Sheldon Waugh Keck (May 30, 1910 - June 12, 1993) and Caroline Martin Kohn Keck (October 6, 1908 - December 17, 2007) were American paintings conservators. Married in 1933, they contributed to the development of techniques in the conservation and restoration of paintings during the 20th century.
Sheldon Waugh Keck was born on May 30, 1910, in Utica, NY, son of Fred R. and Myra Waugh Keck. Keck received his initial education and training in the arts at Harvard University (1932), receiving a BA in art history. He was a student of Paul J. Sachs, and served a year-long apprenticeship as an art conservator at the Fogg Art Museum, under the supervision of innovative painting restorer R. Arcadius Lyon. [1]
Caroline Martin Kohn Keck was born on October 6, 1908, in New York, daughter of Albert and Laura Underhill Kohn. She graduated from Vassar College in 1930 with a degree in History, [2] continuing at Radcliffe College with a Master’s Degree in art history. She began work on a doctorate at the University of Berlin in 1934, but was forced to return to the US after the Nazi party took control of the German government. [3]
The couple met in 1933 in Cambridge, Massachusetts when they both were students in the "Methods and Processes in the Fine Arts" art materials course, taught at the Fogg Art Museum (today part of the Harvard Art Museums) by its director Edward Forbes. They married on October 31, 1933.
In 1934, Sheldon was appointed the first paintings restorer for the staff at the Brooklyn Museum, New York (1934). [3] In April 1935, the Brooklyn Museum Quarterly published Sheldon's report detailing his first completed treatment at the Museum, the beginning of a lengthy series of publications and lectures sharing techniques in art conservation. [1] Sheldon Keck was apparently among the first in the US to use medical x-ray technology in the examination, conservation analysis and authentication of paintings, employing a Metalix portable device - the first of its kind - manufactured by Philips. [4]
By 1943, US President Franklin Roosevelt had created the second of two Roberts Commissions, in this case with the specific charge to collaborate with the War Department in the protection of cultural treasures impacted by the war in Europe. Activities conducted under the Commission included documentation of damage to cultural property and its appropriation by the Axis Powers, was well as the restitution of these treasures. Sheldon Keck had enlisted in the U.S. Army that July. His experience in art restoration (and his relationship with Paul Sachs, by then director of the Fogg Museum and a member of the Commission), lead to Keck being selected for service with the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives program (MFAA). Keck's deployment overseas was delayed until 1945, when he was sent to work under the U.S. Ninth Army in the area around Aachen, Germany. Keck accompanied others in the MFAA in surveys of the region's cities, towns, churches, etc., occasionally entering the combat zone. Later, Keck was assigned to the MFAA's Central Collecting Point in Marburg, where he examined seized Nazi documents for evidence of further looting throughout north Central Europe. Ultimately, Keck was instrumental in the restitution of works belonging to some of Europe's most prominent private collections. [5]
Once Sheldon returned from Europe, he and Caroline became firmly established as conservators, serving some of the most prominent collections and museums. Perhaps most prominent among these projects was repair and conservation analysis of Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon , which had been damaged while on exhibit at New York's Museum of Modern Art in 1948. [5] [6] [7]
Caroline Keck graduated from Vassar College in 1930 with a degree in History, [2] continuing at Radcliffe College with a Master’s Degree in art history. She began work on a doctorate at the University of Berlin in 1934, but was forced to return to the US once the Nazi party had taken control of the German government. [3]
Caroline maintained the functions of the Brooklyn Museum's restoration lab during Sheldon's deployment to Europe. In 1944, Caroline restored the Charles Wilson Peale's 1776 portrait of General George Washington. [8]
Between them, the Kecks were prolific authors of works on art conservation, art security and cultural resources practices. During the 1960s and 1970s, Caroline published six different volumes she produced on these topics.
Caroline served as President of the FAIC from 1981 to 1985. [9] With Caroline's support and advice, in 1990 the University of Delaware's art conservation department began offering doctoral degrees, [9] the first program of its kind in the US, which by 2005 had evolved into a PhD program in Preservation Studies (PSP).
Through the years, the Kecks were known for their contrasting personalities: Sheldon quiet and contemplative, Caroline rather boisterous and at times combative. Caroline was regarded as quite assertive when it came to standards and practice in conservation, and late in her career had a fairly prominent dispute with art historian John Richardson. [10] [11] The dispute centered on restorative treatments of Cubist works, efforts which some artists (Picasso, in particular) apparently opposed. Based on MoMA records, the Kecks were involved in an application of varnish to Les Demoiselles d'Avignon .
Caroline Keck's more notable clients included American portraitist and representational painter Edwin Dickinson, the collection of Nelson A. Rockefeller, and Georgia O'Keeffe. Keck and O'Keeffe met in 1946, and from that point Caroline served as personal conservator for the artist for almost 40 years. [12] While O'Keeffe's techniques tended to be closely guarded by the artist, her correspondence with Caroline Keck reveals in considerable detail the methods and materials O'Keeffe employed. [13] Conversely, conservation projects where Caroline treated O'Keeffe works serve to reveal the impacts that time, materials selection and handling had on the artist's pieces. [14] [15]
The Kecks were considered to be pioneers in the scientific approach to the conservation of paintings and art works in general. For centuries, art restoration had emphasized repair and replacement for works that had experienced losses and other damage, with the purpose of renewing the appearance of a work; an approach that unfortunately often resulted in significantly - and even irreparably - altering a piece.
The Kecks helped bring professional standards to the practice, emphasizing the sharing of technique and methodologies over the maintenance of trade secrets. They also stressed thorough documentation of the procedures applied to each work, with the intent that any changes made could be understood and readily reversed. From 1934 to 1961, the Kecks operated a laboratory and studio in the State Street neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, becoming involved in the training of numerous conservators and consulting for many of the nation's most prominent art museums. [3] [9]
Over the decades, the Kecks' approach to the methods and skills of conservation was featured in exhibitions, including:
In addition, an exhibition of American-owned French artworks - coordinated and curated by Sheldon Keck - entitled "De David à Toulouse-Lautrec", opened at the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris in 1955. [17]
In 1950, the Kecks became charter "Fellows" of the International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (IIC), an organization founded by George L. Stout, Harold Plenderleith, Wallace Akers, Paul Coremans and others. Sheldon served for two terms as president of the organization - from 1974 to 1980 - and chaired a panel of conservators from the IIC's American Group in developing the first code of ethics for the field of conservation. [5]
In 1960, Sheldon and Caroline Keck founded the Conservation Center at the New York University Institute of Fine Arts, often cited as "the oldest graduate degree-granting conservation program in the world". A collaborator on the project was Craig Hugh Smyth, one of Sheldon's colleagues from the MFAA and at that time University Institute's Director. Sheldon Keck served as director of the Conservation Center until 1965.
Under the auspices of UNESCO in 1969 the Kecks established the Latin American Center for Conservation of Cultural property in Mexico City, [3] a formal training program for Mexican art conservators as well as international participants. [18]
In 1970 the Kecks established a successor program to the Center they created at the Institute of Fine Arts, this time in Cooperstown, NY. In affiliation with the State University of New York at Oneonta and the New York State Historical Association, the program became known as the Cooperstown Graduate Program in the Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. [19] In 1983, this program was transferred to Buffalo State University in Buffalo, NY. [20]
Continuing their support for advanced education in art conservation, the Kecks helped found yet another graduate program, this time a collaboration between the University of Delaware and the Winterthur museum. Presently known by the anagram "WUDPAC", the program began in 1974. [9]
In 1993, the Keck Award [3] was initiated by the American Institute for Conservation (AIC), presented annually to individuals demonstrating a "sustained record of excellence in the education and training of conservation professionals".
In 1987, using the money from the sale of a Georgia O’Keeffe painting from their personal collection, the Kecks set up a fund for the Foundation of the American Institute for Conservation (FAIC), the earnings from which support the operations, conservation education, research, and outreach activities of the FAIC and AIC [3]
Sheldon Keck died on June 12, 1993 in Cooperstown, NY. Caroline Keck died on December 17, 2007, also in Cooperstown. [21] Together, they left their library and archives to the Univ. of Delaware/Winterthur program, and to the University's Paul Coremans Endowment Fund in Art Conservation. [9] [22]
Their descendants included two sons: Lawrence Waugh Keck and Albert Keck. Following his undergraduate degree, Albert worked for a number of years as an art conservator. He eventually became a special education teacher in Boston, MA and ultimately returned to Cooperstown in 1990 to care for his ailing parents. [23]
Sheldon Keck
jointly:
dedications:
The conservation and restoration of cultural property focuses on protection and care of cultural property, including artworks, architecture, archaeology, and museum collections. Conservation activities include preventive conservation, examination, documentation, research, treatment, and education. This field is closely allied with conservation science, curators and registrars.
Georgia Totto O'Keeffe was an American modernist painter and draftswoman whose career spanned seven decades and whose work remained largely independent of major art movements. Called the "Mother of American modernism", O'Keeffe gained international recognition for her meticulous paintings of natural forms, particularly flowers and desert-inspired landscapes, which were often drawn from and related to places and environments in which she lived.
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon is a large oil painting created in 1907 by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso. Part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, it portrays five nude female prostitutes in a brothel on Carrer d'Avinyó, a street in Barcelona, Spain. The figures are confrontational and not conventionally feminine, being rendered with angular and disjointed body shapes, some to a menacing degree. The far left figure exhibits facial features and dress of Egyptian or southern Asian style. The two adjacent figures are in an Iberian style of Picasso's Spain, while the two on the right have African mask-like features. Picasso said the ethnic primitivism evoked in these masks moved him to "liberate an utterly original artistic style of compelling, even savage force” leading him to add a shamanistic aspect to his project.
The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum is dedicated to the artistic legacy of Georgia O'Keeffe, her life, American modernism, and public engagement. It opened on July 17, 1997, eleven years after the artist's death. It comprises multiple sites in two locations: Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Abiquiu, New Mexico. In addition to the founding Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, the O'Keeffe includes: the Library and Archive within its research center at the historic A.M. Bergere house; the Education Annex for youth and public programming; Georgia O'Keeffe's historic Abiquiu Home and Studio; the O'Keeffe Welcome Center in Abiquiu; and Museum Stores in both Santa Fe and Abiquiu. Georgia O'Keeffe's additional home at the Ghost Ranch property is also part of the O'Keeffe Museum's assets, but is not open to the public.
Le bonheur de vivre is a painting by Henri Matisse. Along with Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Le bonheur de vivre is regarded as one of the pillars of early modernism. The monumental canvas was first exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants of 1906, where its cadmium colors and spatial distortions caused a public expression of protest and outrage.
A conservator-restorer is a professional responsible for the preservation of artistic and cultural artifacts, also known as cultural heritage. Conservators possess the expertise to preserve cultural heritage in a way that retains the integrity of the object, building or site, including its historical significance, context and aesthetic or visual aspects. This kind of preservation is done by analyzing and assessing the condition of cultural property, understanding processes and evidence of deterioration, planning collections care or site management strategies that prevent damage, carrying out conservation treatments, and conducting research. A conservator's job is to ensure that the objects in a museum's collection are kept in the best possible condition, as well as to serve the museum's mission to bring art before the public.
The International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works (IIC) is a global organisation for conservation and restoration professionals with over two thousand members in over fifty countries. IIC seeks to promote the knowledge, methods and working standards needed to protect and preserve historic and artistic works throughout the world.
Fritz Georg Arndt was a German chemist recognised for his contributions to synthetic methodology, who together with Bernd Eistert discovered the Arndt-Eistert synthesis.
George Leslie Stout was an American art conservation specialist and museum director who founded the first laboratory in the United States to study art conservation, as well as the first journal on the subject of art conservation. During World War II, he was a member of the U.S. Army unit devoted to recovering art, the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives section (MFAA), a.k.a. "The Monuments Men."
A paintings conservator is an individual responsible for protecting cultural heritage in the form of painted works of art. These individuals are most often under the employ of museums, conservation centers, or other cultural institutions. They oversee the physical care of collections, and are trained in chemistry and practical application of techniques for repairing and restoring paintings.
A conservation technician is a specialist in conservation methods pertaining to cultural property, and who may work in museums or public or private conservation organizations. A technician may also work in conjunction with other collection staff, such as a registrar (museum) or collection manager.
The Association of North American Graduate Programs in the Conservation of Cultural Property, better known by its acronym ANAGPIC, is an annual student conference held by the North American conservation graduate programs. The conference sees students present lectures of the highest caliber, sharing their research, leadership, and training with peers and faculty.
An Objects conservator is a professional, working in a museum setting or private practice, that specializes in the conservation of three-dimensional works. They undergo specialized education, training, and experience that allows them to formulate and implement preventive strategies and invasive treatment protocols to preserve cultural property for the future. Objects conservators typically specialize in one type of material or class of cultural property, including metals, archaeological artifacts, ethnographic artifacts, glass, and ceramic art. Objects conservation presents many challenges due to their three-dimensional form and composite nature.
A conservation scientist is a museum professional who works in the field of conservation science and whose focus is on the research of cultural heritage through scientific inquiry. Conservation scientists conduct applied scientific research and techniques to determine the material, chemical, and technical aspects of cultural heritage. The technical information conservation scientists gather is then used by conservator and curators to decide the most suitable conservation treatments for the examined object and/or adds to our knowledge about the object by providing answers about the material composition, fabrication, authenticity, and previous restoration treatments.
A photograph conservator is a professional who examines, documents, researches, and treats photographs, including documenting the structure and condition of art works through written and photographic records, monitoring conditions of works in storage and exhibition and transit environments. This person also performs all aspects of the treatment of photographs and related artworks with adherence to the professional Code of Ethics.
The conservation and restoration of wooden furniture is an activity dedicated to the preservation and protection of wooden furniture objects of historical and personal value. When applied to cultural heritage this activity is generally undertaken by a conservator-restorer. Furniture conservation and restoration can be divided into two general areas: structure and finish. Structure generally relates to wood and can be divided into solid, joined, and veneered wood. The finish of furniture can be painted or transparent.
A textile conservator is a conservator-restorer charged with the care, treatment, research, and preservation of textiles. Issues addressed by a textile conservator are generally related to the field of textile preservation, and include damage caused to textiles by: light, mold and mildew, insects, cleaning, surface cleaning, washing, mounting for display, and storage. Variations in textile types and "the diversity of the textile conservator's work makes it a very rewarding profession". Textiles are among the most fragile artifacts, as they are susceptible to damage from atmospheric pollutants, moisture, biological organisms, and environmental changes and care varies with size, shape, material, and condition issues, all of which a textile conservator must be well versed.
The conservation and restoration of performance art is the process of documenting, collecting, and prolonging the life of Performance Art. Performance Art often features a live presentation initially documented by an artist, cultural institution, or host location. This genre of art can take place in a wide range of mediums, and is usually based on four core elements: Time, Space, the Performer's body, and the relationship between viewers and performer. These variables determine how it can be collected and conserved within museums or cultural institutions.