Handling and Maintenance of Historic House Collections Webinars
Includes a Live Web Event on 01/07/2025 at 1:00 PM (EST)
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Register
- Non-member - Free!
- Member - Free!
January 7, 9, 14, 16, 2025, at 1-2pm ET, online
Instructors: Olivia Bascle, Maddie Cooper, Megan Ramsey, Paige Schmidt
Coordinator: Kelly McCauley Krish
Preventive conservation is the backbone of historic housekeeping and essential to the preservation of our cultural heritage. Preservation of historic homes and their contents is especially challenging as objects are often exhibited with fewer controls than in a formal museum context. This online series of four webinars will present key concepts around preventive conservation practices, which are essential in caring for these important historical sites and the objects they house.
- Session 1: Introduction to preventive conservation within historic houses
- Session 2: Mitigating deterioration in an historic house context
- Session 3: Focus on handling and maintenance of historic house collections
- Session 4: Development of policies and procedures to support preventive practices in historic houses
Registration to participate is free. The live webinar sessions will take place in Zoom and automated captions will be available.
If you are interested in participating in the in-person component of this program, find more information and apply here.
Funding for this program comes from a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional support comes from the Foundation for Advancement in Conservation (FAIC) Endowment for Professional Development, which was also 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 workshop.
Olivia Bascle
Olivia Bascle is the manager of Preventive Conservation in the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation’s (CWF) Historic Area. Using preventive conservation practices, her team cares for over 35 original and reconstructed 18th century properties as well as collections storage and warehouse spaces. Olivia works with many departments to ensure preservation needs are considered. Through her work at CWF, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, and an internship at George Mason’s Gunston Hall, Olivia has years of experience with collections care and preventive project planning. She holds a BA in Anthropology from George Mason University and completed the Heritage Emergency and Response Training in 2022 run by the Smithsonian Cultural Rescue Initiative and FEMA.
Maddie Cooper
Maddie Cooper is the Associate Preventive Conservator at the Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts (CCAHA) where she carries out preservation surveys and assessments and facilitates educational programming. Maddie has worked with a wide range of institutional and community collections. She held roles in conservation and collections at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens and the Wolfsonian-FIU prior to specializing in preventive conservation in graduate school. Through her graduate career, she interned with the Disaster Research Center, the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, and the Midwest Art Conservation Center. Maddie holds an MS in Art Conservation from the Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation, a BA in Chemistry from the University of Delaware, and a BA in Art Conservation with a minor in Art History from the University of Delaware.
Megan Ramsey
Megan Ramsey is the Collections Manager at the Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst, Massachusetts. In this role, Megan is responsible for organizing the first comprehensive collections catalog at the museum including the preservation, documentation and management of over 8,000 objects. Megan brings over a decade of experience in museums and a passion for improving preservation of and access to museum collections. Prior to joining EDM in 2020, Megan worked at Bishop Museum and Iolani Palace in Honolulu, Hawaii; Virginia Holocaust Museum in Richmond, Virginia; Greenbrier Historical Society in Lewisburg, West Virginia; and the Pearl S. Buck Birthplace in Hillsboro, West Virginia.
Paige Schmidt
Paige Schmidt owns and works as an objects conservator for Dogwood Workshop, LLC. She is also the Wooden Objects Conservator for the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation, which provides preservation and conservation support to all of the state’s parks and over 30 historic sites. Paige previously worked as an objects conservator at The Mariners’ Museum and Park, where she helped establish the museum’s current conservation program and worked collaboratively across departments to establish, update, and implement preservation policies and procedures. She holds an MA from Buffalo State University with a certificate in conservation. Her training includes internships at several historic house and living history museums, including the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, the Frick Collection, and Biltmore.
Kelly McCauley Krish (Moderator)
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.