The Icon Photographic Materials Group and the National Library of Scotland are 
delighted to announce a practical workshop with photographic conservator Clara 
M. Prieto. Conservators, archivists and curators of historical photograph 
collections are invited to participate. The one-day workshop will be taught at 
the National Library of Scotland on each of two consecutive days: Thursday 4th 
and Friday 5th July 2019.

Clara M. Prieto de la Fuente is an independent conservator and restorer of 
photographs and graphic art. In addition to conservation treatment and 
research, she teaches conservation and restoration at the Escuela Superior de 
Conservación y Restauración de Bienes Culturales in Madrid. Until 2010 she 
worked for Anne Cartier-Bresson in the Atelier de Restauration et Conservation 
des Photographies de la Ville de Paris as Conservation Project Manager. After 
receiving a grant from the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía she 
returned to Madrid, and in 2012 became a fellow of the Instituto de Patrimonio 
Cultural de España. She holds a Master’s degree in heritage conservation and a 
degree in the conservation and restoration of graphic art; in 2008 she was 
awarded a scholarship from the Ministerio de Cultura de España in order to 
specialise in photographic preservation at the Institut National du Patrimoine, 
Paris.

This workshop will familiarise participants with the history, processing and 
housing of daguerreotypes. Theory on the documentation and system design for 
developing the new structural housing system for cased daguerreotypes will be 
outlined, and each participant will carry out practical work developing one or 
two protection systems for cased daguerreotypes
 
The new structural housing system is designed to strengthen the first line of 
defence of the daguerreotype - the case - and protect it during storage, 
exhibition, handling and viewing, thereby mitigating the risk of further 
deterioration. The main objective of the workshop is to build a housing system 
that takes into account the whole object in its functionality and original 
structure, while allowing for its handling and viewing without increasing the 
risk of damage. The proposed system not only comprehensively protects 
daguerreotypes, and other encased photographs such as ambrotypes, but also 
recreates something of the original intimate viewing experience.

Each workshop will host a maximum of eight participants, who are encouraged to 
bring their own encased daguerreotypes or ambrotypes for practise. ¼" plates 
will be used most frequently, but the exercises can be done using plates of any 
size; smaller plates will be more complicated while larger ones will require 
more material.

Visit our eventbrite page for tickets: 
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/protecting-daguerreotypes-a-new-structural-housing-system-tickets-61227450954


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