule covering museums, conservation labs, local artists, architecture, as well as an Angels Project in Historic Trinidad.

A well maintained and adored 1950s Plymouth taxi.

To really understand the allure of Cuba for a conservator, look no further than the iconic 50s cars that rumble down the street. Despite the embargo and a lack of supplies, the Cubans have managed to keep their beloved American made Buicks, Pontiacs, and Fords in working condition over 50 years since they were produced.  As I sat in the back of an electric blue 50s Plymouth taxi, I listened to the driver speak passionately about how his grandfather, father, and now he, had maintained it over the years using only original Plymouth parts.  The same holds true for conservation in the country.  Although basic supplies like paint brushes and B-72 are difficult to obtain, conservators in Cuba take pride in their history and have managed to preserve it over the years.

A paintings student shows us his research project.

Conservators are well respected in Cuba.  Similar to the American training programs Cuban conservators train at the graduate level with internships/fellowships along the way.  There are also highly skilled craftsmen who attend trade schools with apprenticeships.  The Cuban government funds all conservation projects and established National Center for Conservation, Restoration and Museology in Havana (CENCREM). We visited the well equipped labs which included Paintings, Paper, Objects, and Book conservation along with Conservation Sciences (for more pictures).  The most impressive aspect of the labs for me was a Biological Lab, set aside to identify and address two of the biggest problems faced by conservators in Cuba:  mold and termites.  However as impressive as the CENCREM labs were, not everywhere in Cuba was so well equipped.

A Graduate Student shows us the Paper Lab.

A ceramics conservator shows us his inpainting media for porcelain.
Rosa Lowinger pictured with Trinidad conservator Nancy Benitez overlooking Valley of the Sugar Mills

On the 5th day of our trip, we hit the road for a four hour bus journey to Trinidad, designated a UNESCO world heritage site in 1988, and the site of our Angels Project.  Trinidad, located near the Valley of the Sugar mills, was a major center for the sugar trade until the 1850s when it was surpassed by nearby Cienfuegos.  From 1850 until the 1950s, Trinidad experienced a period of isolation and incidentally did not experience the growth of hotels and other buildings like Havana.  Instead Trinidad is a well preserved testament of Colonial Cuban architecture and art.  Conservators in Trinidad were trained like those in Havana and had labs for Paintings, Objects, and Archaeological conservation (Paper was done elsewhere). However conservators in Trinidad were very limited in resources and supplies in comparison to CENCREM.   The aim of our Angels project in Trinidad was to learn how conservators there dealt with these limited resources and aid them with the donation of supplies and suggestions from our own experiences.

A typical scene on the cobble stone streets of Trinidad.

The Plaza Mayor in Trinidad
Supplies donated by AIC members to Trinidad Conservators.

The conservators in Trinidad received donated books, publications, emergency management tools, inpainting brushes, gilding supplies, dry pigments, small hand tools, a large jar of B-72, along with other helpful supplies.  The group divided amongst ourselves into areas of specialties and went to address projects the conservators there were working on.  I, as an objects conservator, went to the archeological lab where there were objects labeled in boxes on shelves and large objects in a tub desalinating from burial in distilled water.  The conservators were interested in finding ways to reduce the water changes since distilled water was not the easiest to find.  Nancy Odegaard took a trip to the chemical room and came back with a simple spot test for chlorides recently presented and published with WAAC.

Other helpful advice came from the architectural and outdoor sculpture conservators who helped design a mount to elevate a colonial canon that was currently stored on the ground. Paintings conservators examined and suggested treatment procedures for a large canvas with tears, and paper/book conservators worked together with ethnographic conservators to address a painting on damaged leather. By the end of the day both the Cuban and American conservators felt a lot had been gained from our visit, and are hopeful that future collaboration will be possible.

AIC Paintings conservators examine a large oil on canvas in Trinidad.

The end of a successful Angels Project, and the beginning of collaboration with Cuban conservators.

For more pictures and video from the our visit to the Guanabacoa Museum,  click here,  and see AIC’s photos.