Time-Based Media Conservation Team

Nora Kennedy
Kennedy joined The Met in 1990 as the first Photograph Conservator. In 2015, the Department of Photograph Conservation was established under Kennedy's leadership as the Sherman Fairchild Conservator of Photographs. In 2025, the Department takes on new life as the Department of Photograph and Time-Based Media Conservation. In addition to exhibition, loan, and acquisition responsibilities, Kennedy continues to advocate for education, scholarship, preventive conservation, and outreach. Kennedy teaches at NYU's Institute of Fine Arts Conservation Center and lectures and conducts workshops internationally. Kennedy received her BFA from York University, her MS degree in conservation from the University of Delaware, and an honorary doctorate from the Academy of Fine Art and Design, Slovakia.
Norris, Debbie Hess, Nora W. Kennedy, and Bertrand Lavédrine, eds. Conservation of Photographs: Significance, Use and Care. Abingdon and New York: Routledge, 2025.
Kramer, Lia, Alexandra Nichols, Mollie Anderson, Nora Kennedy, Lorena Ramírez López, and Glenn Wharton. “Institutional Assessments and Collection Surveys for Time-Based Media Conservation.” In Conservation of Time-Based Media Art, edited by D. Engel and J. Phillips, 39–66. 1st ed. London: Routledge, 2022.
Kennedy, Nora W., and Silvia Centeno. “Research and Practice: Using Scientific Investigation to Inform Daguerreotype Care.” The Daguerreian Society Quarterly 26, no. 2 (2014): 8–10.
Norris, Debbie Hess, Nora W. Kennedy, and Bertrand Lavédrine. “Photograph Conservation Globally: Educational Needs, Milestones, and Challenges.” In ICOM-CC 17th Triennial Conference Preprints, Melbourne, 15–19 September 2014, edited by J. Bridgland, art. 1405, 1–9. Paris: International Council of Museums, 2014.

Jonathan Farbowitz
Jonathan Farbowitz joined The Met in 2019. As a Conservator in the Department of Photograph and Time-Based Media Conservation, he cares for the film, video, audio, 35mm slide, and software-based artworks in the collection. Jonathan has established a time-based media conservation lab at The Met and helped improve acquisition, documentation, and storage practices for media artworks. From 2016–2019 he was a Fellow in the Conservation of Computer-Based Art at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, where he was part of the restoration process for the museum's three web artworks. Jonathan has led courses and lectured internationally on conservation and digital preservation topics. He holds an MA in Moving Archiving and Preservation from New York University and a BA in Film from Vassar College.
Colloton, Eddy, Jonathan Farbowitz, and Caroline Gil Rodríguez. “Disk Imaging as a Backup Tool for Digital Objects.” In Conservation of Time-Based Media Art, edited by D. Engel and J. Phillips, 204–22. 1st ed. London: Routledge, 2022.
Colloton, Eddy, Jonathan Farbowitz, Flaminia Fortunato, and Caroline Gil. “Towards Best Practices in Disk Imaging: A Cross-Institutional Approach.” The Electronic Media Review 6 (2019–2020).
Farbowitz, Jonathan. “Archiving Computer-Based Artworks.” The Electronic Media Review 5 (2017–2018).

Tess Hamilton
Tess Hamilton joined the Met in 2024 as an Assistant Conservator. She is focused on the preservation of contemporary art encompassing both photographs and time-based media. From 2022–2024 she was the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation Fellow of Photograph Conservation at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum where she conducted research and characterization of nearly 200 Robert Mapplethorpe prints. She received an MS in the Conservation of Art and Historic Artifacts and an MA in the History of Art and Archaeology from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts in 2022. She received a BA in Art and in English from Yale University in 2017.
Hamilton, Tess, Jeffrey Warda, and Cynthia Yue. “A Characterization of Robert Mapplethorpe Prints at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.” Presented at Darkroom to Data: New Methods for Exploring the Material History of Photography, New Haven, CT, August 12, 2024.
Hamilton, Tess, Natasha Kung, and Felice Robles. “International Collaboration and the Potential of Virtual Condition Surveys – The Conservation Assessment of a Collection of Linnaeus Trip Photographs at the University of Yangon Central Library, Myanmar.” Presented at AIC/SPNHC 49th Virtual Annual Meeting, May 10–June 24, 2021.

sasha arden
sasha arden joined The Met in 2025 as Associate Conservator of Time-Based Media. After working with several arts institutions in audiovisual roles, they earned an MS in the Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works specializing in Time-based Media, and an MA in the History of Art and Archaeology from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts. Sasha completed internships with the Museum of Modern Art and Tate, and a fellowship at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. The are the Managing Editor of the Electronic Media Review for the American Institute of Conservation. Their own research includes light-based art and immersive media such as VR and AR. Sasha will be working over the course of the year on the Tang Wing project, and Museum-wide ongoing time-based media conservation.
arden, sasha. “Augmenting Our Approach to Preservation: Documentation of Experience for Immersive Media.” Tate, June 2022.
---. “Guided by the Light: Rethinking Approaches to the Assessment of Light-Based Artworks.” Contemporary Art Review 2 (2022).
---. “The Potential of Augmented Reality (AR) in the Virtual Performance of Time-Based Media Art.” Electronic Media Review 6 (2019).

Jenny Hsu
Jenny Hsu joined the Department in 2024 as an Andrew W. Mellon Fellow in Time-Based Media. Jenny is a recent graduate of New York University’s Moving Image Archiving and Preservation (MIAP) program, where she developed her passion for time-based media conservation. While there, she completed internships at La MaMa E.T.C., Video Data Bank, and NYU Libraries Barbara Goldsmith Preservation and Conservation Department. She was also a Graduate Archival Assistant in NYU’s Cinema Studies Department. Jenny’s master’s thesis, entitled Beyond Bytes and Beats: The Preservation of Digital Live Performance Art, explores the challenges of preserving audiovisual live performances that feature live-coding and analog or digital technology to generate and modify both music and visuals in real-time.