Media Conservator

Role

Cares for time-based, digital, interactive, or technology-dependent works so they can survive over time.

Description

A Media Conservator cares for time-based, digital, interactive, and technology-dependent works so they survive: not the records of the work, the work itself, still runnable, still showable, decades on.

An immersive work's true medium is often a stack of licenses and discontinued devices, and the conservator plans for the day each layer fails. The strategies come from museum conservation's hardest conversations: migrate the work to new technology, emulate its original environment, or reinterpret it for conditions its makers never imagined — and the artist's view of which changes are acceptable is itself something to be collected while it can be.

Discipline-Specific Description

Conservation asks a different question than archiving: not whether the material can be found, but whether the work can still be run — and what it is allowed to become in order to keep running.

Scope Note

May include condition assessment, preservation planning, migration and emulation projects, hardware stockpiling decisions, artist interviews on significant properties and acceptable change, and treatment documentation.

Boundary Note

The Media Conservator keeps works alive; the Archivist keeps records legible; the Collection Manager handles custody and logistics; the Installation Technician keeps today's show running. Conservation is the role that keeps next decade's show possible.

Collaboration Note

Confers with archivists, collection managers, curators, artists and their studios, technical directors who know how the build actually works, and external conservation specialists.

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