The Williamstown Art Conservation Center (WACC) is a nonprofit regional conservation facility devoted to the preservation and conservation of cultural and historical materials.
Located on the campus of the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, in a building designed by Japanese architect Tadao Ando, WACC treats a full range of artworks and artifacts, from paintings, works on paper, sculpture and furniture to antiques, heirlooms and archeological objects. The Center serves museums, libraries, historical societies and archives, as well as corporations, independent art professionals and private collectors. WACC offers state-of-the-art scientific analysis, and can serve institutions as a consultant and partner on all aspects of collections care.
The Williamstown Art Conservation Center offers preservation conservation and restoration for a broad range of cultural and historical materials. These include:
*Paintings in all media on canvas, wood, glass and metal, as well as murals, frescoes and other works which, for reasons of fragility, construction or size, must be treated in situ;
*Prints, drawings, pastels, watercolors, posters, maps, documents and photographs, including non-Western art such as Asian woodblock prints, scrolls and folding screens;
*Varnished, painted and gilded wood, upholstered furniture, picture frames and architectural interiors;
*Fine art sculpture, outdoor monuments, and archaeological, ethnographic, decorative and historic objects made of organic and inorganic materials such as ceramics, glass, stone, plaster, metal, ivory, wood, feathers, leather, fur and rawhide;
In addition to conservation treatments and analysis, WACC also partners with clients on all aspects of preservation outreach, including facility assessments, collection surveys and consultation advice on preventive conservation and collections-management priorities.
Tags: Art Restoration