Skip to main content Skip to navigation

James Crawford

Professional background

Conservation & restoration of cultural heritage materials

My research interests come from training and employment in the preservation of archaeological and historic artefacts – these have been located in art galleries, museums, cathedrals or still submerged underwater on ancient shipwrecks.

Human-made artefacts are often collectively called cultural heritage materials. They help form our understanding of what it is to be human. They testify our past, which made the societies and built environments we live in today.

 broochb150px.jpg

broocha150px.jpg

A 1000+ year old metal, glass and stone brooch with textile pseudomorph: before and after treatment (images courtesy of employment at IRRAP-Conservare)

Cultural heritage materials support significant heritage tourism economies in the United Kingdom and the wider European Union.

united_kingdom_heritage_economy.jpg

Sandie Dawe, Chief Executive of VisitBritain in “Valuing heritage tourism” (Investing in success Heritage and the UK tourism economy. Heritage Lottery Fund, March 2010).

International cultural heritage conservation organisations