Email digest for the Global Conservation Forum (ConsDistList) egroup.
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 1. MONTEFIASCONE PROJECT Summer 2026

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1.From: Scott Devine
 Posted: Sunday February 1, 2026  4:14 PM
 Subject: MONTEFIASCONE PROJECT Summer 2026
 Message: MONTEFIASCONE PROJECT Summer 2026

Montefiascone is a small medieval walled city 100 kilometers (80 miles) north 
of Rome, on Lake Bolsena. Since 1988, conservators, curators, art historians, 
book artists, and others interested in books and their history have come 
together to work, to learn and to enjoy this special place. Participants come 
to enjoy the medieval architecture, friendly people, a clean accessible lake, 
books and scholarship. The Montefiascone Project is a non-profit making 
organisation, set up to fund the restoration of the Library of the Seminario 
Barbarigo in Montefiascone. Participants may attend one, two, three or all four 
weeks. 

Costs are £665 (UK£) for each week and include all lectures (which are in 
English). For more information and to enrol, contact Cheryl Porter: 
[email protected] <[email protected]>



Week 1: 6th-10th July

Recreating the colours on the Medieval palette: Western, Hebrew and Islamic

Instructor: Cheryl Porter

This course will study the colours (made from rocks, minerals, metals, insects 
and plants) that were processed to produce the paints used by artists 
throughout the medieval era.  The focus will be on manuscript art – Islamic, 
Hebrew and European. Participants will re-create the colours using original 
recipes. Illustrated lectures will address history, geography, chemistry, 
iconography and conservation issues. Practical making and painting sessions 
will follow these lectures. No previous experience is necessary.


Cheryl Porter is founder and director of the Montefiascone Project. She trained 
as a book conservator in London and has worked as a conservator, collections 
manager and consultant for libraries and museums in many countries, including 
Australia, USA, Egypt and in Europe. She was deputy Director of the Dar 
al-Kutub (National Library) and Thesaurus Islamicus Foundation Manuscript 
Project in Egypt from 2008-2011. She has published widely on the topic of 
colours used to paint in manuscripts and is a Professional Associate in the 
American Institute for Conservation.




Week 2: 13th-17th July

Safavid Bindings

Instructors: Fatos Aslanoglu and Marina Pelissari; lecturer: Alison Ohta

The Safavid dynasty ruled Iran, parts of the Caucasus and Central Asia from 
1501 to 1722. During this period, the arts of the book flourished, with 
exceptionally fine manuscripts produced in royal workshops, where 
calligraphers, painters, illuminators and bookbinders worked in close 
collaboration. See for example, the Shahnama (Book of Kings) considered one of 
the most lavish manuscripts ever produced, which was commissioned by Shah 
Isma'il I (1501-1524) in Tabriz and is now scattered in collections throughout 
the world. Or Haft Awrang of the poet Jami produced for the Safavid prince 
Ibrahim Mirza between 1556-1565 and now in the Freer Gallery, Washington. These 
magnificent manuscripts were accompanied by equally fine bindings. Safavid 
binders drew extensively on Timurid and Turcoman binding traditions of the 
previous century, which were now refined, producing bindings distinguished by 
their meticulously planned structural systems with richly gilded ornamented 
covers and elaborate
 doublures often including delicate filigree leather work into the design.

The course will begin with an illustrated lecture introducing the historical 
and cultural background of Safavid book production, followed by close 
examination of binding components using selected examples from library and 
museum collections. The class will involve the construction of a Safavid-style 
binding model, guiding participants through textblock preparation, sewing, 
endband sewing, board attachment and leather covering. Participants will also 
work on cover decoration using prepared tools, applying filigree techniques to 
better understand Safavid surface ornamentation. This course aims to develop 
understanding through hands-on reconstruction and learning by making.

Fatos Aslanoglu is a Book and Paper Conservator specialising in Islamic 
manuscript material. She currently works at the British Library as Gulf History 
& Arabic Science Conservator, focusing on the care and treatment of rare 
manuscripts and historical collections. With over a decade of experience in 
book and paper conservation, her professional practice focuses primarily on 
Islamic manuscripts and significant archival collections. She completed her 
academic training in Traditional Turkish Arts (Illumination–Miniature) in 
Istanbul, Turkey and undertook advanced studies in the same field. As part of 
her education, she also completed conservation modules, integrating 
conservation approaches into her artistic practice.Fatos has previously worked 
as a project conservator at University College London Special Collections and 
earlier in her career at the Süleymaniye Library, contributing to the 
conservation of numerous Islamic manuscripts. This experience further 
strengthened her expertise
 in manuscript conservation and her commitment to the preservation of cultural 
heritage.

Marina Pelissari is a Book and Paper Conservator at Cambridge University 
Library and Archives, where she works with rare books, manuscripts, and 
archival collections. With a particular focus in the conservation of medieval 
manuscripts, Marina has developed significant expertise in preserving these 
historical texts and bindings. Her work combines hands-on conservation with 
research, ensuring the long-term preservation of cultural heritage. Before 
moving to the UK, Marina gained extensive experience in private conservation 
studios in Brazil and Italy, where she honed her skills in the care and 
conservation of books and archival materials across a wide range of periods and 
conditions. Marina holds an MA in Conservation from Camberwell College of Arts, 
University of the Arts London (2019). Her research interests include early 
binding structures, the mechanical principles behind historical bindings, 
medieval binding materials, and parchment-both its manufacture and its 
conservation.

Dr. Alison Ohta is currently Director of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great 
Britain and Ireland.  She completed her thesis at SOAS (London University) on 
Mamluk bindings and has published and lectured extensively on the subject. She 
is currently working on editing the catalogue of Mamluk manuscripts in the 
National Library of Egypt.



Week 3: 20th-24th July

Hiding in Plain Sight: Italian long-stitch bindings with secondary covers

Instructors:  Maria Fredericks and Anne Hillam; guest lecture by Renae Satterley

During the early modern period in Italy, many printed books were bound using 
simple long-stitch structures, which could be completed quickly using basic 
techniques and tools. These books were sewn directly through wrappers of paper 
or parchment and can usually be identified by the characteristic 'long-stitch 
sets' on the exterior of the spine. However, from the late 15th century 
onwards, long-stitch bindings and their exposed sewing threads could be 
additionally covered with woodblock prints, paste-papers, parchment, 
cartonnage, tawed skin or tanned leather for a more decorative or durable 
finished binding. Through lectures and demonstrations, this course will trace 
the evolution of long-stitch sewing patterns and secondary coverings in Italy 
during the hand-press period and examine ways in which the primary wrapper 
could be embellished, reinforced, or even disguised. Four or more historically 
based models will be completed using a range of covering types and sewing 
patterns; modern
 adaptations of this useful non-adhesive structure for use in conservation 
bindings will also be explored. Historical examples of long-stitch bindings in 
the Barbarigo Seminary Library will be available for first-hand examination and 
inspiration.

Maria Fredericks is the Sherman Fairchild Head of Conservation at the Morgan 
Library & Museum, where she began work in 2005 as the Drue Heinz Book 
Conservator. She is a Visiting Lecturer in Library & Archives Conservation at 
the New York University Conservation Center, and a conservation consultant to 
the Acton Library at NYU's Villa La Pietra in Florence. She was Head of 
Conservation at Columbia University Libraries 1998-2005; Principal Book 
Conservator at the Huntington Library 1993-98; Associate Library Conservator at 
the Winterthur Library 1990-93, where she established the first library 
conservation program, and Book Conservator at the Library of Congress 1987-90. 
She is a past co-director of the Paper and Book Intensive and is on the board 
of the Center for Book Arts in New York. She has been a regular attendee and 
occasional instructor at Montefiascone for over 20 years.

Anne Hillam is a book conservator in private practice providing conservation 
services for institutions and individuals in New York City and Western 
Massachusetts. She was Head of Conservation at the New York Academy of 
Medicine's Gladys Brooks Book & Paper Conservation Laboratory, 2007 - 12. Anne 
is the Guest Lecturer for Book Conservation at the Garman Art Conservation 
Department at SUNY Buffalo State University, a member of the Library and 
Archive Conservation Education (LACE) Consortium. Anne also regularly teaches 
at the American Academy of Bookbinding in Telluride, CO. She has a strong 
interest in historic book structures, particularly parchment bindings and 
teaches these structures both nationally and internationally. 

Dr. Renae Satterley is Head of the Library at The Honourable Society of the 
Middle Temple, one of the four Inns of Court in London. She has been studying 
early modern books and libraries from 2006, with a particular focus on the 
founding collection at Middle Temple, the private library of Robert Ashley 
(1565-1641). She completed her PhD at Queen Mary University of London in 2024 
and has previously worked at Cambridge University Library, Concordia 
University, and McGill University in Montreal. She has been cataloguing and 
organising the books in the Seminary library for the past sixteen years.



Week 4: 27th-31st July

A 14th century Irish Manuscript

Instructors: John Gillis and Élodie Lévêque

The Red Book of Ossory is a 14th century manuscript produced in Co Kilkenny, 
Ireland and the property of Richard de Ledrede, controversial Bishop of Ossory 
from 1317 to his death in 1361. The Red Book consists of 79 pages of parchment 
and is written in Latin and Old French. Among its wide-ranging contents is a 
treatise for Aqua vitae, the 'water of life' or uisce beatha, today known as 
Irish whiskey.


The book is a large format measuring 304 x 223 x 39 mm. The manuscript contains 
seven quires sewn on four split alum-tawed sewing supports which are laced into 
quarter-sawn oak binding boards, held in place with hardwood pegs. There is 
evidence of primary endbands sewn on rolled alum tawed cores (now lost) being 
also laced into the extant boards. The boards are covered in a stitched chemise 
of chamois or whittawed sheepskin leather with the flesh side facing out and 
dyed a crimson red. Historically, this method was often employed over a more 
traditional leather covering but in the case of the Red Book of Ossory, it is 
the sole surviving covering material. The lacing pattern for the sewing 
supports differs between the front and back boards, the back board being a 
later replacement, presumably attached at the same time the first covering 
leather was removed. The front board has a tunnelled entry with a channel on 
the outside face, in a typical Romanesque manner. The back board is not
 tunnelled, rather the straps are set in channels and pegged on the inside, 
usual for Insular structures from the late 13th century. Both boards suggest a 
conservative approach to binding and repair given the date of the manuscript.

It is proposed to make a scaled down version of the binding. This will be an 
interesting exercise as the finished model will display two different board 
attachment traditions and the stitched-on chamise cover will be untypical, with 
the stained fleshside as the outer surface. The nature of the cover also allows 
for its removal exposing the sewing structure and lacing system beneath.

Dr. John Gillis is Chief Manuscript Conservator and Project Manager at Trinity 
College Dublin Conservation Department. In 1988 he established and worked as 
Head of Conservation in the Delmas Conservation Bindery at Archbishop Marsh's 
Library, Dublin. John has taught book conservation techniques and theory in 
Italy for over twenty-five years. He lectures both at home and abroad and has 
been published in several journals and books. His major achievement to date has 
been the conservation of the Faddan More Psalter, a medieval manuscript 
retrieved from a bog in 2006, and conserved at the National Museum of Ireland 
Conservation Department over a four-and-a-half-year period, for which he won 
the Heritage Council of Ireland Conservation Award in 2010. In 2021 he 
published a monograph on the Psalter detailing the art history, conservation, 
codicology, palaeography and materiality of the manuscript. John has twice been 
a resident scholar in the Getty Research Institute in Los Angles and has
 lectured widely in the United States while carrying out his research. 

Dr. Élodie Lévêque completed a PhD in Medieval History in 2020 at Université 
Paris Nanterre (Paris X) and holds a Master's degree in Book Conservation from 
the Sorbonne (2010). Her research focuses on Carolingian and medieval 
bookbindings from France. She is currently Associate Professor of Book and 
Paper Conservation at Sorbonne University and a member of the Institut de 
Recherche et d'Histoire des Textes (IRHT, CNRS). She is the Principal 
Investigator of an ANR-funded project on 3D imaging of medieval bindings and 
was previously a postdoctoral researcher on the ERC-funded Beasts to Craft 
project. Before her current appointment, she worked as a Senior Conservator at 
the National Library of Ireland and at Trinity College Dublin, and as a 
Research Engineer at the Institut de Recherche et d'Histoire des Textes 
(IRHT/CNRS) in Paris. She was previously a Manuscript Conservator at 
Montpellier University Library. From 2010 to 2016, she worked at the National 
Library of Ireland as a
 Project Conservator and Heritage Council Fellow, where she conserved the 
Library's manuscript collections, including the Gaelic and Ormond Deeds 
collections. She was also a Gladys Brooks Book and Paper Fellow at the New York 
Academy of Medicine (2010), and completed postgraduate internships at the 
Morgan Library & Museum and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2009–2010).




------------------------------
Scott Devine
Global Conservation Forum Moderator
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