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.
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.
2002 New Media Preservation Network
2002-02 Seminar on Organic Materials

MICHALSKI, S. Conservation Lessons from Other Types of Museums and a Universal Database for Collection Preservation, 1999
GROENENBOOM, R. Installations and Interpretations, 1999

DE LEEUW, R. The Precarious Reconstruction of Installations, 1999

VAN DE VALL, R. Painful Decisions: Philosophical Considerations on a Decision-making Model, 1999

LAURENSON, P. The Conservation and Documentation of Video Art, 1999

DE JONGE, P. Man Ray, or the Eternal Theme of the Wink, 1999
