Dear Mr. I'lltradeyoufiveofmyporchcatsforyouronebigone : Drawings and photographic prints are really two very different things when it comes to conservation customs, unless you are speaking of prints where the deckle edge of the media itself needs to look like a humidity-prone paper, as is the case with certain pt/pd prints on watercolor papers, and now some "giclee" work. And it isn't just AA that drymounted silver prints - it's just about everyone for several generations. The drymounting holds the print flat. It also tends to chemically isolate it from the background. The proper board can be discussed elsewhere, but every competent pro framer knows these things, or should. Many painters did not. And Rob - anyone who can't figure out how to keep a mat sandwich dry and clean over the long haul isn't even on first base yet. If THAT is going to get inevitably contaminated, being typically four-ply thick, what the heck do you think is going to
happen to a bare print under the same display conditions? A curly warped fiber print will want to stick to the glazing, right where is doesn't
belong. Bugs (corrodentia) might get behind it to eat the hinge glue, blah blah. Changing the board every five years means 1) you must be
rich, 2) the print is going to get a lot of unnecessary handling, 3) unless the print is small, it's going to look sloppy on display. There is no
need to change the mounting board unless you let a slob handle your work. That can happen. That's exactly why I turned down a couple of
galleries after I asked to examined their back room first. Expensive galleries aren't immune from hiring monkeys; but it isn't a very smart
way of staying in business. And museum staff are typically well trained to handle their collection appropriately. Then there's yet another aspect to this: if I as an artist choose to present my work in a particular manner, that's part of my compositional strategy. I want such and
such print border, such and such a specific shade of white on the board and overmat. That's not for someone else to decide, anymore than
it's for them to decide how much toning one of my images needs. Has this fact ever been a hindrance to something being potentially collectible. Never. Nor have I ever met another photographer who encountered this kind of problem. But I really really do my homework.
Although mounting silver gelatin prints has a widely accepted path via drymounting, I have done test after test on mounting color images,
displaying them in all kinds of abusive environments, you name it. Expensive and time consuming; and I've even kept a few of the failures
as examples of what can go wrong. Believe me, not all the facts are in Wilhelm, by any means. But drymounting has a long proven track
record. It just has to be done competently.