Exciting work continues here at the Study as our conservators, Brian Fick and Mary Yeager from Acanthus Arts in Indianapolis, uncover and restore more incredible decorative paint inside the historic building's dome.
Brian is spending his day 30 feet in the air, uncovering layer by layer of paint to get to the original design, described by Ella Kostanzer in 1900 as the "implements of war." So far, he's uncovered a beautiful musical motif in the corner, featuring a drum flanked by skin-covered mallets, with a fife and sheets of music behind, accented with laurel leaves. We believe there might be musical scenes in each of the corners, with more military-themed decoration along the sides of the dome. Here's a progression of the work so far:
We'll continue to update as the restoration progresses. Many thanks to the Montgomery County Community Foundation for providing the funds for this fascinating project!
Friday, June 3, 2011
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Ella Was Right
Ella Kostanzer visited the General's Study around 1900, and described, among other things, a scene on the domed ceiling that contained "implements of war". Because she is the only one to recount this detail, staff and visitors alike have long hoped she was right but didn't want to rely on her testimony too heavily. Today, a pair of paint conservators arrived on the scene to attempt to expose some of that original design.Sure enough, there appear to be shields and laurel leaves in a design that incorporates not only the shades of green found in the paint analysis, but also rust colors and silvery grays as well. This is part of a 3-foot-wide path the conservators plan to expose from the skylight to the tops of the bookcases. What a wonderful discovery!
Saturday, May 28, 2011
LEW WALLACE ACADEMY ANNOUNCES OPEN ENROLLMENT
| 2010 Youth Academy students learn what it was like to undergo surgery on the Civil War battlefield. |
Crawfordsville, Indiana, May 25, 2011—Amanda Wesselmann, Associate Director of the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum and Coordinator of the Lew Wallace Youth Academy, announced today that enrollment into the weeklong day camp, held this year from July 5-9, is now open to the public. In 2008, the General Lew Wallace Study and Museum won the National Medal for Museum and Library Service, the highest honor this country gives to museums, largely because of the impact the Academy made on the Montgomery County community.
The Academy, which is in its seventh year after six tremendously successful seasons, has already enrolled exceptional middle school-aged students from schools and home school organizations from throughout Montgomery County , and only a few positions remain. The Academy promotes in its students the qualities of leadership, character and lifelong learning that General Lew Wallace embodied throughout his life. This year, Academy students will investigate new disciplines related to the Wallace legacy: in the day dedicated to “The Food That Lew Knew”, participants will meet a local sheep farmer and her livestock, and discuss the processing of food from farm to table, complete with sampling the types of cuisine Lew Wallace tasted. They will also prepare wool for felting and spinning, and create their own project to take home.
“We chose our wide variety of subjects not to have one specialty for everyone, but to illustrate that each student can excel in many things,” said Wesselmann. “Our diverse faculty has designed hands-on group activities that will build on students’ interests, and pique new ones.”
| 2010 Youth Academy students excel in African drumming. |
Applicants for the Academy must be entering 6th through 8th grade or equivalent and able to attend the entire camp from July 5-9, 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Parents are responsible for arranging transportation to and from the Academy. The cost to the family is only $25 per child. Scholarship opportunities are available for families experiencing financial hardship; contact the Museum to make arrangements.
This program is made possible through our generous sponsors, including Tipmont REMC, Union Township Board of Trustees, Sugar Creek Kiwanis, Character Counts, American Legion Byron Cox Post 72, Clements Plumbing, INFBPW/Crawfordsville, Montgomery County Retired Teachers Association, Psi Iota Xi - Gamma Xi Chapter, Teachers Credit Union, Brian Keim, and Roberta Berry.
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Overheard at International Museum Day 4

This is from a Crawfordsville native:
"The Study was very much a part of my youth as my family lived just a few blocks away on Wabash Avenue, I went to school at Wilson from kindergarten through the middle of fourth grade, my Scout Troop met in the Carriage House during some of my early years, and when I was still living in Crawfordsville and preparing to walk in the Indianapolis Mini-Marathon in 2004 and 2005 walking around the blocks near the Study was a regular part of my early-morning training route. So I have fond memories of time spent in the Study and on the grounds during my youth and part of my adult life."
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Overheard at International Museum Day 3

From a previous volunteer:
"I remember that spot up there looked a little shaky back then. There was damage from the leaks, and the plaster around the skylight would flake off."
Thankfully, the Study Restoration Project seems to have fixed that issue!
Overheard at International Museum Day 2

Overheard from a young visitor:
"I remember the bright orange carpet. And that there used to be a lot more stuff in here."
Hang on, Josie. Just a few more weeks and then we plan to move artifacts back into the Study! (The carpet's gone for good, though.)
Overheard at International Museum Day
Today the Museum is participating in International Museum Day with free admission. The theme is Museums and REmembrance, and our visitors are talking up a storm about what they remember from their previous visits! This was overheard from a former teacher during a tour:"Didn't there used to be a picture of a lady whose eyes followed you? I remember that. All the kids remembered that from their field trips." [The Turkish Princess by C.F. Mueller, hanging in the center of the photo]
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