Faculty & Staff
The Art Conservation Department’s administrative offices and the photograph conservation laboratory are located in Old College at the University’s Newark campus. Additional laboratories and studios utilized by the program are located in the Louise duPont Crowninshield Research Building at Winterthur Museum. This facility includes one of the country’s largest and best-equipped museum analytical laboratories and six state-of-the-art conservation studios. The University and Winterthur are approximately 15 miles apart.
Undergraduate students complete most of their course work at the University’s main campus but have the opportunity to intern with faculty at Winterthur Museum & Country Estate during their junior and senior years in the program.
Graduate students in our Master’s level program study with 18 conservators and conservation scientists (full-time and part-time faculty) representing a broad range of conservation disciplines and educational and training backgrounds in addition to faculty from many other departments and programs. Since our Master’s-level Program began in 1974, we have had a full-time staff of conservators and scientists employed by the University of Delaware and an agreement to use as needed up to fifteen conservators, scientists, and a conservation photographer employed by Winterthur. Our unique relationshiop with Winterthur allows us to modify the time needed from each conservator or conservation scientist annually, thereby allowing us to meet the specific needs of our graduate students. We also have adjunct arrangements with professors in other departments, conservators in nearby museums, and visiting instructors that lead courses and lecture annually in our Program.
Our faculty have consulted on and assisted with the preservation of Rembrandt’s Night Watch, Van Gogh’s Irises, Whistler’s Peacock Room, drafts of the Declaration of Independence, the decorative murals in the US Capitol and Radio City Music Hall, the largest known woven hanging in the world (from Ethiopia), and the channeled and deteriorated acetate-film negatives of the Dead Sea Scrolls taken at the time of their discovery. They have authored and presented many papers at international professional conferences focused on the preservation of cultural property and serve as elected officials on national and international boards.

