WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
Philip Klausmeyer is a highly experienced conservation scientist and paintings conservator with a career spanning over two decades. Currently, Philip serves as a Conservation Scientist and Paintings Conservator at the Worcester Art Museum, holding various titles including Andrew W. Mellon Conservation Scientist and Associate Paintings Conservator, and previously as Assistant Paintings Conservator and Samuel H. Kress Paintings Conservation Fellow. In addition to this role, Philip contributes as an Associate Editor for IIC - Studies in Conservation and as a non-faculty researcher at Worcester Polytechnic Institute since 2010. Earlier experience includes a position as Assistant Paintings Conservator at Harvard University Art Museums and an internship in paintings conservation at the Museum of American Art at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Philip holds a PhD in Art Conservation Science from Clark University and advanced degrees in Art Conservation and dual bachelor's degrees in Art History and Studio Art from the University of Delaware and University of Massachusetts Amherst, respectively.
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WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
Worcester Art Museum's mission is to connect people, communities, and cultures through the experience of art. WAM actively pursues this mission by sharing and caring for its distinguished encyclopedic collection, and through special exhibitions and events, innovative programming, university and community partnerships, and art classes and workshops.