Congratulations

The Trustees of the Textile Conservation Foundation (TCF) are delighted to learn of the news of Frances Lennard’s promotion, on August 1st 2016, from Senior Lecturer to Professor.

Frances joins just a tiny handful of professorial appointments within the conservation profession and is the first UK Professor of Textile Conservation. Her career path started as a postgraduate student at the Textile Conservation Centre (TCC) where she subsequently worked in the Conservation Services Section. Frances then worked as a freelance textile conservator in Somerset, in partnership with Fiona Hutton, returning to the TCC in 2001 where she took on the role of Programme Leader of the MA course until the TCC’s closure in 2009. In 2009 the TCC, renamed as the Centre for Textile Conservation (CTC), relocated to the University of Glasgow where Frances was appointed Senior Lecturer and Convenor of the MPhil Textile Conservation course.

A comprehensive list of Frances’ publications may be found at http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/cca/staff/franceslennard/, but two outstanding contributions to the literature of textile conservation are highlighted here:

Lennard, F. and Ewer, P., (Eds.) (2010) Textile Conservation: Advances in Practice. Series: Butterworth-Heinemann series in conservation and museology. Elsevier/Butterworth-Heinemann: Oxford. ISBN 9780750667906

and

Lennard, F. and Hayward, M., (Eds.) (2006) Tapestry Conservation: Principles and Practice. Series: Series in Conservation and Museology. Butterworth-Heinemann: Oxford. ISBN 9780750661843

Currently, Frances is the Principal Investigator of two major research projects:

Situating Pacific barkcloth production in time and place, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and a partnership between Glasgow University’s Hunterian Museum, the Royal Botanic Gardens Economic Botany Collection at Kew, and the Smithsonian Institution, reflected in the appointments of three project staff within the CTC – an historian, a conservator and a scientist.

From the Golden Age to the Digital Age: modelling and monitoring historic tapestries, funded by a Leverhulme Trust Research Grant and is a partnership with Glasgow Museums, Glasgow University’s Engineering Department and Historic Environment Scotland.

These two major projects amply demonstrate the strength of the Centre and its reputation since its relocation to the University of Glasgow, but there is more. Dr Anita Quye, Lecturer in Conservation Centre at CTC has been promoted to Senior

Lecturer and pilot phases of further research projects are underway, led by Frances and Anita, as well as other colleagues, which have already resulted in an increased number of research assistants and PhD students.

Underpinning Frances’ publication and research is delivery of the acclaimed two-year MPhil Textile Conservation course where she leads an energetic and committed team of teaching staff. Annual cohorts of eight post-graduate students are put through their professional paces and, upon graduating, add to the CTC’s exceptional internship and workplace track record.

Congratulations Professor Lennard!

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