
Catalog Advanced Search
-
Contains 9 Component(s) Includes Multiple Live Events. The next is on 06/13/2025 at 2:00 PM (EDT)
Connect with your fellow members!
Our Monthly Member Meetup is a series of hour-long monthly events that we’ll host second Fridays at 2pm ET. Topics may cover sustainability, private practice, volunteering, the wiki, emergency planning, introductions to our various committees and groups, and more. Our goal is to offer you a social outlet and way to connect with other members. We welcome suggestions for topics and guest hosts! Send us your ideas at membership@culturalheritage.org.
Review our past meetups:
-
Register
- Member - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 05/13/2025 at 11:00 AM (EDT)
a meeting to discuss the proposed changes to the Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice
Please join the Conservators in Private Practice Specialty group for a meeting to discuss the proposed changes to the Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice.
Recently the Ethics Core Documents Review Task Force shared with AIC membership the Proposed Revisions to the Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice (pdf) document.
Over the past three years, the Task Force has been reviewing these documents, recommending changes to align with membership designation changes and reflect the field's modern and future priorities. As detailed in the task force's Rationale for Changes to the AIC Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice (pdf), the revisions incorporate input from the AIC Board of Directors, six focused subgroups, and leaders from all AIC committees, networks, and specialty groups. In December 2024, CiPP Officers also met with the Task Force after reviewing the proposed changes and raised specific areas of concern for CiPP members.
As a member of AIC and a conservator in private practice, we urge you to carefully review and consider the Rationale and the new draft of the Code and Guidelines.
We also invite you to a virtual discussion hosted by CiPP, focusing on how these changes will affect conservators in private practice. This forum will address the unique needs of private practice, aiming to identify specific points to bring to the Task Force's attention. Come prepared with talking points! Our goal is to ensure that through this time of change CiPP members' needs are heard, recognized, and met.-
Register
- Member - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 3 Component(s) Includes Multiple Live Events. The next is on 04/30/2025 at 1:00 PM (EDT)
Online, April 30 and May 7 at 1-4:30pm ET
Online, April 30 and May 7 at 1-4:30pm ET
Coordinator: JP BrownArt in Transit 2.0 is delighted to announce a joint PACCIN/AIC workshop focused on the theory and practice of crating museum collections for transport. This 2-part webinar series is meant for emerging preparators, as well as registrars, conservators and museum professionals who would like to gain practical experience with packing. The workshop comprises two online sessions that will take place before an optional in-person component at the pre-session of the AIC Annual Meeting.
Register here if you wish to only participate in the online workshop sessions. If you wish to participate in the in-person workshop as well, you must register through the AIC Annual Meeting (which includes registration to both the online and in-person components of the workshop. Find more information about that here.
The first online session will cover damage from vibration and shock during road and air transit and strategies for preventing and minimizing short- and long-term damage, by calculating and designing appropriate padding strategies. This session will be led by Bob White and Dale Kronkright.
The second online session will focus on probable risks and practical approaches to packing and crating for transit. This session will be led by Chris Barber, JP Flick, Mark Wamaling, and T Ashley McGrew.
The live online sessions will take place in Zoom and automated captions will be available. The sessions will be recorded and the recordings will be available to registrants.
This workshop is supported in part by the Foundation for Advancement in Conservation (FAIC) Endowment for Professional Development, which was created by a grant from The Mellon Foundation and is supported by donations from members of the American Institute for Conservation (AIC) and its friends. Workshops are made possible with the assistance of many AIC members, but no AIC membership dues were used to create or present this course.
FAIC relies on your contributions to support these and its many other programs. Learn more about donating to the foundation.
Chris Barber
Chris Barber has been a collections care professional in the commercial sector since 2002. In addition to his operational contributions to best practices in packing and crating are comprehensive proprietary IT tools for guided crate design and problem-solving with predictive models for MRP, labor, carbon, cushioning, and related data management. More recently he has also supported operations through process improvement, systems design, global standardization, training, and governance in storage, project management, and crating. In 2023 he collaborated with STiCH to build ICEFAT’s carbon calculator for crates. Chris volunteers with the AIC Materials Working Group and serves as Publications Chair for PACCIN.
Dale Kronkright
Dale Kronkright is Head of Conservation at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Dale has been gathering vibration, shock and climatic data for the museum’s collections in travelling exhibitions and loans since 2011. In 2016, Dale began working with co-author Vikrant Palan and Polytec Inc. to study the natural frequencies of the museum’s paintings using laser Doppler vibrometry. In 2021, Dale began working with co-author Robert White at White Noise LLC to test a reusable art transport system that attenuates all vibration impulses above 6 Hz. This year they successfully achieved that engineering goal! He is extremely excited about this achievement. Dale co-authored three vibration attenuation and damping patents related to art in transit.
T. Ashley McGrew
T. Ashley McGrew is PACCIN’s longest continually serving volunteer, starting in 2003 when he was invited to join the steering committee. As the first subcommittee chair for the Preparation, Art Handling and Collections Care Network, he was educated by professional peers while managing Publications which meant moderating the Website, Forum and Listserv from 2008 to 2017. He is currently a member of two PACCIN subcommittees and is the organization liaison to the American Institute for Conservation.
Mark Wamaling
Course Coordinator
Mark Wamaling has been an advocate for the collection care professions throughout his many years of staff training at Artex Fine Art Services and as a contributor to workshops, webinars and museum conferences around the country. He has over twenty-five years of experience in art handling, packing, and crating design for museum exhibitions as well as large collection relocations. In 2014 he became Chair of the Preparation, Art handling, Collections Care Information Network (PACCIN) and has been involved in organizing workshops and training for the collections care community.
Bob White
Bob White is a Ph.D. noise, vibration, and modal analysis (NVH) engineer and owns White Noise LLC, a NVH and dynamics testing service in Waterloo Iowa. Bob was the Senior NVH Test Engineer for John Deere for 31 years where he authored six patents related to vibration and power transmission testing and engineering.
-
Register
- Non-member - $120
- Member - $120
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 04/29/2025 at 1:00 PM (EDT)
an introduction to a new conservation-specific insurance guide for private practices by Mary Pontillo, a fine arts insurance expert from Risk Strategies.
Our Conservators in Private Practice group is pleased to announce that the focus of its next meet-up session will be on insurance.
We've partnered with Mary Pontillo from Risk Strategies, a fine arts insurance expert, to create a conservation-specific insurance guide for private practices, which will be available to all group members. She will she will introduce the guide, discuss key issues for private practitioners, and hold a Q&A at this meeting.
Additionally, the group will host a luncheon session at this year's annual meeting in Minneapolis on Friday, May 30th which will be a continuation of this topic.
We want to ensure the guide and presentation are as relevant as possible to group members, so please take this brief anonymous survey beforehand to make sure your specific questions and concerns are addressed. It should only take 5-10 minutes to complete. https://forms.gle/NPcH6WziZEMvA1sr8
-
Register
- Member - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 3 Component(s)
Our Architecture Specialty Group will host a "town-hall" style meeting for all group members and officers. Agenda to be shared.
Our Architecture Specialty Group will host a "town-hall" style meeting for all group members and officers. Agenda to be shared.
-
Register
- Member - Free!
- *Further discounts may apply once you log in.
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 8 Component(s)
By adapting and applying what has been learned about sustainable preservation at larger institutions, the field can also more substantially address the need to meet international, federal, and state sustainability goals.
This self-study program is presented as a series of recordings of a live course offered March - April 2025. Please note that any assignments are designed for enrichment only and will not be reviewed.
Sustainability initiatives are linked to cost-savings, reduced carbon footprints, improved community relationships, and future resilience, along with the opportunity to optimize the preservation of collections. Doing so can be critical for small and mid-sized institutions with substantially limited resources to survive and thrive going forward. However, the time and financial resources to develop such a plan have meant that these efforts have previously been limited to larger institutions. By adapting and applying what has been learned about sustainable preservation at larger institutions, the field can also more substantially address the need to meet sustainability goals.
The learning objectives for this course include:
• become familiar with the tools and resources available to implement sustainable practices specifically in the cultural heritage field
• understand sustainability terms and practices, and how they can apply to collecting institutions
• begin assessing current institutional practices through a sustainability lens and realize how to develop this practice into an actionable planCourse Schedule
Webinar 1: Green Terms and Tools
Presenter: Lorraine Finch, Director, LFCP
This introductory webinar will go over commonly used sustainability terms and metrics, and what resources are available to implement sustainable and resilient practices in the cultural heritage field.Webinar 2: Examining current operations
Presenter: Christopher Dunbrack, Associate Building Manager for The Metropolitan Museum of Art- Cloisters
While focusing on identifying measures to reduce energy and carbon, this webinar will also explore ways of benchmarking and fundraising to support addressing these concerns.Webinar 3: ET Developing a Green Vision
Presenter: Patrick Hamilton, Manager, Climate & Sustainability Initiatives
Division of Mission Infrastructure, Science Museum of Minnesota
This webinar will present the Science Museum of Minnesota’s approach to examining institutional practices through a sustainability lens as a case study, along with practical tips for other institutions learned from these experiences.Webinar 4: Creating a Plan
Presenter: Lorraine Finch, Director, LFCP
In the final webinar, participants will learn how to "write a sustainability plan in an hour", which can then be implemented at their institutions.Course Coordinator: Kelly McCauley Krish, Preventive Conservator
Live captioning in English and Spanish is available. The program will be held using Zoom Meeting.
Registration Fee
• $89Connecting to Collections Care courses are made possible in part by generous support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Kelly McCauley Krish (Moderator)
Preventive Conservator
Kelly McCauley Krish is the Preventive Conservator at the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, where she helps implement preventive practices in the historic houses and fine arts museum. Prior to joining CW, she was the Senior Preventive Conservator at the National Museum Cardiff and a Preventive Conservation Specialist at the Image Permanence Institute, where she offered consulting services, research, and educational opportunities to support sustainable preservation practices. Kelly holds an MS from the University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation and a BA in Historic Preservation from the University of Mary Washington.
Christopher Dunbrack
Associate Building Manager
The Metropolitan Museum of Art- Cloisters
Patrick Hamilton
Manager, Climate & Sustainability Initiatives Division of Mission Infrastructure
Science Museum of Minnesota
Lorraine Finch (Moderator)
Director
LFCP
Lorraine is director of LFCP, which is accelerating the cultural heritage sector’s climate and environmental actions through research, knowledge sharing and resource creation.
Lorraine is a sustainability leader who advocates on the international stage for sustainability in cultural heritage participating in conferences, leading workshops and training, publishing books and articles and collaborating with leaders in the field in the USA and Europe.
Lorraine is founder and Chair of the Institute of Conservation’s Sustainability Network. In recognition, she was presented with a David Middleton Sustainability Award. Lorraine is a Director of Climate Museum UK and an accredited conservator of archives, photographs, film and sound.
-
Register
- Non-member - $89
- Member - $89
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 1 Component(s)
Sign up to learn how to use our Toolkit
Join AIC for a virtual Advocacy 101 and walk through our Advocacy Toolkit with tips on how to take action, why federal funding for conservation is critical, what’s at risk if agencies are defunded, and FAIC programs that would be eliminated without federal funding. Also learn the conservation impact: get the stats, learn everyday advocacy, and discover partner organizations advocating for support, and more.
Lissa Rosenthal-Yoffe
Executive Director
AIC and FAIC
Lissa joined AIC and FAIC in June 2022 with 30 years of nonprofit leadership experience, primarily in service to the arts and culture. Throughout her career, she has focused on coalition building, membership service, and advocacy. She is committed to supporting our staff, board and volunteers while promoting a deeper understanding of cultural heritage, advocating for public policies that advance cultural heritage preservation, providing excellent and responsible member services, advancing life-long learning for AIC members and the public, and striving to create inclusive and equitable environments in all that we do.
Past leadership roles include Executive Director of DC Arts and Humanities Education Collaborative and Future of Music Coalition. Past Development Director roles include Pittsburgh Glass Center and MoMA PS1. Lissa was Programs Director of American Council for the Arts (now Americans for the Arts), where she led national Arts Advocacy Day in during the 90s. In addition to her work advancing the arts and cultural heritage, Lissa has a long history of leadership in social justice organizations, including National Program Director of PAX: Real Solutions to Gun Violence, where she led programs to support reducing gun violence against children. She served as the National Corporate Sponsorship Officer and National Senior Team Director of MZA Events, where she honed her team-based strategies producing AIDS Walks and Dance-a-thons benefitting AIDS service organizations nationwide.
Storytelling and communications have played a major role in Lissa’s work. She owned a public relations firm where she led marketing, program development, and fundraising to support the arts, food, cultural and community events in Pittsburgh and New York City. Her educational background includes degrees and advanced study in Art History, Fine Arts, and Museum Studies. Current board service includes the National Cherry Blossom Festival and SoCo Arts Lab. Lissa spends most evenings listening to vinyl while working on sculptures in her studio on the Western Chesapeake. Personal interests include anything square, transparent, plastic, and pickled. She likes to wear black.Ruth Seyler
AIC Meetings & Advocacy Director
American Institute for Conservation
Ruth joined AIC in 2005 after working at several other DC-based associations. She manages all annual meeting components, and is a point-person for our advocacy efforts. As part of her position, she is able to work with conservators on issues facing the field and to assist them in networking with related professionals. She enjoys the opportunities to interact with our members and to learn about their current projects. She holds an undergraduate degree from Smith College and a Master’s Degree from American University.
As the daughter of a native Washingtonian, she enjoys living and working in DC and is involved in efforts to preserve Washington’s historic buildings.
-
Register
- Non-member - Free!
- Member - Free!
- More Information
-
Register
-
Contains 14 Component(s)
The objective of this course is to enable participants from small to mid-size institutions to undertake a risk assessment that identifies natural, traditional, made or non-traditional hazards and evaluates the risk impact.
This self-study program is presented as a series of recordings of a live course offered March - April 2025. Please note that any assignments are designed for enrichment only and will not be reviewed.
Risk Assessments are one of the most important steps that heritage institutions can take in emergency and business continuity planning. The objective of this course is to enable participants from small to mid-size heritage institutions to undertake a risk assessment specific to their institution, enabling them to identify potential natural, traditional, made or non-traditional risks and evaluate their impact. Utilizing existing knowledge of their institution and its collections, programs and assets, participants evaluate hazards and risks based on information from the heritage field, the insurance industry, the commercial business resumption sector and government agencies. A recommended reading list/bibliography will be provided.
At the completion of this course, participants will be able to:
- Identify and understand the internal and external hazards likely to affect their institution (building, collections, people)
- Evaluate the likelihood of these hazards affecting their institution
- Rank these risks posed by these hazards through the lens of their institution’s key functions and program priorities
- Assess the likelihood and impact of these hazards on their institution’s buildings and collections
- Summarize this information and identify risk priorities using a Heritage Risk Assessment Matrix
Course Schedule
Webinar One: Introduction
In this session participants will review their institution’s key functions and asset vulnerabilities in order to identify the key programs and critical needs of their institution. A consideration of the relative importance of these areas leads into a discussion of how and for how long their institution could continue to operate if any these were impacted. Participants complete an assignment outlining the key functions and asset vulnerabilities of their heritage institution.Webinar Two: Identifying Hazards & Risks
This session discusses the different types of hazards and outlines the differences between a hazard and a risk. Reference material and guidelines are provided to help participants identify potential hazards in their area, and discusses methods to determine the extent to which they pose a risk. Participants complete an assignment that identifies the hazards that could pose a risk to their institution.Webinar Three: Risk Impact
This session evaluates the impact of hazards that participants have identified as posing a risk to their heritage institution. This module discusses the primary and secondary effects on your institution, its collection and assets, and its functioning. Participants complete a Risk Impact assignment using Hazard Trees to evaluate the impact of disruption of services and the loss of collections, assets, revenue, facilities, reputation and information on their institution.Webinar Four: Putting It All Together
This module brings together the information created in the Self Study component of the previous modules to complete a Cultural Heritage Risk Assessment Spreadsheet specific to participants’ institutions. This information is transferred to an institution-specific Risk Assessment Matrix. Together, the Spreadsheet and the Matrix provide a risk assessment snapshot that enables participants to address and prepare for the most likely risks to their institutions. Although risks, hazards and institutional circumstances change from year to year, updating these documents through an annual review will enable participants to be prepared.Course Coordinator: Jane Dalley, Jane Dalley Heritage Consulting
Jane Dalley began her career as a student in the Conservation Department at the Royal Ontario Museum, trained as a bench conservator at the National Maritime Museum (UK), worked privately in Montreal, spent 12 years as Chief Conservator for the Manitoba Archives and 18 years as a provincial conservation advisor. She is currently a conservator with Parks Canada. Jane has been involved in disasters in museums and archives since early in her career, responding to small and large-scale disasters, organizing an annual spring flood watch and assisting museums with flood threats, dam failure and tornadoes. She recently completed a BSc (Honours) in Applied Disaster & Emergency Studies and has IICRC certification in Water Damage Restoration, Applied Microbial Remediation, Odour Control, Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration and Infrared Thermography. She enjoys applying her practical experience, training and academic studies to disaster situations and emergency management in the heritage sector.
Captioning in English and Spanish is available. The program will be held using Zoom Meeting.
Registration Fee
• $89Connecting to Collections Care courses are made possible in part by generous support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Jane Dalley
Jane Dalley Heritage Consulting
Jane Dalley began her career as a student in the Conservation Department at the Royal Ontario Museum, trained as a bench conservator at the National Maritime Museum (UK), worked privately in Montreal, spent 12 years as Chief Conservator for the Manitoba Archives and 18 years as a provincial conservation advisor. She is currently a conservator with Parks Canada. Jane has been involved in disasters in museums and archives since early in her career, responding to small and large-scale disasters, organizing an annual spring flood watch and assisting museums with flood threats, dam failure and tornadoes. She recently completed a BSc (Honours) in Applied Disaster & Emergency Studies and has IICRC certification in Water Damage Restoration, Applied Microbial Remediation, Odour Control, Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration and Infrared Thermography. She enjoys applying her practical experience, training and academic studies to disaster situations and emergency management in the heritage sector.
-
Register
- Non-member - $89
- Member - $89
- More Information
-
Contains 1 Component(s)
AIC's Paintings Specialty Group invites you to join their Beva 371 reformulaton project update on the studies conducted on the traditional solvent-based version of the optimized formula, in comparison to the original and current blend. Panelists also introduced two solvent-free forms: pre-blended pellets and an open-weave non-woven fabric of (at least) two different densities.
AIC's Paintings Specialty Group hosted an "Update on the Reformulating Beva 371 Project: A Virtual Discussion" on February 24, 2025. Panelists shared results from the multi-year Reformulating Beva 371 Project, headed by Chris McGlinchey and supported by the Getty Foundation via their Conserving Canvas initiative. The Project is focused on working with Conservator’s Products Company in the U.S. and Centro Trattamento Superfici (aka CTS) in Europe to make the optimized formulation commercially available.
The panelists reviewed the studies conducted on the traditional solvent-based version of the optimized formula, in comparison to the original and current blend. They also introduced two solvent-free forms: pre-blended pellets and an open-weave non-woven fabric of (at least) two different densities.
- There was a long Q&A period that is included in the recording.
- Presentation slides are available on the Handouts tab.
Note: The panellists are not receiving remuneration from the companies that commercialize Beva. The purpose of this virtual presentation is to provide information on the new formulation and answer related questions to aid conservators in their decisions-making.
All specialties are invited to participate. Join PSG to have the fee waived for this event!
-
Register
- Non-member - $20
- Member - $15
- *Further discounts may apply once you log in.
- More Information
-
Contains 1 Component(s)
AIC's Equity & Inclusion Committee is hosting a second talk in its series of conversational interviews with conservators and cultural caretakers advancing DEIA principles forward, changing the way we think about and practice cultural heritage preservation. Our conversation will be February 21 at 12pm ET / 9am PT.
AIC's Equity & Inclusion Committee is hosting its second talk in a series of conversational interviews with conservators and cultural caretakers advancing DEIA principles forward, changing the way we think about and practice cultural heritage preservation. Join us on February 21 at 12pm ET / 9am PT.
Join members of the committee on Friday, February 21, for a conversation with Eric Hemenway, Director of the Repatriation, Archives, and Records department for the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, on "More Collaboration, Better History: Working Together to Bring a Better Story Forward."
We will discuss how a tribal historian works with various governments, institutions and organizations on creating historical narratives in public spaces. Focus will be what materials to include, or not include, as well as navigating difficult stories.
Free for members. All sessions will be recorded and available to AIC members and shared after the live session through the Equity and Inclusion in Conservation online community and the AIC Member Community.
Eric Hemenway
Director of Repatriation, Archives and Records
Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indian
Eric Hemenway is an Anishnaabe/Odawa from Cross Village, Michigan. Eric is the Director ofRepatriation, Archives and Records for the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians. Eric oversees themanagement, collecting and preservation of historic documents and materials for the tribe. Thesematerials are used to support LTBB government functions and its citizens. Eric works on numerous educational initiatives that include but are not limited to: museum exhibits, media, curriculumdevelopment, publications, historical interpretation, signage, web content and presentations.Collaborations on exhibits and programs have included the National Park Service, state of Michigan,Mackinac State Historic Parks, Emmet County, Welt Museum Wien Vienna, Austria and the HarborSprings History Museum, as well as other museums. Educational partnerships include: Harbor SpringsPublic Schools, Charlevoix Public Schools, Western Michigan University, Amherst College, BrownUniversity, Newberry Library, University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Harvard, Yale andAquinas College. Eric also has extensive work experience under the Native American Graves Protectionand Repatriation Act, working on over thirty successful repatriation claims and authoring a manual onperforming repatriation work.He currently sits on boards for the Michigan Historical Commission, Central Michigan University ClarkeLibrary, Michigan Historical Society, King House Association and Little Traverse Conservancy. Eric is aformer board member of the Michigan Humanities Council, Emmet County Historical Commission,National NAGRPA Review Committee, Harbor Springs Historical Museum and the Michigan Commissionon the Commemoration of the Bicentennial of the War of 1812. He is the recipient of the Grand RapidsPublic Museum Casey award 2010, Harbor Springs Chamber of Commerce Community Service Award2015, Michigan Humanities Council Humanities Champion of the Year 2019, Petoskey Chamber ofCommerce Marty VanDecar Inclusivity Award 2024 and received an Honorary Doctorate from OaklandUniversity in 2024.Outside of work, Eric spends his time with family and friends. Family includes two dogs, Sammy theSamoyed and Prim the Pitbull. Eric also spends as much time outdoors in beautiful Northern Michigan,exploring trails, two tracks, beaches and generally anywhere off the beaten path. Good food andconversations are appreciated, as well as meeting new people and seeing new places. Eric would like toacknowledge all the people and experiences that have helped him along his path, as well as beingAnishnaabe in the lands of the ancestors.
-
Register
- Member - Free!
- *Further discounts may apply once you log in.
- More Information
-
Register