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About The Met/ Conservation and Scientific Research/ Paper Conservation/ Meet the Staff

Meet the Staff

Headshot of Rachel Mustalish

Rachel Mustalish

Sherman Fairchild Conservator in Charge

Rachel Mustalish joined the department in 1998. She works on drawings and prints across the collection with specializations in European and American modernism, international contemporary art, and prints. Her work focuses on treatment, examination, and research of materials and techniques used by artists. She teaches and lectures internationally and is a fellow of both the American Institute for Conservation and International Institute for Conservation. She received her BA in art history and environmental science from Wesleyan University, a MA in the history of art and a certificate of advanced study in conservation from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and a PhD from the Courtauld Institute, University of London.

Selected Publications

“Paper, Patterns, and Play: Juan Gris’s Materials and Techniques.” In Cubism and the Trompe l’Oeil Tradition, by Emily Braun and Elizabeth Cowling, 69–85. New Haven: The Yale University Press, 2022.

“Capturing Modern Life: Cyril E. Power’s The Eight from Sketch to Print.” In Modern Times: British Prints, 1913-1939, by Jennifer Farrell, 69–81. New Haven: The Yale University Press, 2021.

“Drawings from the Metropolitan Museum of Art: a Microcosm of Gósol /Dibuixos del Metropolitan Museum of Art: un microcosmos de Gósol.” In Picasso: de ‘Paseses d’Andorra’ a ‘Demoiselles d’Avignon’: un viatge romànic, Boncompte Coll, Concepció, Rachel Mustalish, and Rebecca A. Rabinow. 2016.

Headshot of Marjorie Shelley

Marjorie Shelley

Senior Conservator

Marjorie Shelley (MA art history, Institute of Fine Arts; Certificate, degree, Conservation Center, NYU), oversees the conservation of drawings and prints from seventeen curatorial departments. A specialist in fifteenth through early twentieth century drawings and pastels, she frequently lectures and has written numerous publications on drawing materials and artists’ practices; among them, Rembrandt, Fragonard, Wright of Darby, Audubon, Delacroix, Degas, Van Gogh, Cezanne and Sargent. She is editor and chief author of The Met’s preservation manual, The Care and Handling of Art Objects; instituted an annual technical art history symposium on works on paper, and established a collection of historic artists’ materials.

Selected Publications

MetPublications: Selected publications by Marjorie Shelley 

The Care and Handling of Art Objects: Practices in The Metropolitan Museum of Art (2019 revised edition). New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2019.

“Delacroix drawings: Line and Color.” In A Devotion to Drawing, the Karen B. Cohen collection, edited by Ashely E. Dunn, 137–150. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2018.

 

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Yana van Dyke

Conservator

Yana van Dyke joined the Museum in 1999 after earning her MS in art conservation from The Winterthur/University of Delaware Program in Art Conservation. Specializing in the conservation of works of art on paper and parchment, Yana frequently liaisons with the departments of Medieval Art and the Cloisters, Asian Art, and Islamic Art. A recognized Professional Associate of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, a member of the International Council of Museums Committee for Conservation, and the Society of Winterthur Fellows, she is actively involved in both the U.S. and the international conservation community as an instructor, mentor, and author.

Selected Publications

“Sacred Leaves: The Conservation and Exhibition of Early Buddhist Manuscripts on Palm Leaves.” The Book and Paper Group Annual 28 (2009): 83-99. 

“Practical Applications of Protease Enzymes in Paper Conservation.” The Book and Paper Annual 23 (2004): 93-107.

MetMuseum Academia: Selected publications by Yana van Dyke

Headshot of Marina Ruiz-Molina

Marina Ruiz Molina

Conservator

Marina Ruiz Molina joined the Department of Paper Conservation in 2010. She trained as a paper conservator at the School for Conservation of Cultural Heritage in Madrid, Spain, and has since specialized in the research and treatment of three-dimensional, multi-layered works on paper. Marina works with drawings and prints from across departments, with emphasis on the collection of works on paper by the studios of Louis Comfort Tiffany. She also serves as liaison for collections in Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, South Asian, and Colonial Latin American.

Selected Publications

Ruiz Molina, M., Olson, C. Drawing, Photography, and the Design of Tiffany Studios’ Te Deum Laudamus Mosaic Triptych. Metropolitan Museum Journal 51, 2017.

Ruiz Molina, M. et al. What Lies Beneath a Tiffany Drawing? Retrieved from https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2017/secrets-of-louis-comfort-tiffany-process

Ruiz Molina, M. The Conservation of Tiffany Studio Drawings: Finding New Ways to Reconstruct Complex Paper Loss. The Book and Paper Group. Volume Thirty Three, 2014.

Headshot of Rebecca Capua

Rebecca Capua

Conservator

Rebecca Capua joined the staff of the Paper Conservation Department in 2009. She works with art on paper from across the Museum’s collection with a special focus on prints from the Department of Drawings and Prints and papyrus from the Department of Egyptian Art. Her primary research has explored that materials and techniques of artists working in the Japonisme style in the US and Europe, and the role of facsimiles in the Museum. She is a graduate of Barnard College and New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts – Conservation Center.

Selected Publications

Japonisme and Japanese works on paper: Cross-cultural influences and hybrid materials,” Adapt & Evolve 2015: East Asian Materials and Techniques in Western Conservation. Proceedings from the International Conference of the Icon Book & Paper Group, London 8–10 April 2015 (London, The Institute of Conservation: 2017), 28–42.

“The obscure history of a ubiquitous pigment: Phosphorescent lithopone and its appearance on drawings by John La Farge.” Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, Volume 53 Issue 2 (May, 2014), 75–88.

Facsimiles, Artworks, and Real Things.” Metropolitan Museum Journal, v. 56 (2021) 98-112.

Woman with dark blonde hair standing in the Astor Court

Josefine Elsa Werthmann

Associate Conservator

Josefine Werthmann joined the Department of Paper Conservation in August 2023 as Associate Conservator for the Tang Wing Project. Josefine is a graduate of the Stuttgart Academy of Art and Design in Germany and interned at the National Library of Russia, The Morgan Library & Museum and worked as a paper conservation fellow at the National Gallery in Washington DC. In her previous position as paper conservator at the Kunstmuseum Bern in Switzerland, Josefine worked on the collection of the Adolf Woelfli Foundation and the Meret Oppenheim collection. She was also involved in the art-technological analysis of the Gurlitt Collection in cooperation with the Provenance Research Team.

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Colleen Watkins

Assistant Conservator

Colleen Watkins joined the Paper Conservation Department in December 2022 as Assistant Paper Conservator for the Tang Wing Project. Colleen earned a BA in art history, studio art, and Spanish from the University of Minnesota, a MA in the history of art from the New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts, and MA and certificate of advanced study in art conservation from the Garman Art Conservation Program at SUNY Buffalo State College.

Woman with long dark hair standing in the Astor Court

Catriona Whiteside

Assistant Conservator

Catriona Whiteside joined the Met in September 2023 as an Assistant Conservator on the Tang Wing project. She is a paper conservator with experience in both Eastern and Western works of art on paper. She received her BA in art history and chemistry from the University of Arkansas and her MA in works of art on paper conservation from Northumbria University in 2018. Catriona has experience working around the world in various institutions including the National Museum of Asian Art in Washington DC, the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties in Tokyo, the British Museum in London, and a private conservation studio in Northern England.

Headshot of Laura Margaret Ramsey

Laura Margaret Ramsey

Associate Manager Conservation Documentation

L. M. Ramsey joined the Department of Paper Conservation in 2024. She manages the department’s image creation, post-processing and asset management efforts. This includes standard visible, raking and specular light imaging, infrared and ultraviolet radiation imaging, X-radiography, and photomicrography. She holds an MA in Film & Photographic Preservation and Collections Management from Toronto Metropolitan University, and a BDes in Photography from Alberta University of the Arts. Her past and continuing work underscores her commitment to the intersections of conservation, scientific documentation, and artistic expression.

Selected Publications

Ramsey, Laura Margaret, and Charlene Heath. “Mobilizing Materiality: The Role of Digitisation in the Preservation of and Access to Berenice Abbott’s Acetate Negatives.” Archiving Conference 18, no. 1 (June 18, 2021): 87–90. https://doi.org/10.2352/issn.2168-3204.2021.1.0.20.

Ramsey, Laura Margaret. “Phases of the Moon: A Study of 19th Century Scientific Book Illustrations, Providing a Comprehensive Catalogue for the First Three Editions of James Nasmyth & James Carpenter's the Moon: Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite”. Toronto Metropolitan University, January 1, 2014. https://doi.org/10.32920/ryerson.14668023.v2

Headshot of Martin Bansbach

Martin A. Bansbach

Senior Manager for Installation and Matting

Martin Bansbach’s primary task is the housing of all works from the seventeen curatorial collections that come through Paper Conservation including works on paper, parchment, and papyrus. Most housing consists of cutting acid-free rag-board mats to allow for safer handling and storage of exhibition and loan objects. Martin also frames and unframes works of art that are fragile or problematic, such as pastels, and constructs custom storage boxes and exhibition book cradles. Martin’s position requires a substantial and satisfying amount of interdepartmental interface, as well as cross-disciplinary collaboration.

Johnathan Lewis

Johnathan Lewis

Associate Administrator

Johnathan Lewis joined the Paper Conservation department in the Spring of 2022. Working closely with the team of conservators, he coordinates with almost every curatorial department at The Met to ensure artworks on paper are prepared in time for exhibitions and outgoing loans. He is responsible for the department’s operating budget and donor funds, as well as all administrative duties, including orchestrating annual departmental symposiums and assisting with preparations for all Visiting Committee events and communications. Johnathan grew up in Miami, Florida and has a BFA in photography from Massachusetts College of Art in Boston.