Reversibility grew as one of the key ethical codes of early
conservation and has acted as an aspirational notion in conservation
treatment. However the term is frequently
used without clarity and like much of conservation methodology it is largely
context-dependent. The two comparative case
studies demonstrate how reversibility can only be an appropriate notion in
certain treatment methods and in most cases unattainable, due to material
structure that can limit the removal of treatments and contextual information.
UK Museum Theft
-
in the early hours of Tuesday 7 May, Ely Museum was broken into. Thieves
stole the East Cambridgeshire gold torc and a gold bracelet, both dating
from...
4 hours ago
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