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RE: Preservation Awareness Workshop at LOC
- Subject: RE: Preservation Awareness Workshop at LOC
- From: Henry Grunder <hgrunder@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 17 Mar 1999 13:31:41 -0800
- Message-id: <01BE7094.29496860.hgrunder@vsla.edu>
I wish they would quit sending me these.
-----Original Message-----
From: Conserva-Lista
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Sent: Wednesday, March 17, 1999 5:50 PM
To: padg@xxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Preservation Awareness Workshop at LOC
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-------------------- Original Message Follows
--------------------
February 12, 1999
Press contact: Helen Dalrymple (202) 707-1940
Public contact: Amparo Torres (202) 707-1026
Web address: <lcweb.loc.gov/preserv/servpubs.html>
FOURTH PRESERVATION AWARENESS WORKSHOP
TO BE HELD AT LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ON APRIL 13
The problems of keeping, organizing and storing old
family
photographs, important papers, or special books that are
fading,
yellowing and growing ever more fragile are common to
individuals as
well as to libraries and museums around the world.
The Library of Congress is offering its fourth
annual free
workshop to help members of the public learn more about
handling,
cleaning, preserving and storing these valuable materials.
The first preservation awareness workshop, held in
1996,
proved so successful, with more than 600 people in
attendance, that
the Library's Preservation Directorate decided to make the
workshop
an annual event. Once again, the general public will have
an
opportunity to view demonstrations and gather information
from
conservators and other specialists at the Library of
Congress on April
13, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. No reservations are necessary.
This year the workshop will be held in the
Librarian's
Reception Room, LJ 119, in the northwest corner of the
first floor of
the Thomas Jefferson Building, with presentations taking
place in the
Coolidge Auditorium, on the ground floor of the Jefferson
Building.
Persons wishing to attend should enter the Jefferson
Building through
the Visitors' Center entrance, on the west ground level.
For the second year, Allan J. Stypeck, host of the
popular
public radio show "The Bookguys," will be available all day
to
appraise (free of charge) old books, prints, photographs,
manuscripts
and sound recordings.
In addition, professional conservators, members of
the
American Institute for
- over -
Conservation, will be on hand to assess the condition of
personal
books, documents and photographs and to offer specific
conservation
treatment options and storage advice.
Co-sponsored by the Library's Center for the Book and the
Preservation Directorate, the workshop is part of the
Library's
celebration of National Library Week.
Throughout the day, visitors will be able to see
live
demonstrations of gold tooling, paper mending, book sewing,
materials
testing, and matting and hinging of works of art on paper.
Library
staff at table displays will be available to answer
questions as well
as
provide printed information on the handling, cleaning and
storage of
books, papers and documents, fine prints, photographs, CDs,
sound
recordings and motion picture film.
Slide presentations will focus on some of the
factors that
place personal collections at risk and help workshop
attendees
determine when it is wise to seek professional advice.
In addition to the Library's professional
conservation and
curatorial staff, representatives of nonprofit
professional
associations in the preservation field as well as companies
that
manufacture and distribute conservation products will be on
hand to
answer questions and offer other information on
preservation products
and issues.
The Library of Congress is the largest library in
the world.
It contains 115 million items, including more than 17
million books,
4 million maps, 13 million visual materials,
2 million sound recordings and 49 million manuscripts. The
mission
of the Library's Preservation Directorate is to preserve
these
collections for future generations. Founded in 1972, the
preservation
program has trained many distinguished scientists,
conservators and
other experts in the preservation field; the program is
also open to
interns from all over the world, who learn while working
with the
Library's professional staff. Many of the conservation
methods
developed at the Library have become standard procedures in
libraries
and archives worldwide.
The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress
was
established in 1977 to stimulate public interest in books,
reading and
libraries and to encourage the study of the book as an
artifact, art
form and means of communication. Its projects are
supported by
contributions from individuals, corporations and
foundations.
# # #
PR99-21
2-12-99
ISSN 0731-3527
Amparo R. de Torres
Special Projects Officer
Conservation Division, LM G 38
Library of Congress
101 Independence Ave., SE
Washington, D. C. 20540-4500, USA
Tel: (202) 707-1026
Fax: (202) 707-1525
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