I collect and sell other vintage posters besides movie posters such as
French Opera Posters, WWI posters etc. Some of these posters were
linen-backed at the turn of the century and hold up even today. I also
have to say that only in connection with Movie Posters has linen-backing
gotten such a bad rap. Most collectors of other vintage posters would
prefer to have the posters in a linen-backed state provided there is not
a lot of paint restoration.  FRANC

-----Original Message-----
From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Doug
Taylor
Sent: Wednesday, September 02, 2009 4:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] the role of restoration in forgeries



I have had almost every poster I own LB'd, regardless of grade.and many
were Mint to begin with.  (Perhaps proving my own insanity, I refuse to
grade a poster that has been LB'd higher than NM, even if it was my
poster and Mint before backing.)  

 

Many were backed without restoration, even of the fold lines.  Many with
"normal" restoration of folds to make them appear "mint".

 

I originally began the practice because it helped in preservation and
handling and, when I first started collecting in the late 1980's/early
1990's, LB'd posters generally garnered a higher price and it appeared
to me to be an industry standard.  As I gained experience I learned that
it was personal taste.  Now, of course, many feel it is a detriment to
the poster.

 

I'm happy with my collection but I must say that, over time, I've come
to question my decision to LB everything.  

 

Also, as I develop more wrinkles, I've come to appreciate more the
wrinkles in my old posters.

 

Regards

 

DBT

 <http://www.linkedin.com/in/douglasbtaylor> Profile

 

From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Richard Halegua Comic Art
Sent: Wednesday, September 02, 2009 4:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] the role of restoration in forgeries

 

my opinion on restoration & linenbacking: 

I only have a single poster in my collection that I paid to get
linenbacked and I will not get that many restored for myself 
there are posters I have which must be backed & restored for
conservation & display. 
But they have to have serious issues as I'm just as happy displaying a
poster with tears and small pieces out as I would be with a nmint poster
and I don't care if a poster shows folds. I'm all for originality. Some
posters cannot be owned that way 

I also know people who linenback every poster for their own collection
even if the poster was NM to begin with. I disagree with this position. 

I like originality, if it's messed up.. so what, it's messed up - but I
still love it. 

(note, I actually realize I have 3 posters that paid to have backed. two
are 3 sheets)



At 12:59 PM 9/2/2009, Anne Coco wrote:



I have been reading the discussion surrounding the recent revelations
about forgeries have been discussed and there is one point I would like
to make before this topic is sidelined as old news.  The
over-restoration of movie posters has contributed greatly to forgers'
ability to fake old paper.  Too much paint makes it difficult to
determine not only how much (if any) original paper actually exists but
it also plays into the hands of those with nefarious plans.  As I
understand it, the forgers not only distressed the paper that they used
but they also applied over-painting because this is a common practice
within the field of collectible movie paper.  I would advocate for movie
paper collectibles to instead be evaluated based on their original
condition not some ideal that can be created via the application of
over-painting.  
 
If anything good comes out of this, it would be (in my opinion) that
collectors would look at posters with fold creases and paper losses and
learn to love them just the way they are without paint to brighten the
colors and obscure the signs of use.  If the practice of over-painting
could magically disappear, it would be much easier to determine what is
and is not real.  Visible fold creases should be viewed as a clue that
the paper is truly what it claims to be while a lack of fold creases
should be a cause of concern for collectors.  If the fold creases,
background and borders have been over-painted, how can you be certain
that what you are buying is more paper than paint?  And I haven't even
touched on the problems of what happens to paint and paper when they
age.  It's not pretty, especially if the piece was exhibited under less
than ideal light conditions in a frame on a wall in your house for a
long period of time.
 
That said I completely understand that paper losses particularly in the
image area can detract greatly from the enjoyment of a poster.  In these
cases, those in the field of paper conservation would tell you that
whatever you do should be completely reversible serving only to trick
the eye at a distance but completely revealing itself upon close
inspection.
 
Whether you collect for personal enjoyment, as an investment or as part
of a larger institutional mandate, the posters we all hold are part of
our larger cultural heritage as well as assets to be protected.  Please
take my comments as an attempt to ask the field to re-evaluate current
practices and think about the long-term implications of
over-restoration.  The benefit will be increased transparency which will
make it more difficult for forgers to ply their trade and collections
that will continue to awe for generations to come.
 
 
Anne Coco
Graphic Arts Librarian
 
Search our catalog!
http://catalog.oscars.org
 
 

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