| Contact:
Jeff Morgan, GHF
press@globalheritagefund.org
(650) 325 7520
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Passing:
GHF Advisory Board Member Martin Weaver
|
Martin
Weaver 1938 - 2004 |
GHF is very saddened to announce the
recent death at the age of 66 of Martin Weaver, a
leading international figure in the scientific conservation
of buildings and their constituent materials.
From 1991 until last year, when illness
made him reduce his extraordinary level of activity,
he was Director of the Center for Preservation Research
and a professor of historic preservation at Columbia
University, New York. Simultaneously, he ran an international
conservation consultancy practice based in Ottawa,
Canada. Both as teacher and as consultant, he had
a remarkable international experience of conservation
and an unusual breadth of interest and expertise,
from timber and stone deterioration through industrial
locomotives and installations to Danish and Spanish
fortifications in the Caribbean.
Originally from London, where he received
in 1961 the Diploma of the Architectural Association,
he had his first field experiences as a site architect
on British excavation projects in the UK and Middle
East. His interest in methods of site preservation
was pioneering at that period. Moving to Canada to
work on the preservation of an Arctic explorers hut,
he remained resident there while lecturing and consulting
internationally for UNESCO and numerous government
organizations, institutes and universities.
He contributed to ICCROM's work as a
participant in the Seminar on the Safeguard of the
Rock-Hewn Gvreme Valley Churches in Turkey in 1993,
and as a lecturer on the 2002 International Course
on the Technology of Wood Conservation, co-organized
with the cultural heritage authorities of Norway.
His deep knowledge of the deterioration and conservation
of timber will remain one of Martins enduring contributions
to conservation, as will his standard text Conserving
Buildings: A Guide to Techniques and Materials"
(Wiley, 1992; 2nd ed., 1997). He was a former President
of the Association for Preservation Technology and
a member of both US/ICOMOS and ICOMOS Canada.
To all those who studied or worked
with him, Martin Weaver will be remembered for the
infectious enthusiasm and energy which he brought
to his work, the generosity with which he gave advice
and help, and the extraordinarily broad range of his
interests in conservation. His contribution to the
field will be long-lasting. [ICCROM]
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