Skip to product information
1 of 1

Conservation Mounting for Prints and Drawings

Regular price £60.00
Sale price £60.00 Regular price £60.00
Sale Sold out
This detailed and practical handbook offers a rare insight into the British Museum’s methods for mounting prints and drawings, tracing the history of conservation mounting from the 1850s to today. ...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 01 May 2004
View Product Details

As long ago as the 1850s, an attendant in the Printed Room at the British Museum devised the sunk mount to protect the stored prints and drawings from the adverse effects of handling. Mounts of this kind are now in universal use.

Attention to detail in the long-term care of prints and drawings has characterized the British Museum to the present day. In this book, the author and her colleagues have given us a rare and detailed insight into the workings of a practising mounting studio within a national institution. The history of mounting is traced using examples from the British Museum's collection, and the reader is taken visually, step by step through the processes and techniques used in the British Museum for mounting both western and Oriental prints and drawings.

A professional practical handbook with a comprehensive bibliography, glossary and index, Conservation Mounting for Prints and Drawings places the practice of mounting in context within the history of collecting, connoisseurship, conservation theory and collections management. This book will appeal to conservators, collection managers, curators and collectors.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £60.00
Pages: 200
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 May 2004
Trim Size: 11.70 X 8.25 in
ISBN: 9781909492882
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

ART / Conservation & Preservation, Conservation, restoration and care of artworks

REVIEWS Icon

Acknowledgements

Disclaimer

Foreward

Introduction

Part 1: Theoretical background

Outline history of the presentation of prints and drawings at the British Museum

The sunk mount

Early mounts

Plain, cream-coloured board mount

Mount board

Solander boxes

British Museum mount sizes

Stamping mounts

Mounters

Mounting Oriental art

Modern developments

Scientific background

Deterioration of objects

Standards for environmental condition

Reduced temperature storage

Anoxic storage

Environmental monitoring

Microenvironments for the storage of paper - Vincent Daniels

Relative humidity and temperature

Air pollutants

Offgassing

Migration of materials through paper

Current research into microenvironments

Mounting materials

Mounting board and papers

Japanese papers

Adhesives and plastic films

Photographic mounting materials

Terminology and standards

The conservation profession

ECCO Professional Guidelines: I The profession

ECCO Professional Guidelines: II Code of Ethic

Considerations before mounting

Preservation planning

Size, status and purpose of the collection

Access and use

Acquisition policy

Inherent environmental factors

Building and storage facilities

Budget for and availability of mounting materials

Staff and expertise

Historical and aesthetic considerations

Technical considerations

Practical checklist

Part 2: Mounting instructions

Sizes and thickness of mounts

Mount sizes for western objects

Mount sizes for Oriental objects

Thickness of mounts

Standard mount styles (storage and display)

Overthrow mount

Inset mount

Solid mount

Perspex verso mount

Perspex sandwich mount

Standard mounts for Oriental objects (storage and display)

Diptych mount

Triptych mount

Concertina mount

Apertures

Mount apertures for western objects

Single aperture

Multiple aperture

Circular aperture

Elliptical/oval aperture

Animated aperture

Mount apertures for Oriental objects

Single aperture

Diptych aperture

Triptych aperture

Concertina aperture

Fan aperture

 

Mounting for display (additional methods)

Back board mount

Temporary top window mount

Housing for storage (additional methods)

Protective flap

Polyester overlay in overthrow mount

Polyester enclosure in overthrow mount

Portfolio or folder mount

Corrugated board mount with boxboard flap

Portfolio for small thin books and pamphlets

Portfolio for large and thick books

Post-binders and housing series of loose sheets

Safeguarding and recreating historical mounts

Incorporating old mounts into standard styles

Incorporating archive material into new mounts

Recreating washline mounts

Recreating gilt mounts

Hinging

Pasted hinges

V -hinge

T-hinge

Paper tabs for float-mounted objects

Non-adhesive hinging methods

Photographic mounting corners

Polyester/polyethylene strips

Polyester window

Continuous polyester V-hinge

Polyester and paper welded hinge

'Stretch-hinging' parchment

Attaching heavy and distorted supports

Inlaying

Traditional inlaying method

Strip inlaying method

Slot inlaying method

Finishing operations

Finishing corners

Finishing edges

Finishing bevels

Part 3: Stamping instructions

Practical notes on stamping, tools and inking

 

Guidelines for typesetting

Guidelines for spacing

Guidelines for spacing of letters

Guidelines for spacing of numbers

Guidelines (miscellaneous)

Stamping mounts

Acquisition numbers

Artists' names

Collection stamps

Reference numbers

Acknowledgements

Instruction to turn over

Stamping portfolios and protective flaps

Portfolios

Mounts with protective flaps

Illustrated summary: stamping mounts

Stamping mounts for drawings

Stamping mounts for prints

Stamping covers/flaps/portfolios

Stamping objects

Prints

Drawings

Sketchbook

Books

Stamping multiple acquisitions, catalogue numbers and artists' names

Example 1 (double acquisition numbers)

Example 2 (two artists' names for one print)

Example 3 (two artists' names associated with one print)

Example 4 (multiple apertures/collection stamps)

Example 5 (double apertures in a landscape format mount with two artists associated with both prints)

Example 6 (double apertures in a portrait format mount with two artists associated with both prints)

Part 4: Mounting studio

Studio organisation

Studio design

Studio maintenance

Workflow organisation

Materials

Illustrated list of mounting materials

Materials: tips for use

Moistening and applying linen tape

Water-cutting and chamfering Japanese paper

Preparing wheat starch paste

Preparing methyl cellulose adhesive

Tools and equipment

Illustrated list of tools and equipment

Tools and equipment: tips for use and maintenance

Cutting apertures

Sharpening tools

Cleaning type

List of suppliers

List of professional organizations and online sources of information

List of paper conservation training institutions in the UK

Bibliography and further reading

Glossary

Index