This collection of essays brings to focus a moment in the evolution of the complex decision making processes required when conservators consider the treatment of cultural heritage materials. The papers presented here are drawn from two consecutive years of presentations at the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (AIC) Annual Meeting General Sessions. These were, in 2010, The Conservation Continuum: Examining the Past, Envisioning the Future, and in 2011, Ethos Logos Pathos: Ethical Principles and Critical Thinking in Conservation.
Conservation in the 21st Century: Will a 20th Century Code of Ethics Suffice?
Barbara Appelbaum
Legacies from the Past: Previous Repairs
Deborah Bede
To Treat or Not to Treat: Decision-making in Preparing Archives for Digitization
Gabriëlle Beentjes
Resuscitating Bamiyan’s Buddhas? A Dispatch from Dresden, Two Lessons Learned
James Janowski
Objects of Trauma, Finding the Balance
Jane E. Klinger
On Time and the Modalities of Conservation
Frank Matero
The Frankenstein Syndrome
Salvador Muñoz Viñas
Restoration Ethics, Cleaning, and Perception: Case Studies from the Dutch Government Collection
W. Wei, Z. Benders, and E. Domela Nieuwenhuis
Book Review: Conservation Takes a Reflective Turn
George Wheeler, introduction by Nancie Ravenel