Volunteers Complete Restoration of Historic Mural

Volunteers Complete Restoration of Historic Mural

A group of 12 CVSR volunteers have completed the restoration of a historic mural in the 1940’s Saint Lucie Sound Lounge Car. The restoration of the 1946 mural has taken 1,494 volunteer hours to complete over the course of more than two years.

The mural was discovered in 2014 after maintenance workers began stripping away carpet on the bar of the St. Lucie Sound Lounge Car during a complete restoration. The vibrant piece of artwork painted onto linoleum depicts daily life of a group of Seminole Indians. CVSR made the decision to restore the mural to its original state, thus making restoration of the St. Lucie Sound Lounge Car complete. It was found that the mural was original to the car when it was first built in 1946. After being fully stripped of the carpet covering, much of the mural remained; however, layers of glue damaged the piece.

CVSR volunteer Carol Schroeder was tasked to lead the mural restoration and assemble a group of volunteers to assist in the work. Schroeder recruited 11 volunteers and connected with Andrea Chevalier, Senior Paintings Conservator of Intermuseum Conservation Association (ICA) in 2016 to evaluate the piece. After researching and planning, Chevalier assisted the group of 12 volunteers in restoring the mural. In January 2017, Chevalier began training sessions to show the volunteers how to use tools to safely remove layers of glue from the artwork and restoration work officially began on January 26, 2017.

Restored Mural

“Upon examination, it quickly became apparent that any chemical means would damage the mural, so they had to manually scrape it,” said Chevalier. “I was very impressed with the group of volunteers. They were very careful; they did a great job. They were meticulous in scraping off the glue and being careful not to damage the surface”.

“It was a labor-intensive project,” Schroeder said. “Each volunteer could only work a couple of hours at a time.” The group of volunteers spent 1,494 hours combined removing glue from the linoleum. Kathy Eitel, one of the volunteers working on the restoration, named the volunteer group the “Scrappy Scrapers,” and it stuck.

In 2018, the last of the glue was removed from the mural. Volunteer, Regis Schilling, was recruited for his expertise in restoring art works and to complete a part of the mural that was damaged during restoration. In early 2019, Schilling worked to carve the linoleum replacement piece and paint the piece to exact detail matching the mural. Schilling completed the painting of the replacement piece ahead of schedule on April 21, 2019.

Portion of linoleum that was damaged.

On April 28, the mural was officially completed when the group of volunteers gathered one last time to complete the varnish on the mural.

“The completion of this mural is a tremendous accomplishment for our volunteers and CVSR,” said CVSR President and CEO Joe Mazur. “We’re dedicated and committed to preserving and renovating historic railcars so that they may be enjoyed by future generations. We can’t thank the volunteers enough for their help in preserving this historic train car.”

1st row: Eileen Strauss, Carol Schroeder, Siegfried Buerling (founder of CVSR), Kathy Eitel, Martha Grzelak; 2nd row: Roy Moore, Polly Bowman, Andrea Chevalier (ICA – Art Conservation), Gary Spencer, Mary Spencer; 3rd row: Roy Moore, Dave Harris, Cherie Harris, Joe Grzelak. Not pictured: Regis Schilling.

 

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Lynee Bixler