Unit 4 AoS 3 turns from students’ own practice to the professional context: galleries, museums, and other exhibition spaces where artworks are displayed and conserved for audiences. Students investigate how institutions manage the presentation, conservation and care of artworks during display — and apply this knowledge to their own practice.
When artworks are placed on display in an exhibition space, presentation decisions directly affect both the viewer’s experience and the artwork’s long-term preservation.
Lighting
One of the most significant considerations. Issues include:
- UV radiation: all light contains some UV, which causes photochemical degradation (fading, embrittlement, discolouration) in many materials. Solutions: UV-filtering glazing, UV-filtering laminates on light sources, fibre-optic lighting (no UV component)
- Illuminance levels: measured in lux. Light-sensitive works (watercolour, photographs, textile) require lower illuminance (50–150 lux); oil paintings and sculptures can tolerate higher levels (150–300 lux)
- Heat from light sources: incandescent and halogen sources generate heat that can damage works; LED sources are preferred
- Direction and colour temperature: affect how works are seen and the atmosphere created
Environmental conditions
- Relative humidity (RH): ideally maintained at 45–55% RH. High humidity encourages mould and mildew; low humidity causes desiccation, cracking and warping
- Temperature: ideally stable at 18–22°C. Fluctuations cause expansion and contraction damaging to composite materials (stretched canvas, panel paintings)
- Air quality: pollutants (sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides) cause chemical damage to many media; HEPA filtration systems reduce particulate contamination
- Vibration: from nearby traffic, HVAC systems or heavy foot traffic can loosen paint layers; particularly critical for fragile or old works
Security
- Physical barriers (rails, ropes) prevent accidental contact
- Motion sensors and alarms for high-value works
- Video surveillance
Barriers and access
- Perspex/acrylic barriers protect delicate surfaces while maintaining visibility
- Some works require direct physical access (interactive installation) — conservation protocols protect them differently
Even in ideal environmental conditions, works on display undergo gradual change. Conservation methods include:
REMEMBER: Conservation during display is primarily about preventing deterioration, not repairing it. The best conservation is preventive — maintaining the right environment and minimising risk.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA requires students to investigate the methods and considerations involved in displaying artworks in real galleries visited as part of their study. Observations made during gallery visits — of how works are lit, what barriers or environmental controls are in place — should be documented in the Visual Arts journal.
EXAM TIP: When asked about conservation methods used during display, discuss environmental controls (light, temperature, humidity), physical protection (barriers, mounts), and monitoring (condition reports). Be specific about why each method is used — the underlying conservation principle.