Subject: Sealant or coating for marble
David Turnbull <dturnbull [at] edmontonarts__ab__ca> writes >We have an upcoming large scale artwork that will be carved from >Vermont Mountain White Marble and Vermont Danby Marble with a honed >finish. It will be permanently displayed indoors in a heavily >trafficked public space. The artist has recommended using a water- >based penetrating sealant to protect and facilitate easier cleaning >from water and oil-based staining. I am concerned about its >irreversibility. Anyone with experience with successes or failures >of penetrating sealants or opinions on coatings that could be >applied before it is installed would be appreciated. ... The Elgin Marbles in the British Museum are coated with Polyethyleneglycol Wax 6000. The wax was dissolved in industrial methylated spirit for application by brushing. This was carried out--I think--in the 1970s. In response to the publication of "Lord Elgin and the Marbles: The Controversial History of the Parthenon Sculptures" by W St Clair (Oxford, 1998), the British Museum held a conference, in that year, to which St Clair was invited (and which notoriously ended in chaos). However to prove a point regarding their wellbeing, I uncovered a small square--about 10cm x 10cm--from one of the Parthenon Frieze panels. The wax came away effortless with IMS and revealed a slightly whiter patch of marble. The slight darkening was due to the absorption of atmospheric dust, by the wax. I also recall removing ink that had been squirted from a fountain pen on a marble relief, also coated with PEG 6000. It was in the gallery next to the Duveen Gallery (which contains the Parthenon Frieze). The ink came off easily and had not penetrated the wax. Eric Miller retired from the British Museum *** Conservation DistList Instance 24:40 Distributed: Wednesday, February 23, 2011 Message Id: cdl-24-40-002 ***Received on Sunday, 20 February, 2011