Subject: Bread
Robert Lodge <mckaylodge [at] gmail__com> writes >I was contacted by a construction company in North Carolina seeking >someone who can permanently preserve and protect for display actual >loaves of fresh bread. Bread is quite an interesting subject for me and I would like to talk to you about three different occasions of bread exhibition. I first came across actual bread loaves when I was doing an internship as a Zibby Garnett scholar at the Museo Egizio in Turin, Italy. The museum exhibited quite a number of ancient Egyptian loaves which all presented the same problem: insect attack. All of the attacks were of the same age as the ancient Egyptian bread itself. In this case, I would recommend just a mild mechanical cleaning of the objects. You see, the exit holes as well as the the insect tunnels within the bread loaves may provide scientists with important information about the biology, ecology and climate of the time the objects were made and they therefore should be kept as part of the object and its history. It is worth taking a look at Baucon A., Privitera S., Morandi Bonacossi D., Canci A., Neto de Carvalho C., Kyriazi E., Laborel-Deguen F., Morhange C., Marriner N. "Principles of Ichnoarchaeology: new frontiers for studying past times", 2008, in: Avanzini M., Petti F. "Italian Ichnology", Studi Trentini in Scienze Naturali, Acta Geologica 8 (in English). As far as I know, in Greece, there is a Bread Museum: <URL:http://www.breadmuseum.gr> but it is only available in greek. There is however an e-mail address info<-a t->breadmuseum< . >gr where I suppose that you may ask how they preserve their loaves. In the town of Chania, on the Greek island of Crete, one of the souvenirs widely sold is traditional marriage loaves. It is actually round O-shaped loaves, highly 3D decorated with flowers and leaves. They are sold as decorative objects, ready to be hung on the wall. They are sold pre-varnished, so they are quite shiny, which I guess that is something not acceptable for a museum collection as this is not the original appearance of natural bread baked for consumption. The shop assistants advise their customers to spray them with insecticide once every couple of months. Regarding exhibiting contemporary bread, I would advise you to either bake your loaves adding quite a lot of salt in the dough (this will act as a natural preservative and it won't show in the final outcome), or inject them with insecticide especially made for object conservation purposes and then apply a couple of layers of consolidant, such as Paraloid B72-10-15% w/w in acetone, including some fumed silica as a matting agent. Evangelia Kyriazi BA Hons Conservation and Restoration MSc Geography and Applied Geoinformatics *** Conservation DistList Instance 24:53 Distributed: Monday, May 30, 2011 Message Id: cdl-24-53-004 ***Received on Monday, 30 May, 2011