Conservator


A conservator or conservator is the manager of an art collection or collection of other objects and data with artistic or scientific value. If there are multiple conservators attached to a collection, there may also be a main conservator. Conservator in a museum

In a large museum, the main conservator is the main responsible for organizing and building up the museum collection in cooperation with the scientific staff. For example, the collection may consist of works of art or other objects of cultural or scientific value. Increasingly, the cataloging of these objects is done using digital files.

In small museums, the conservator can actually take care of the conservation of the objects themselves. However, the conservator usually works with a team of more artisan specialized restaurators. In large museums, the restoration takes place under the supervision of the conservator or the "head" of the collections.

A museum's main conservator sets up the permanent exhibition and organizes trade shows. Temporary exhibitions can also be made by a guest conservator who is a specialist in the subject of the temporary exhibition. A conservator is expected to unlock the collection by documenting the collection, giving lectures and publishing scientific writings and public catalogs. A possible pre-school education is the art history course.

The term "conservator" is often used for the person who could be called the "museum director" as well. In addition to the 'artistic director', some museums have an 'economic director' which provides budget monitoring. Difference to the curator

An exhibitor's curator is the one who, often on a project basis, organizes an exhibition and takes on the artistic responsibility. The term is taken from English and is now synonymous with 'exhibition maker' in the exhibition world. The items that he or she shows can all come from retailers. Also see

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