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Saturday, January 22, 2011
“Conserving
Textiles in the Topkapi Palace Collection,
with Paul Hepworth, IstanbuL “Buy Art. Pass it On.” with Kate Fitz Gibbon, Santa Fe Special Guests of Honor Maryclaire Ramsey, Director and Bruce P. Baganz President, Board of Trustees The Textile Museum “Conserving Textiles in the Topkapi Palace Collection, and in Our Own Collections”
with Paul Hepworth, Istanbul, Turkey
During conservation treatment, the
study of a group of textiles in the Topkapi Palace Collection for the
Istanbul ICOC (International Conference on Oriental Carpets) brought many
insights into how they have been cared for and repaired in the past, as well
as their current needs. Special focus on a series of chatmas
(Ottoman cushion covers) and wrapping covers that had never been exhibited
or published before revealed a use of patchwork techniques of extraordinary
sophistication. Examination of these techniques and the fabrics used in the
creation of these cloths allow for better understanding and interpretation
of the artistic and material culture in which they were produced. As the
conservation issues addressed in such museum treatments are the same as
those faced by private collectors, a practical approach to treatment and
storage can also be applied to the textiles we acquire and live with in our
homes, including considerations about how conservation can affect, both
positively or negatively, the value of these rugs and textiles. "Buy Art. Pass It On." with Kate Fitz Gibbon, Santa Fe A lecture covering the many personal and public reasons you should be collecting textiles and other ethnographic and tribal art, how collectors passing art on is key to a vital artistic life in America as well as tax advantageous, how textile collecting owes everything to hippies and hashish, though it is ending with corporate collections...and answers to all your questions on patrimony issues and where we go from here. With amusing photographs. Kate Fitz Gibbon is a practicing attorney in Santa Fe, specializing in art and cultural heritage law, trusts, and estate planning. She was a member of the Cultural Property Advisory Committee to Presidents Clinton and Bush and editor of Who Owns the Past? Cultural Property, Cultural Policy and the Law, Rutgers University Press, 2005. She is an expert on Central Asian textiles and their cultural context, and has written or co-written seven books on Asian textiles, including “IKAT: The Guido Goldman Collection,” which won the prestigious Wittenborn Prize for the Best Art Book of the Year. Kate was also a founding member of the Textile Museum Associates of Southern California, and a past Program Chairman and Past President of TMA/SC. |
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