Raphael, Madonna del cardellino (1507)
As objects, works of the visual arts not only must survive, they also need to be seen, touched, entered into, and, in every respect, experienced in their physical dimension. The instant we gaze on a painting, examine a sculpture, or enter an architectural space, the issue of conservation arises, posing a multitude of questions, whether we are aware of them or not. How much of what is before us is original? To what degree of later manipulation has the object been subjected? Has there been deterioration in the constituent materials, and, if so, was this due to natural or man-made causes? Are we looking at a fragment or at the whole? The list goes on. Conservation, in a very real sense, is the arbiter of our artistic patrimony—of its substance and our understanding of it.
Indeed, conservation problems are just one of the many factors affecting our perception of virtually every art o ...
Marco Grassi is a private paintings conservator and dealer in New York
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 27 June 2009, on page 23
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