This Standard is about carrying out basic conservation of cultural heritage. This can apply in both day-to-day and emergency situations. This can be in the form of removing accretions or active agents that cause deteriorations, treating stains and so on. Cultural heritage can refer to objects that are on display or in storage or to historic buildings, structures, sites or settings.
It includes identifying cleaning needs, removing, reducing or neutralising unwanted materials, making basic repairs, identifying actions to minimise further deterioration and keeping records of treatments.
This standard is for anyone who is responsible for carrying out basic conservation of cultural heritage. They are likely to do this under the direction of a conservator.
Performance criteria
You must be able to:
assess cultural heritage on a regular basis to identify material that inhibits use or interpretation or has the potential to cause deterioration
clarify your findings and methods to resolve them with appropriate people
remove, reduce or neutralise potential and active agents of deterioration in ways that do not cause damage to cultural heritage
remove or reduce material that inhibits use or interpretation in ways that do not cause damage to cultural heritage
repair or strengthen damaged objects or components within the remit of your expertise, referring those which you cannot resolve to appropriate people
identify essential environmental requirements relevant for the cultural heritage with which you are working
identify action required to minimise further deterioration, bringing them to the attention of relevant people
assess the need for ongoing preventive or protective measures on a regular basis
make accurate and clear records of treatments in organisational systems
Knowledge and understanding
You need to know and understand:
your organisational and conservation treatment policies, practice and standards
organisational procedures for salvaging and protecting objects in the event of fire, flood or other emergency
the range of active agents that cause deterioration and how to remove, reduce or neutralise them
the range of routine conservation and emergency treatments relevant to the cultural heritage with which you are working and how to undertake them
why it is important to test cleaning methods for effectiveness before implementing them and how to do so
how to identify the need for preventive and protective measures after treatment
actions needed to prevent further deterioration of salvaged objects
how to access and use your organisation's recording procedures
appropriate environmental conditions for the cultural heritage with which you are working
conservation judgement and ethics appropriate to your role
how to recognise signs of damage and deterioration
who you report to and when you need to do so
the limitations of your expertise and when further advice is needed
Overview
This Standard is about carrying out basic conservation of cultural heritage. This can apply in both day-to-day and emergency situations. This can be in the form of removing accretions or active agents that cause deteriorations, treating stains and so on. Cultural heritage can refer to objects that are on display or in storage or to historic buildings, structures, sites or settings.
It includes identifying cleaning needs, removing, reducing or neutralising unwanted materials, making basic repairs, identifying actions to minimise further deterioration and keeping records of treatments.
This standard is for anyone who is responsible for carrying out basic conservation of cultural heritage. They are likely to do this under the direction of a conservator.
Performance criteria
You must be able to:
Knowledge and understanding
You need to know and understand: