The Cleveland Museum of Art welcomes applications for the museum’s inaugural Eric and Jane Nord Conservation Scientist. This new role offers the opportunity to establish a groundbreaking conservation science program dedicated to the care, research, and interpretation of one of the world’s most significant museum collections. As the Museum’s first Eric and Jane Nord Conservation Scientist, the successful candidate is responsible for developing and leading the Museum’s conservation science program and establishing scientific research priorities focused on the CMA’s collection in collaboration with conservation and curatorial colleagues. Duties include the technical analysis of artworks, the testing of conservation materials, and offering guidance and technical support to conservators to facilitate their treatment and preservation approach. The conservation scientist oversees the administration, budgeting, and all activities in the analytical lab, and is responsible for hiring and managing the Eric and Jane Nord Post-Doctoral Conservation Science Fellow, interns, and contractors in that area. They collaborate with colleagues and departments across the Museum, including Curatorial, Technical Imaging, Facilities, Collections Management, Public and Academic Engagement, Exhibitions, Design, Philanthropy, Security, Operations, and more. They must meet critical deadlines in support of conservation treatments, exhibitions, acquisitions, loans, publications, capital projects and other major Museum activities. The conservation scientist plays a key role in helping the museum move towards more sustainable practices. This new position has been generously endowed by the Eric and Jane Nord Family Fund which includes funding for a full-time conservation scientist position, a post-doctoral conservation science fellow (which will be hired by the scientist in forthcoming years), and analytical lab operating support. The incoming scientist will be expected to purchase, operate, and maintain new scientific equipment utilizing substantial recent additional gifts. The department already has a partially equipped 1,000 square foot analytical laboratory that resides within the Eric T. and Jane Baker Nord Conservation Suite, an 18,000 square foot integrated facility with five conservation labs (Asian paintings, Objects, Paper, Paintings, and Textiles), a technical imaging studio with multimodal capabilities, including an Apollo infrared camera, a library, administrative offices, and two preparatory spaces for frames and paper. The analytical lab is already functioning with the following equipment: an FTIR equipped with a Continuum microscope and Fisher Thermo Scientific iS50 bench with an iS50 Raman module and iS50 diamond sampling station; Bruker 5i XRF Spectrometer; Bruker M6 Jetstream micro-XRF scanner; Struers LaboPol-20/LaboForce-50 Polishing Grinder; Zeiss Axio Imager M2m fluorescent microscope and Zeiss AxioSkop-2 MOT fluorescent microscope. Additionally, the department has an X-radiography facility with 100kV and 360kV tubes, utilizing a Carestream digital scanner for digital X-ray imaging. About the Conservation Department The successful candidate will join a convivial, generous, and skilled conservation department consisting of ten conservators, three technicians, and a lab coordinator, along with numerous interns (pre-program to graduate) and fellows. The Conservation team is committed to the mentorship and support of emerging conservators, and regularly hosts pre-program conservation interns, graduate interns, and post-graduate fellows with the support of substantial endowment funds; the Eric and Jane Nord Family Fund includes a dedicated conservation science post-doctoral fellowship. The conservation team is an active part of the public program and engages regularly with the museum’s visitors and donors. The department also has access to the significant resources of the Cleveland Museum of Art, including a dedicated conservation technical imaging specialist and an outstanding library and archive, which is one of the largest in the nation, prioritizes collecting conservation literature, and supports a dedicated research librarian who assists with conservation-specific queries. For more information about the department please visit: https://www.clevelandart.org/conservation About the Museum and Its Collection The Cleveland Museum of Art is renowned for the quality and breadth of its collection, which includes more than 68,000 objects and spans 6,000 years of achievement in the arts. A major renovation and expansion project completed in 2014 has transformed the museum into a significant international forum for exhibitions, scholarship, performing arts, and art education. One of the top comprehensive art museums in the nation and free of charge to all, the Cleveland Museum of Art is located in the University Circle neighborhood. The city and surrounding areas contain excellent cultural institutions, outdoor parks, and schools. Cleveland has a robust art and culture scene, including one of the world’s finest symphonies. Local resources and collaborators include the Cleveland Clinic and ICA-Art Conservation, which is the nation’s oldest regional lab, along with Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) with its innovative maker space, think[box] and scientific centers including the Swagelok Center for Surface Analysis of Materials (SCSAM) and the Materials for Opto/Electronics Research and Education (MORE) Center. For more information on the museum’s strategic plan, please visit https://www.clevelandart.org/for-the-benefit-of-all-the-people-forever
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Mid Level
Education Level
Ph.D. or professional degree