GoGreen Project

The EU-Funded GoGreen project promotes preventive and remedial conservation practices based on green principles to spearhead the green revolution within conservation.

Overview

Heritage conservation preserves the tangible remains of society, but relies on toxic, unsustainable materials and on energy-consuming air conditioning of collections. The EU-Funded GoGreen project promotes preventive and remedial conservation practices based on green principles to spearhead the green revolution within conservation. The Conservation Department at The Courtauld will contribute to the development of preventive conservation for easel and wall paintings, the application and assessment of cleaning methods for easel paintings, and the development of teaching modules.

GoGreen: Developing sustainable strategies for conservation of cultural heritage Consortium meets in Amsterdam to kick-off four-year European project. Photo: GoGreen | HIMS.

Primary Aims

The GoGreen Project will:

  • develop new damage functions that allow more flexible environmental control in collections, thus improving energy efficiency.
  • generate innovative nature-inspired, bio-based and historical conservation treatment-inspired methods for remedial conservation, including new cleaning solutions for paintings using green solvents, bio-inspired reagents, green delivery systems.
  • assess our new materials and methods using cutting-edge analytical techniques and benchmark methods in collaboration with expert practitioners and museums, to determine their efficacy in the cleaning of painting
  • develop a digital web-app to aid conservators in the design of green preventive and remedial conservation treatments, and a decision model integrating green thinking in complex conservation decision making.
GoGreen aims, amongst others, to develop innovative cleaning solutions that employ green solvents and bio-inspired reagents. Photo: Rijksmuseum | HIMS.

Crucially, GoGreen encompasses all relevant and necessary academic and socio-economic actors spanning the full stakeholder value chain to ensure future impact. The embedding of bottom-up education of professionals through modules and courses for conservation training programmes, emerging conservators, and mid-career professionals, guarantees the next generation of conservators are fully prepared to embrace the GreenDeal.

 

Coordinated by: Prof Katrien Keune, Rijskmuseum Amsterdam and University of Amsterdam

Faculty

Citations