
Grand Hall tour
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Conservation and Restoration |
The pole Gambalch is the most extensive restoration of a totem
pole ever undertaken to preserve the cultural heritage of the West
Coast. The Museum had three of the seven sections of the original
pole. The middle two sections were badly deteriorated when the Museum
acquired them. The normal response to a deteriorated pole has been
to re-carve the whole pole. The Museum decided, however, to preserve
as much of the original as possible. The remaining four sections had
been lost and had to be recarved.
Restoration
Conservation
The conservation of the three original sections was undertaken by a team from the Museum's Conservation and Technical Services Division, consisting of James Hay, Conservator; Ghislain Bérubé, Conservator; Charles Hett, Contract Conservator; and Denis Gauthier, Cabinet Maker. After careful examination and testing it was determined that the sculpture's interiors were voids, structurally, and would require internal bracing to support the weight of the new replacement pieces.
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The sculpted face was sawn off of the back to expose the interior, and all rotten interior material was removed. New pieces of western red cedar were sawn and custom-fitted to the irregular void, then glued in place with epoxy. Surfaces on the right side of the pole that had been lost to rot were similarly filled with new wood, and sculpted to mirror original features. The new sections were carefully cut to align with old sections; alignment was secured with dowels and new surfaces were shaved in line to match the old. Next, new wood was textured to simulate the old wood and, finally, coloured to match. The last step was to design and build the enormous metal mount, or "strongback", and attach all the sections of the pole to it.
