|
Dateline: April 17,
2003
Vault
doors will soon shine again
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
vault doors in the Donley County Courthouse are beginning to shine with
new life as a Dallas conservator works to remove more than a century of
dirt and grime from their surfaces.
Michael
van Enter discussed his work on the doors with county officials, project
architect Chris Hutson, Texas Historical Commission representative Lyman
Labry, and Phoenix I project manager Stephen Dodge during a construction
conference last Thursday.
Van
Enter and his crew have been working to remove coal soot residue and dirt
to reveal hidden colors in the artwork on the doors. Original paint will
be touched up only minimally. They are also bringing out colored bands
along the top of the vault doorframes that may have been added in the
1930s based on the type of paint.
“You’re
really lucky somebody in the 1930s didn’t decide to put an Art Deco
design over these doors,” van Enter said.
The
doors were manufactured in Cincinnati, Ohio, by the Mosler & Bahmann
Company and carry an order date of January 1883. They were apparently then
kept in storage until sold for use in the local courthouse in 1890.
Artwork
on the doors was likely done by indentured servants, van Enter said. Three
of the doors depict landscape scenes, but a fourth door stands out for its
sailboat scene, which van Enter says is in the Impressionist style and was
very advanced for the time period.
“They
must have had at least one artist that was more in tune with what was
happening in Europe at the time,” he said. “A Polish or Czech painter
was probably responsible for some of the work. Three of the doors were
definitely done by the same hand.”
Trim
work on the doors is painted with gold and bronze dust covered by shellac.
Decorative elements on the backsides of the doors are made with ground
glass covered by shellac, which gives a luminescent quality to the
accents.
Van
Enter’s team first vacuums the dust from the door, washes them with an
alkalizing solution, then a neutralizing solution. A solvent wash is then
used, followed by another round of alkalizing and neutralizing.
One
door in the office formerly used by the county ag agent was badly stained
at some point when someone sprayed an ammonia-based cleanser on it. A
cocktail of chemicals, which included some strong alcohols, was used by
van Enter to lift the stain and reveal the beautiful artwork hidden
beneath.
The
conservation work on the vault doors is part of the overall restoration of
the 1890 building, which county officials say is coming along at a brisk
pace. Scaffolding around the exterior of the building is expected to come
down some time next week.
For
more project information, go to www.ClarendonOnline.com and click on the
courthouse icon.
|