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Products are filtered by different dates, depending on the combination of live and on-demand components that they contain, and on whether any live components are over or not.
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  • Contains 2 Component(s) Includes Multiple Live Events. The next is on 06/20/2024 at 11:00 AM (EDT)

    PMG is sponsoring a workshop on Carbon Literacy with instructor Lorraine Finch.

    In the ongoing endeavor to align conservation practices with sustainable principles, and as a follow-up event from the PMG Winter Meeting Sustainability panel in 2023, PMG will be offering a "Carbon Literacy for Conservation and Collections Care" workshop. The training will be offered over 2 sessions (June 20 and 21). Full details below.

    Led by esteemed instructor Lorraine Finch ACR, a certified Carbon Literacy Trainer, this workshop is geared to colleagues seeking to integrate climate-conscious strategies into their conservation efforts. Through engaging sessions and interactive discussions, participants will delve into the nuanced intersection of climate science and conservation practice, equipping themselves with the knowledge and tools needed to enact positive change within their institutions and communities.

    Lorraine Finch brings a wealth of expertise to the forefront as an advocate for environmental stewardship within the conservation field. With a distinguished background in Carbon Literacy training and a profound understanding of its implications for conservation and collections care, Lorraine is poised to guide participants through an illuminating journey towards sustainability. Her commitment to empowering individuals to recognize their role in mitigating climate change reflects a dedication to fostering a greener, more resilient future for cultural heritage preservation. 

    Join us in embracing this transformative learning experience under Lorraine's guidance, as we collectively embark on a path towards environmental responsibility and conservation excellence. 

    $30 for PMG members and student members, $40 for AIC members. We have a limited number of stipendiary (free) registrations for those experiencing financial hardship. Use the code on the registration page to register at this special rate.

  • Contains 9 Component(s) Includes Multiple Live Events. The next is on 06/14/2024 at 2:00 PM (EDT) Recorded On: 02/09/2024

    Connect with your fellow members!

    Our Monthly Member Meetup is a series of hour-long monthly events that we’ll host every second Friday 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. See past recordings at https://learning.culturalherit... and https://learning.culturalherit....

  • Contains 5 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 06/13/2024 at 1:00 PM (EDT) Recorded On: 03/14/2024

    Learn about new processes and improvements with the AIC Wiki

    The Wiki Working Group welcomes AIC Wiki editors and users to an open discussion. Learn about new processes and improvements with the AIC Wiki, as well as technical hurdles we are addressing, then discuss your own experiences and ideas. This will be a quarterly meeting, and will be recorded for those who can't join live.

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 06/10/2024 at 12:00 PM (EDT)

    Join AIC's Wooden Artifacts Group for its lecture series

    Join the Wooden Artifacts Group for the second session of its online webinar series. Dr. Geoffrey Killen will present on Ancient Eqyptian Woodworking and the techniques and tools used by Egyptian carpenters. A discussion will follow with Q&A from the audience. 

    Egyptian carpenters used a wide range of tools, techniques and processes to create products that were manufactured to serve the needs of Egyptian society. Egyptians exploited all the products of the tree, its wood for constructional work, leaves for fodder, basketry and matting. Locally sourced woods were used from an early period but the variable quality of these timbers led Egyptians to venture beyond their borders to source better quality material.

    Originally tree trunks were cleaved into boards by driving wedges into the tree’s grain. However, advances in metallurgy and the development of metal woodwork tools made it possible to accurately convert boards by sawing down the tree trunk. Egyptian carpenters also developed a range of sophisticated woodwork joints and tools and they also mastered the techniques of gluing, veneering, inlaying, marquetry and parquetry as well as experimenting with woodturning.

    This event is open to WAG and AIC members for free and $10 for nonmembers. The Zoom webinar will have automated captioning in English. 

    Dr. Geoffrey Killen

    Dr Geoffrey Killen is a leading Egyptologist, wood technologist and furniture historian. He studied Design and Technology at Shoreditch College, University of London and completed his PhD on woodworking of the Ramesside Period at the University of Liverpool. Geoffrey has more than 40 years experience of research in the areas of ancient Egyptian furniture and woodworking technology and has written several books, including “Ancient Egyptian Furniture” (3 vols, Oxbow Books, 2017) and “Egyptian Woodworking and Furniture” (Shire Egyptology Publications, 1994).”

    He has also published a number of articles and papers in conference reports, Festschrifts, books, journals and magazines.

    He has studied the collections of ancient Egyptian furniture at most of the major museums including the Egyptian Antiquities Museum, Cairo. He has lectured and given practical demonstrations of ancient woodworking processes and techniques in the Egypt, Israel, Switzerland, United States of America and Britain.

    He has also led in the field of experimental archaeology where in making and using replica woodworking tools and equipment he has generated and tested archaeological hypotheses. He acted as a consultant for the ‘Death on the Nile: Uncovering the Afterlife of Ancient Egypt’ exhibition held at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge in 2016. This work involved building a number of replica coffin displays. William H. Peck commented on the exhibition and its catalogue ‘Analysis of woods and the ongoing work on carpentry and the cabinet-making techniques of Geoffrey Killen have added greatly to our knowledge about Egyptian craftsmen and their methods’ (Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017.02.41). Geoffrey Killen’s practical work and reconstructions are displayed together with those original artefacts in many British museums. 

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 06/04/2024 at 1:00 PM (EDT)

    AIC's annual business meeting

    Join the board and executive director for a summary of our activities and financials and hear about plans for the future.

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 04/26/2024 at 2:00 PM (EDT)

    BPG's inaugural speaker series for members

    Join experts Travis McDade and Nick Wilding as they share case studies on library theft and book and manuscript forgeries. Both will present for 15-20 minutes each, then a robust discussion and conversation will take the final 20-30 minutes. This event is free for BPG members. 

  • Contains 1 Component(s) Includes a Live Web Event on 04/25/2024 at 12:00 PM (EDT)

    Join AIC's Wooden Artifacts Group for its new speaker series

    Join the Wooden Artifacts Group for the inaugural session of its online webinar series. Dr. Adam Bowett will present on Exotic Woods and the Growth of Empire from 1600-1900. A discussion will follow with Q&A from the audience. 

    This presentation looks at the way in which British commercial and colonial policy shaped the availability of exotic furniture woods to British furniture-makers. It is a story that runs in parallel with the growth of British maritime trade and the expansion of its colonial empire. Above all it was competition with other colonial powers – Holland, France, Spain and Portugal – which was the primary determinant of which woods were imported from which parts of the world, and at what date. Trade with North America is also considered, especially the development of timber imports from Canada and the United States in the 19th century.

    This event is open to WAG and AIC members for free and $10 for nonmembers. The Zoom webinar will have automated captioning in English. 

    Dr. Geoffrey Killen

    Dr Geoffrey Killen is a leading Egyptologist, wood technologist and furniture historian. He studied Design and Technology at Shoreditch College, University of London and completed his PhD on woodworking of the Ramesside Period at the University of Liverpool. Geoffrey has more than 40 years experience of research in the areas of ancient Egyptian furniture and woodworking technology and has written several books, including “Ancient Egyptian Furniture” (3 vols, Oxbow Books, 2017) and “Egyptian Woodworking and Furniture” (Shire Egyptology Publications, 1994).”

    He has also published a number of articles and papers in conference reports, Festschrifts, books, journals and magazines.

    He has studied the collections of ancient Egyptian furniture at most of the major museums including the Egyptian Antiquities Museum, Cairo. He has lectured and given practical demonstrations of ancient woodworking processes and techniques in the Egypt, Israel, Switzerland, United States of America and Britain.

    He has also led in the field of experimental archaeology where in making and using replica woodworking tools and equipment he has generated and tested archaeological hypotheses. He acted as a consultant for the ‘Death on the Nile: Uncovering the Afterlife of Ancient Egypt’ exhibition held at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge in 2016. This work involved building a number of replica coffin displays. William H. Peck commented on the exhibition and its catalogue ‘Analysis of woods and the ongoing work on carpentry and the cabinet-making techniques of Geoffrey Killen have added greatly to our knowledge about Egyptian craftsmen and their methods’ (Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2017.02.41). Geoffrey Killen’s practical work and reconstructions are displayed together with those original artefacts in many British museums. 

  • Contains 1 Component(s)

    In this conversation Jae Gutierrez, Executive Director of the Image Permanence Institute (IPI), will provide an informal introduction to current research on sealed frame packages being conducted at IPI. She will also discuss how this research sits within IPI’s sustainable preservation practices research agenda. As part of a three-year, Institute of Museum and Library Services-funded, research project a total of 28 sealed frame package designs were created for laboratory testing. Variations in design allowed for both quantitative and qualitative analysis. Experimental data was evaluated to understand the effectiveness of each design at buffering against external changes in temperature and relative humidity. Additionally, qualitative assessments were conducted of the reusability of sealed frame package materials. This research is ongoing, and the laboratory data is still being processed. Therefore, final conclusions will not be shared during this conversation, but trends and generalizations of lessons learned will be discussed.

    In this conversation Jae Gutierrez, Executive Director of the Image Permanence Institute (IPI), will provide an informal introduction to current research on sealed frame packages being conducted at IPI. She will also discuss how this research sits within IPI’s sustainable preservation practices research agenda. As part of a three-year, Institute of Museum and Library Services-funded, research project a total of 28 sealed frame package designs were created for laboratory testing. Variations in design allowed for both quantitative and qualitative analysis. Experimental data was evaluated to understand the effectiveness of each design at buffering against external changes in temperature and relative humidity. Additionally, qualitative assessments were conducted of the reusability of sealed frame package materials. This research is ongoing, and the laboratory data is still being processed. Therefore, final conclusions will not be shared during this conversation, but trends and generalizations of lessons learned will be discussed.

    Jae Gutierrez

    Executive Director

    Image Permanence Institute (IPI)

    Jennifer Jae Gutierrez has served as Executive Director of IPI since 2017. She provides leadership and strategic direction for the research center, with more than twenty years of experience as a preservation administrator, photograph conservator, and conservation educator. Jae has a MSc in Art Conservation from the University of Delaware specializing in photograph conservation. Prior to her appointment at RIT, Jae was the Arthur J. Bell Senior Photograph Conservator at the Center for Creative Photography (CCP) where she established the institution’s conservation department. Before that, she held a faculty appointment in the Art Conservation Department at the University of Delaware (UD) where she taught undergraduate- and graduate-level courses in preventive conservation, conservation ethics, and the conservation of photographic materials. 

  • Contains 2 Component(s)

    Introducing Climate Resilience Resources for Cultural Heritage, a new resource created by FAIC in partnership with the National Endowment for the Humanities and Environment and Culture Partners.

    Introducing Climate Resilience Resources for Cultural Heritage, a new resource created by FAIC in partnership with the National Endowment for the Humanities and Environment and Culture Partners.

    Webinar #1: Making the Case for Climate Resilience: How Cultural Heritage Can Lead the Way 

    Join us for an introduction to the Climate Resilience Resources for Cultural Heritage (CRR), a new resource created by FAIC in partnership with the National Endowment for the Humanities and Environment and Culture Partners. CRR is a suite of free resources that enables those who care for cultural resources in their communities to plan for and respond to climate change’s impacts. This series, tailored to cultural heritage stewards will walk through the importance of building climate resilience and how to do so using the three components to support collaborative planning efforts among cultural resources and communities.

    Webinar #2: Location, Location, Location: Assessing and Interpreting Risk of Climate-Related Hazards

    The second webinar of the Building Climate Resilience for Cultural Heritage webinar series will be introduced to the assessment tools including the interactive mapping tool and site risk vulnerability assessment survey.

    -       Why the need for another interactive Map? What makes this resource different and how it is relevant to you.

    -       Location, Location, Location: Using information from the interactive map tool in the site risk vulnerability assessment survey.

  • Contains 1 Component(s)

    AIC's Equity & Inclusion Committee is launching a new 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 first conversation will be March 21 at 2pm ET / 11am PT.

    Our Equity & Inclusion Committee is launching a new 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 first conversation will be March 21 at 2pm ET / 11am PT.

    We are excited to welcome Professor Fernando Dominguez Rubio, Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, University of California, San Diego, for the inaugural event. His work on ecologies of care, meaning and imagination intersect with conservation in a number of ways.

    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. Registration will open soon.