George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery

In the years following George Scharf’s appointment to the National Portrait Gallery in 1857, he had to face up to the conservation requirements of a growing collection. Before the expansion of museum collections in Victorian Britain, picture restoration had been a matter of satisfying the demands of...

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Main Author: Jacob Simon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Art History, University of Birmingham 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Art Historiography
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2018/05/simon.pdf
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spelling doaj-8ecbabb43ae24e2fb0b85a74ddcab6122020-11-24T20:47:24ZengDepartment of Art History, University of BirminghamJournal of Art Historiography2042-47522018-06-011818JS1George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait GalleryJacob Simon0National Portrait Gallery, LondonIn the years following George Scharf’s appointment to the National Portrait Gallery in 1857, he had to face up to the conservation requirements of a growing collection. Before the expansion of museum collections in Victorian Britain, picture restoration had been a matter of satisfying the demands of private owners. But museums and galleries were in the public gaze and faced wider scrutiny, witness the picture cleaning controversies at the National Gallery. In supervising conservation work, museum professionals, often artists by training, had various audiences to satisfy: the visiting public, their museum peers, their trustees and the government. Scharf’s methodical approach to documentation makes his progress easy to follow. This paper identifies the nature of his learning curve, the process of both seeking and providing external advice, and the extent of his trustees’ interest.https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2018/05/simon.pdfGeorge ScharfNational Portrait Gallery Londonmuseum professionalsconservationpicture restorersnetworks of expertiseNational Gallery London
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacob Simon
spellingShingle Jacob Simon
George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
Journal of Art Historiography
George Scharf
National Portrait Gallery London
museum professionals
conservation
picture restorers
networks of expertise
National Gallery London
author_facet Jacob Simon
author_sort Jacob Simon
title George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
title_short George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
title_full George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
title_fullStr George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
title_full_unstemmed George Scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the National Portrait Gallery
title_sort george scharf and improving collection care and restoration at the national portrait gallery
publisher Department of Art History, University of Birmingham
series Journal of Art Historiography
issn 2042-4752
publishDate 2018-06-01
description In the years following George Scharf’s appointment to the National Portrait Gallery in 1857, he had to face up to the conservation requirements of a growing collection. Before the expansion of museum collections in Victorian Britain, picture restoration had been a matter of satisfying the demands of private owners. But museums and galleries were in the public gaze and faced wider scrutiny, witness the picture cleaning controversies at the National Gallery. In supervising conservation work, museum professionals, often artists by training, had various audiences to satisfy: the visiting public, their museum peers, their trustees and the government. Scharf’s methodical approach to documentation makes his progress easy to follow. This paper identifies the nature of his learning curve, the process of both seeking and providing external advice, and the extent of his trustees’ interest.
topic George Scharf
National Portrait Gallery London
museum professionals
conservation
picture restorers
networks of expertise
National Gallery London
url https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2018/05/simon.pdf
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