Created 2006, updated 2019
Author: Cameron Trowbridge
The Conservation Collection is housed in the Getty Library. It represents an ongoing collaboration between the Getty Conservation Institute and the Getty Research Institute.
Within its general focus on the management, conservation, and protection of cultural property, the seven main areas of the Conservation Collection are:
- Movable cultural property
- Built heritage
- Archeological conservation
- Conservation science (including methods and technologies used in assessment and preservation)
- Materials and materials science
- Education and training methods
- Policy and management issues
The holdings of the Conservation Collection may be consulted at the Getty Center or borrowed through your Library's Interlibrary Loan Department.
How to Search
Begin searching the Conservation Collection by navigating to the
Library Catalog.
Once inside the Catalog, click on "Advanced Search" and enter your topic "contains" and "conservation collection" "is (exact)", as seen here:
For more information about how to search, please consult the
Guide to Searching the Conservation Collection (PDF, 193KB).
Scope of the Collection
The Conservation Collection, with its emphasis on conservation, management, and protection of cultural property, both movable (held by museums or libraries) and immovable (architecture, cultural heritage sites), complements the general and special collections of the Research Library that focus on the history of the visual arts, architecture, archaeology, and the humanities. Due to the interdisciplinary nature of conservation, the Conservation Collection includes research resources ranging from the pure and applied sciences, such as chemistry and materials science, to humanities-based disciplines, such as history and archaeology.
To read more about the nature of the Conservation Collection, consult the
Collection Development Policy for the Conservation Collection (PDF, 215KB, updated 2019).
Contact
For reference assistance in the use of the Conservation Collection, to recommend a specific title or to make a donation to the Conservation Collection,
contact the GCI Information Center.
Banner: Production of Sulfur (detail), Hans Rudolf Manuel Deutsch (Swiss, 1525–1571), 1556, woodcut and letterpress. From Georg Agricola,
De re metallica: Libri XII, 466. The Getty Research Institute,
84-B21868