The Huffington Post recently posted an interview with Albert Albano, executive director of the Cleveland-based Intermuseum Conservation Association (ICA), the nation's oldest non-profit regional art conservation center. Founded in 1952 by the directors of six Midwestern museums, the ICA "protects, preserves and enriches the shared heritage of art and material culture through conservation, advocacy and education."
The ICA has one of the largest climate-controlled fine art storage facilities in the Midwest, a resource made available to artists, collectors, and institutions. "Why, because the single most important issue for cultural material [art] is a stable environment -- 24/7 in all seasons," Albano is quoted as saying.
The other main mission of the ICA is education. AMIEN, which stands for art materials information education network, is one of the ICA's premier education programs. The site, which has up to 20,000 users per month, provides artists with information about materials that are used for art.
Albano states that his strongest commitment is to the community. "Fundamentally, every object alters in one way or another over time and that alteration can sometimes substantially change the audiences' ability to understand the artist or fabricator's original intent. It is critical to understand the true intent, and only through the engagement of conservation/preservation expertise can that happen properly and therefore make that story the most comprehensible."
Examine the whole work here.