Haitian artists and cultural professionals have been conducting informal salvage operations for the past four months. But the Americans are bringing conservation expertise — there are few if any professionally trained art conservators in Haiti — and special equipment, much of it paid for by private money.
The initiative, in its swiftness, its close collaboration with a foreign government and its combination of private and government financing, represents a new model of American cultural diplomacy, one that organizers believe stands in stark contrast to the apathy Americans were accused of exhibiting during the looting of Iraqi artistic treasures in 2003.
Commentary on book and rare book, publishing, libraries, eBooks, technology, forgery, and museums.
The Paper Trail
![The Paper Trail](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg4GHslOqAep35IG5vR31WfJO3RELwN7evM9qkfDYNbhotWlAajlqE7cx5fn-Dw8qwGpmlPS0fJ7EjDPQIXSIpjeZ_e6G4G3mJwyuFIgHOJS0FTVUvBAVxy3KuytxppflB-xfpZ5_YlNTg/s660/BooksInaVise-CROP2-resize.jpg)
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Art Conservation Rescue in Haiti
he NY Times reports on efforts by conservators in Haiti, "Conservators Aid Art Rescue Effort in Haiti":
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