Descriptive Summary
Administrative History
Administrative Information
Related Materials
Scope and Content of Collection
Indexing Terms
Descriptive Summary
Title: Getty Conservation Institute Maya Initiative records
Date (inclusive): 1972-2016, undated
Number: IA30023
Creator/Collector:
Getty Conservation Institute. Field Projects Division
Physical Description:
33.11 Linear Feet
(22 boxes, 25 videocassettes, and 4 flat files)
Physical Description:
52.14 GB
(32,436 files)
Repository:
The Getty Research Institute
Institutional Records and Archives
1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 1100
Los Angeles 90049-1688
reference@getty.edu
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10020/askref
(310) 440-7390
Abstract: The Maya Initiative records date from 1972 to 2016, undated (bulk 1996-2016) and primarily document the Getty Conservation
Institute's collaborations with the Instituto Hondureño de Antropología e Historia (IHAH) of Honduras to develop a conservation
strategy for the Hieroglyphic Stairway at Copán and with the Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y el Arte (CONCULTURA) of El
Salvador to develop a site management plan for Joya de Cerén. The records are a mix of analog and digital files and cover
the initial planning meetings that led to the Maya Initiative, as well as the logistical planning, progress, findings, and
final outputs of the Copán and Joya de Cerén projects. There are also some files pertaining to the El Salvador Earthquake
Relief project, another collaboration with CONCULTURA under the Maya Initiative.
Language: Collection material is in Records are primarily in English and Spanish. A small portion is in French.
Administrative History
The Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) is an operating program of the J. Paul Getty Trust, a not-for-profit cultural and philanthropic
organization dedicated to the visual arts. Established in 1985, the GCI's mission is to advance conservation practice in the
visual arts, broadly interpreted to include objects, collections, architecture, and cultural heritage sites. Working internationally,
it serves the conservation community through scientific research, education and training, model field projects, and the broad
dissemination of the results of both its own work and the work of others in the field. In all its endeavors, the GCI focuses
on the creation and dissemination of knowledge that will benefit the professionals and organizations responsible for the conservation
of the world's cultural heritage.
Through field projects, the GCI works to advance conservation practice worldwide on a range of heritage places including buildings,
archaeological sites, and urban environments, and to address problems of regional or international relevance. The field projects
that the GCI develops and implements incorporate strong research, planning, and educational objectives. While field projects
vary in emphasis, complexity, and scope, all are multidisciplinary and involve working with local partners to build knowledge,
skills, and experience, and to ensure sustainability. Projects also adhere to a consistent methodology which includes documentation
and recording, diagnostic research and assessment, the development and testing of conservation treatments and strategies,
implementation, and, finally, dissemination and training. Field project teams consist of the GCI (and sometimes other Getty)
staff, representatives of partner organizations, and external consultants. Team members come from a variety of disciplines
and include archaeologists, conservators, curators, engineers, architects, art historians, biologists, geologists, chemists,
city planners, surveyors, museum administrators, and site managers.
The Maya Initiative (1999-2008) is a GCI field project that sought to establish a heritage management plan for the Maya region.
Initial discussions began with a meeting at the GCI in August 1997 with directors of national heritage conservation institutes
from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Belize. Representatives of the World Bank, the International Development
Bank, and the Mundo Maya organization were also present. The objectives of the Maya Initiative were to improve conservation
practice in the region and to foster collaboration among the countries of the area through development of methodologies to
address site management and conservation issues; transfer of knowledge to technicians and site managers; establishment of
reference documents and training; dissemination and promotion of the results; and support for the development of local, national,
and regional networks. After site visits and additional meetings held in Merida, Mexico (January 1998) and Antigua, Guatemala
(April 1998), projects at two UNESCO World Heritage sites were selected for collaboration: development of a site management
plan for earthen architecture at Joya de Cerén in El Salvador (1999-2002) and development of a conservation plan for the Hieroglyphic
Stairway in Copán in Honduras (1999-2005). The El Salvador Earthquake Relief project was later initiated under the Maya Initiative
in 2001.
Joya de Cerén, located to the northwest of the city of San Salvador, contains the well-preserved remains of a prehispanic
Maya farming village buried by a volcanic eruption in the sixth century CE. The GCI worked with the Consejo Nacional para
la Cultura y el Arte (CONCULTURA) of El Salvador to develop a management plan to address, through holistic measures, the complex
natural and social conditions related to the conservation of the archaeological site. With a focus on sustainability and developing
a model plan for other sites, working meetings were held with various interest groups to strengthen collaboration and to foster
a sense of ownership and, in turn, a greater commitment to the conservation of Joya de Cerén. A condition assessment was carried
out, which involved a detailed digital topographic survey of the site and architectural survey of each structure, environmental
monitoring, biological analysis, and research on the history of interventions and conditions of the structures at the time
of the site's excavation. The final management plan was completed in the summer of 2002 and presented publicly to local and
national authorities and stakeholders and to the vice president of El Salvador by the GCI and CONCULTURA. The process of creating
the management plan is detailed in the Getty publication,
Conservation Management Planning: Putting Theory into Practice: The Case of Joya de Cerén, El Salvador, published in 2008.
The other major collaboration under the Maya Initiative was the GCI's partnership with the Instituto Hondureño de Antropología
e Historia (IHAH) of Honduras to develop a long-term conservation strategy for the Hieroglyphic Stairway at the archaeological
site of Copán, located in western Honduras. Built in eighth century CE, the Stairway measures 10 meters wide by 24 meters
high and contains the longest Maya text carved on stone from ancient Mesoamerica. Its 63 steps are covered with over 1,000
intricately carved glyphs that recount the official history of Copán rulers. The Stairway was rediscovered and excavated in
the late 1890s and reconstructed 1937-1940. Over the years, the stone surfaces have deteriorated, impacting the readability
of the carved text. The project has thus focused on evaluating the conditions of the stones and identifying the causes and
mechanisms of decay. Work on the project included a complete stereophotographic survey, a detailed condition survey, scientific
analysis of stone and mortar samples and biological specimens from stone surfaces, environmental monitoring, and archival
research. The findings, as well as proposals for conservation treatment, preventive measures, and maintenance strategies,
were presented in a final project report,
The Hieroglyphic Stairway of Copán, Honduras: Study Results and Conservation Proposals. The report was officially presented in July 2007 to the Minister of Culture and the public in Tegucigalpa, the capital of
Honduras. Presentations were also held in San Pedro Sula and Copán Ruinas.
The El Salvador Earthquake Relief project (2001-2002) was a minor component of the Maya Initiative, initiated with CONCULTURA
after two major earthquakes hit the country in 2001. To provide professionals in El Salvador with the skills to stabilize
historic buildings after an earthquake, the GCI funded and organized a two-week training course in June 2001 on emergency
temporary shoring and rain protection, using the country's national monuments as practical examples. The buildings selected
were Iglesia del Carmen in Santa Tecla, Nuestra Señora del Pilar in San Vicente, and Casa de la Cultura in Izalco. Julio Vargas
and Daniel Torrealva, structural engineers from Peru, were contracted to design a temporary structural shoring system and
rain protection for the buildings and to lead the training course, while the coverings were constructed and installed by a
Salvadorian crew. Participants in the training program were selected by CONCULTURA.
Administrative Information
Restrictions on Access
Most of the records described in accessions 2013.IA.17, 2014.IA.41, 2015.IA.05, 2015.IA.11, 2016.IA.22, 2017.IA.42, 2017.IA.45,
and 2018.IA.23 are available for use by qualified researchers. Public access to contracts in 2015.IA.05 and 2017.IA.45 is
restricted.
Access copies of videocassettes must be created prior to use. To request access, fill out the
reference form with the videocassette title and finding aid number IA30023. Please note reformatting may take up to eight weeks.
The following types of records are permanently closed: records containing personal information, records that compromise security
or operations, legal communications, legal work product, and records related to donors. The J. Paul Getty Trust reserves the
right to restrict access to any records held by the Institutional Archives.
Restrictions on Use
Preferred Citation
Getty Conservation Institute Maya Initiative records, 1972-2016, undated (bulk 1996-2016). Institutional Records and Archives.
Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, IA30023.
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifaia30023
Immediate Source of Acquisition
The records described in this finding aid were transferred by the Getty Conservation Institute and form part of accessions
2013.IA.17, 2014.IA.41, 2015.IA.05, 2015.IA.11, 2016.IA.22, 2017.IA.42, 2017.IA.45, and 2018.IA.23.
Processing Information
Processing of the Maya Initiative records was completed by Lorain Wang in 2019.
Files were transferred off of CD-ROMs and Zip disks in the collection, and each set of files was assigned a unique identifier
by the archivist. Gaps in numbering are due to the deaccession of duplicate sets of files. With the exception of two disks,
the CDs and Zip disks were removed from the collection. Labels written on the media were transcribed in the container list
as titles.
The digital network files were maintained by multiple GCI staff members, which resulted in multiple filing schemes and duplicate
files throughout. To facilitate navigation of the network files, the archivist reorganized parts of the folder structure and
deleted duplicate folders. Not all duplicate files were deleted, however, to maintain context of files.
For all digital files, a virus scan was performed and no viruses were found. In addition, problematic characters were removed
or replaced in filenames due to system limitations of the Getty's digital preservation system. A log was created of the original
and new names.
Dates listed for digital content are primarily based on the last modified date.
For additional information regarding Institutional Archives' standard practices for processing digital files, contact records@getty.edu.
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Access to digital content in accessions 2013.IA.17, 2015.IA.05, 2016.IA.22, 2017.IA.42, and 2017.IA.45 is only available on-site.
2016.IA.22 is available on Getty networked computers and in the Special Collections Reading Room through the link provided
in the inventory. For all other accessions, specify the digital files you would like to view when submitting an appointment
request. Please note that we may not be able to provide access to all file formats due to lack of required software and/or
system specifications. For more information or to request access, contact
Library Reference at the Getty Research Institute.
Related Materials
The following materials are offered as additional sources of information on the people, programs, and subjects covered by
the records. The listing is not exhaustive.
Getty Conservation Institute:
Most of the original photos related to the project are held in the Getty Conservation Institute's Visual Resources Library.
Project publications available online:
http://www.getty.edu/conservation/our_projects/field_projects/maya/maya_publications.html
Scope and Content of Collection
The Maya Initiative records date from 1972 to 2016, undated (bulk 1996-2016) and primarily document the Getty Conservation
Institute's collaborations with the Instituto Hondureño de Antropología e Historia (IHAH) of Honduras to develop a conservation
strategy for the Hieroglyphic Stairway at Copán and with the Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y el Arte (CONCULTURA) of El
Salvador to develop a site management plan for Joya de Cerén. The files cover the initial planning meetings that led to the
Maya Initiative, as well as the logistical planning, progress, findings, and final outputs of the Copán and Joya de Cerén
projects. Materials are a mix of analog and digital files and include signed project agreements with the GCI's partners, consultant
contracts, project proposals and summaries, correspondence, budgets, meeting agenda and minutes, work plans, condition assessment
drawings, archival and bibliographic research, technical data, reports, photographs, videocassettes, and press releases and
articles about the initiative and the individual projects. The videocassettes consist of recordings of the first planning
meeting, site visits, and interviews. Additional records in the collection include a small number of files pertaining to the
El Salvador Earthquake Relief project, another collaboration with CONCULTURA. These materials include a copy of the signed
agreement, correspondence, photos, research on temporary shoring, and a project proposal and description. There are no materials
from the project's training course.
The digital materials in the collection consist of files copied from five Zip disks and 78 CD-ROMs and files maintained for
the project on the GCI's shared network drive. They include a mix of text, image, database, ArcView, and CAD formats.
Network files are listed only at the top folder levels while files from CDs are listed at the disc level. A complete listing
of files and folder names is available upon request.
Arrangement
Records are arranged in the following series: Series I. Administrative and general files, 1995-2015, undated; Series II. Copán,
1972-2015, undated (bulk 1996-2015); Series III. Joya de Cerén, 1996-2016, undated.
Indexing Terms
Subjects - Topics
Cultural property -- Protection
Cultural property -- Conservation and restoration
Earthquake engineering
Environmental monitoring
Subjects - Places
Copán Site (Honduras)
Ceren Site (El Salvador)
Genres and Forms of Material
Electronic documents
Digital images
Computer-aided designs (visual works)
Contracts
Correspondence
Technical reports
Condition surveys
Videotapes
Photographs
Site plans
Compact discs
Born digital
Electronic records (digital records)
Contributors
Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y el Arte (El Salvador)
Instituto Hondureño de Antropología e Historia
Getty Conservation Institute. Field Projects Division