Dancing with a Degas

Dancing with a Degas

The Conservation Center is excited to have the honor of working on the collection of the Fisher Governor Foundation in Marshalltown, Iowa. Their collection is immense and impressive – the Impressionist Gallery was donated by the late Bill Fisher and features paintings from artists like Mary Cassatt and Camile Pissarro. We are excited to work on this unique cultural and artistic asset, and recently completed treatment of a graceful Degas pastel, “Dancers on Stage.”

A Letter from Heather Becker, CEO of The Conservation Center

A Letter from Heather Becker, CEO of The Conservation Center

I sent a letter out on March 25th updating all of you on how we were handling Covid-19 as a small art business and the feedback was tremendous: Reflecting on the Past to Inform Our Future, By Heather Becker. I wanted to give all of you an update on what has transpired since then.

Terracotta Warriors Ride Again

Terracotta Warriors Ride Again

Horses have a special place in Chinese history. They were considered so important that during the Shang and Zhou dynasties, they were buried alive in the tombs of their noble owners. You have likely heard of the Qin Shi Huang Mausoleum, where Emporer Qin Shi Huang went so far as to build an entire terracotta army of life-size war horses to protect him in the afterlife. When a set of terracotta horses and riders arrived at The Center, while nowhere as large as those in the Qin Shi Huang Mausoleum, we knew we were working with something special.

Preserving a Family Recipe Book

Preserving a Family Recipe Book

Here at The Center, we deal with a wide variety of pieces: museum acquisitions, historical artifacts, contemporary collections – but sometimes the most special projects are the ones focused on family heirlooms. A recipe book we recently had the honor of treating is the perfect example: deeply sentimental, an homage to past generations’ day-to-day lives, and in need of preservation for future generations’ continued enjoyment. This book came to us from a family eager to explore its origins, once belonging to a (perhaps great) grandmother from England.

Lincoln’s Loveseat: Restoring a Historical “Courting Couch”

Lincoln’s Loveseat: Restoring a Historical “Courting Couch”

Love is in the air with Valentine’s Day this month, and we couldn’t think of a more suitable time to finish restoring Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln’s “Courting Couch” for The Springfield Art Association’s collection in Springfield, Illinois. Romantic sparks flew between the 16th U.S. president and his future First Lady, Mary Todd, right on this horsehair-upholstered sofa built in the 1830s. The Conservation Center revived an 180-year old loveseat and along the process, uncovered a lost piece of history hidden in the arm cavity.

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