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Conservation

Preserving for Tomorrow

Conservators are the museum’s experts in the materials, techniques, preservation, and restoration of art objects. They dedicate their time primarily to preservation activities, examination, and treatment, and, along with the division’s scientists, research to advance knowledge about works of art. Conservation staff work closely with departments across the museum, including Curatorial, Registration, Operations, Installations, and other departments in the service of the institutional mission and strategic goals.

The division comprises six specialized departments: Costume and Textiles, Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Furniture and Woodwork, Paintings, Works of Art on Paper, and Scientific Research.

Conservation professional staff includes the Director of Conservation, twelve conservators in the different areas of specialization, and two scientists. Staff also includes a conservation framer, a technical photographer, an administrator, and a records coordinator. Every year the division provides training and career-advancement opportunities for interns from conservation graduate programs, post-graduate, and post-doctoral fellows. Conservation also oversees a gallery maintenance team that provides preventive maintenance of art objects and collection spaces in all museum buildings.

Conservation Responsibilities

  • Adding to knowledge about works of art through technical and historical research, examination, and scientific analysis.
  • Determining and documenting the condition of art objects.
  • Performing conservation treatments to stabilize, repair, or restore art objects.
  • Overseeing conditions of temperature, relative humidity, air quality, and pest management in storage and installation spaces to assure they are optimal for art object preservation.
  • Educating the public via outreach that includes teaching, lectures, the museum website, and social media.

Contact

To learn more about conservation, contact [email protected].

Featured Stories & Resources

Gilding Diana

Discover how the museum preserved Augustus Saint-Gaudens's gilded copper Diana, an almost fifteen-foot weathervane that once crowned New York’s ​​Madison Square Garden.
View Case Study

When Conserving a Painting Reveals a Different Picture

Considering the layers of paint—and meaning—in a Medici portrait by Agnolo Bronzino
View Resource

In Conversation: Conserving Portraits of Mexican Royalty

Get an inside look into the Paintings Conservation Studio with Fellow Sarah Mastrangelo on the art and science behind her treatment of the portraits of Ana MarĂ­a and AgustĂ­n de Iturbide, the onetime Empress and Emperor of Mexico. The story of these paintings connects Mexican Independence with the history of Philadelphia in surprising ways.
Watch Video

Look Closely: Emma Amos and the Perfect Print

How American artist Emma Amos pushed etching to its limits—and brought American Girl to life.
View Resource

Museum Hands: Conservation

Meet Behrooz Salimnejad, Elaine S. Harrington Senior Conservator of Furniture and Woodwork, and learn more about his history and how his hands care for and contribute to our collections at the museum.
Watch Video

Tibetan Altar

Discover how conservators at the Philadelphia Museum of Art revealed the beauty, age, and artistic techniques behind an elaborately painted Tibetan altar.
View Case Study

Fit for a Queen

Conserving sculptures made for Marie Antoinette and the ill-fated Chateâu de Saint-Cloud.
View Resource

Conserving the Reliefs of Joseph Deschamps

Jack Hinton (the Henry P. McIlhenny Curator of European Decorative Arts and Sculpture) and Melissa Meighan (Conservator of Decorative Arts and Sculpture) discuss conserving sculptures that once adorned the apartments of Marie Antoinette.
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Behind the Scenes with Peale’s Staircase Group

Go behind the scenes with conservator Lucia Bay as she treats a beloved painting from the collection.
Watch Video
Conservation | Philadelphia Art Museum