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An
Interview with Pedro Barbáchano and Ana Beny, BARBACHANO & BENY Founders of a World-Class Paper Restoration Laboratory in a Spanish Mountain Village |
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Water is Better" "Restoration facility" is too amorphous a term for this fascinating combination of research laboratory, workshop, detective's office and clinic. "In fact," that's precisely what we are," says Pedro, "a clinic for sick papers." That explains the hospital-like atmosphere here, with everyone attired in white laboratory smocks; the compulsive cleanliness; Pedro's serious scientific discourse and reassuring bedside manner. His mission is clear and the medical analogy is complete: he and his team of experts diagnose paper illnesses, they carry out the necessary treatments and then follow up the patients' recovery. New
Standards for Restorers
Ironically, 14 years later Barbáchano & Beny does very little work for private clients and even less in Madrid. Most of their orders are from libraries, historical archives and museums from all over the world. "These days we basically only deal with really important works on paper or parchment," says Pedro, adding. "Do you see that book Ana is working on working on over there? It's a first edition, hand written by Christopher Columbus' son. Basically," says Pedro, "our installations, equipment and technical level are among the finest in the world. The only area in which we can't compete is price. Besides getting all of the hardest jobs, the ones other places reject, everything we touch is very expensive. All of this has to be reflected in our prices." Ana Beny is a younger woman, lively and professional, with clearly-expressed ideas and lots of character. I have come to talk with Pedro and Ana about fine-print conservation, a subject which they are eminently qualified to discuss. But, inevitably, in a place with so many interesting things going on, the conversation is far ranging. The
Paper Ghostbusters
So, what do you do? "Here's where the technology comes in," says Pedro, triumphantly. "You freeze everything." How do you freeze the contents of an entire archive? "It's complicated, but not so much as you might think. The last time it occurred we took all the books and manuscripts to an industrial freezing plant outside Zaragoza." What then? When you thaw them out they're going to be wet again, no? "Well, actually, no," says Pedro, "because we don't thaw them out till they're dry. That is to say, we submit them to a process of liophilization, in the same way that freeze-dried soups or fishfood are dried. Little by little, we place the frozen books, documents, prints, maps and manuscripts in a hyperbaric chamber, essentially the same apparatus which divers use to decompress. But instead of increasing the atmospheric pressure inside, we decrease it, creating a vacuum." What
happens then? The Key to Conservacion: Framing On the subject of print conservation Pedro is emphatic: "Fully 90% of the restoration work on paper is due to faulty framing, and that is the area where preventive measures can do the most good. The good news is that practically all deterioration of paper is quite easily preventable by taking a few fairly simple precautions," says Pedro. "The bad news is that almost nobody takes them, and the principal responsibility for this situation belongs to framing shops around the world. Due to the almost universal ignorance of framers, they are more apt to destroy works of art on paper than to conserve them." "The tragedy is that the conservation of works on paper is not even very complicated. There are no magic formulas," says Pedro, "just common sense. Merely by becoming acquainted with the natural enemies of paper--heat, humidity, light, acids, insects, bleaches-we are able to take effective preventive measures. The most common enemy of fine paper is wood, for its acid content, so framed prints should never be backed with wood. Even the wooden molding should be kept at a discreet distance from the paper. Naturally, all framing materials which come in contact with the paper should be Ph neutral, or slightly alkaline."
The
Finest Papers in History Given the almost universally low standards of framing and restoration services available to art collectors worldwide, the question of how to find reliable technicians for this work acquires tremendous importance. Pedro has some valuable suggestions. "A competent framer or restorer is essential," he says. "If you can find a person recommended by someone knowledgeable, so much the better. If not, it's a question of doing your homework. Read all you can on the subject, then go and discuss your concerns with your framer or restorer. If you don't get the right answers, keep looking until you do." Cures
Worse Than the Illnesses Many old-fashioned restorers will abuse the technique of dampening deformed papers, then submitting them to extreme pressures in a press," says Pedro. "This process eliminates all of the important textural qualities of a print or document. We're talking here about textures inherent in the paper itself, in the typography, the edges of the plate, not to mention any embossing which may be present. That is the first quality to be lost." Pedro Barbáchano is one of those exceptional people who make you feel enriched just by talking with him, and for a person interested in art conservation and recovery the rewards are multiplied. I dared to ask him very tentatively if he would be willing to share some of his specific technical knowledge regarding the all-important question of framing with World Printmakers. "I'd be delighted to do that," said Pedro. "It's just a question of finding the time. But, as it's a matter which I consider tremendously important, I'll give it priority." So,
with any luck, we'll be hearing from Pedro in the near future. |
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