The UCLA/Getty Program in the Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic 
Materials has received a generous grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to 
help increase diversity in the study and practice of conservation of art and 
cultural collections. This grant supports outreach and summer opportunities for 
undergraduate students who are interested in learning more about cultural 
materials conservation and are underrepresented in the field, which is 87% 
non-Hispanic white.

Applications are currently available for students or recent degree holders to 
attend a fully funded, week-long summer workshop in Los Angeles, July 9-14, 
2018, designed to introduce 15 participants to conservation and other 
collections work through tours, lab activities, lectures and presentations at 
the Getty Villa and regional museums.

Participants in the 2018 summer workshop are eligible to apply for a fully 
funded 8-10 week internship the following summer.

Please find further information and the application, due March 9, 2018, at 
http://conservation.ucla.edu/Mellon_diversity_opportunity

Please distribute widely and encourage young people interested in 
art/science/social sciences to apply to learn about whether conservation is a 
field they would like to pursue.

For further information, feel free to contact me or

LaleƱa Arenas Vellanoweth
Program Manager
Mellon Opportunity for Diversity in Conservation
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


Ellen Pearlstein
Professor

UCLA Information Studies
230 GSEIS
Los Angeles, CA 90095

UCLA/Getty Program in the Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic 
Materials
A 410 Fowler
Los Angeles, CA 90095

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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