Lewis Conservation Services, LLC

Lewis Conservation Services, LLC Lewis Conservation Services provides painting conservation and restoration services based in mid-coast Maine.

I have had an interesting time of it since I helped identify this N. C. Wyeth painting that had been missing for 80 year...
09/10/2023

I have had an interesting time of it since I helped identify this N. C. Wyeth painting that had been missing for 80 years! I never thought I'd be interviewed by the Boston Globe, the Washington Post and NPR in the same week. NYT article still to be published...

An art conservator helped authenticate a Wyeth painting that a woman bought at a thrift store in New Hampshire. It’s expected to sell for as much as $250,000.

05/29/2020

Historical wood panel paintings with developed craquelure patterns – networks of fine cracks in the paint– are significantly less vulnerable to environmental variations than previously assumed, according to a study in the open access journal Heritage Science. - HeritageDaily - Archaeology News

04/24/2019
This video has been all over social media lately, even being reposted by George Takei, my Facebook posting hero. It appe...
11/17/2017

This video has been all over social media lately, even being reposted by George Takei, my Facebook posting hero. It appears to be an "amazing" restoration, but it has caused an uproar in art conservation circles. Yes, gels can be used to great result in cleaning a painting, but it is the technique employed here that gives conservators feelings of despair and panic. Please read this article for the other side of the story!

A viral video of a painting restoration has horrified experts in the field, who say it completely misrepresents how the process proceeds.

11/08/2017

A small grasshopper embedded for more than a century in the thick paint of Vincent van Gogh�s Olive Trees was discovered as part of research for

As the flood waters recede and people return to what remains of their possessions, many difficult decisions need to be m...
09/03/2017

As the flood waters recede and people return to what remains of their possessions, many difficult decisions need to be made and challenges will need to be addressed. While the first impulse would probably be to contact professionals to deal with your artwork, books, photographs and other keepsakes, local conservators will likely be overwhelmed with the amount that needs to be done. Perhaps next you would turn to the internet, but I would encourage caution when reading advice on how to deal with your priceless possessions. There is much information on the web that might actually cause further damage. Where, then, should you turn for advice? I am attaching some articles, links, and practical advice that I hope will be helpful in your salvage efforts.

Take care of yourself first. Mold growth and toxins in the flood waters risk your health, so please use safety gear (gloves, respirator, etc). This cannot be stressed enough.

Link to keeping yourself safe after a flood:
https://www.cdc.gov/disasters/hurricanes/cleanup-home.html

The most important first aid that can be given to flood damaged items is to remove any water and to dry them. Lay things flat, preferably on a moisture-wicking surface like blotter paper or even on a platform made of screening, so that air can reach top and bottom of the item. Use fans to move the air, but make sure there is no loose paint that might be lifted by air movement. The goal is slow, even drying. Don't use hairdryers. Don't try to flatten photographs before they are dry as the surfaces will be easily damaged when wet. Keep paintings on stretchers if possible so they dry with even tension.

Once the items are dry they can be reviewed by a conservator for further treatment.

Link to the National Heritage Responders, a group of conservators trained to deal with disasters:
https://www.conservation-us.org/emergencies/national-heritage-responders #.WawvbMiGPIU

Link to article in Museum of Modern Art blog on dealing with contemporary paintings damaged in flood:
https://www.moma.org/explore/inside_out/2012/11/09/dealing-with-wet-contemporary-paintings-tips-for-artists-water-damage-to-paintings/

Stay safe and please share with anyone that could use this information!

06/27/2017

Armed with cotton swabs, strong solvents and a lot of training, conservators are entrusted with restoring priceless works of art. At the National Gallery of Art we learn that varnish is enemy No. 1.

04/10/2017

Have you ever wondered where different pigments originally came from? Did you know that rocks, crushed insects, and even elephant dung were used to create ea...

06/28/2016
05/24/2016

Slowly but surely.

Address

Winter Street
Rockland, ME
04841

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