INCCA members are dedicated to developing, sharing and preserving knowledge needed for the conservation of modern and contemporary art. INCCA is a network of like-minded professionals connected to the conservation of modern and contemporary art.
KERSTEN-PAMPIGLIONE, N. Artist questionnaire format for works on paper, 2008
HUYS, F. A Methodology for the Communication with Artists, 2000
GAGNE, S. Artists’ Interviews: Art Conservation Program at Queen’s University, 2006
1999 Conference Mortality Immortality? The Legacy of 20th-Century Art
2001-12 Symposium Barnett Newman
2001-05 Symposium Modern Art in the Laboratory
2001-09 Conference Conservation of Contemporary Art - Creation, Curation, Collection and Conservation
2002-10 Symposium Surface Cleaning, Materials and Methods
2002-10 Conference Virtual Systems and MultiMedia
What is the cost of membership?
INCCA loosely defines modern art as artistic works from the late 19th century though the 1960s. Modern art is often experimental and frequently abstract. Contemporary art is considered to have begun in the 1960s, as artists challenged the concerns of modern artists and questioned the definition of art itself. Given the complex nature of artistic movements during this period, INCCA adopts broad definitions of these terms and relies on its members to decide what, for instance, qualifies as appropriate art for its Database.