Cover Story
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November 7, 2005 - Volume 83, Number 45
- p. 46
Art And Science
Smithsonian Chemists Squeezed Out Of Analytical Jobs
Rachel Petkewich
At the intersection of art and science, analytical chemists have problems to solve.
John Winter is one of three permanent researchers at the Smithsonian Institute’s Arthur M. Sackler and Freer Galleries in Washington, D.C. “We have our separate fields of research just as any scientist does,” he says. With 25 years of experience, his specialty is East Asian paintings. Winter is also in charge of examining pieces under consideration for acquisition by the galleries for things like disguised repairs and added decorations, which “are far more common than out-and-out forgery.”
In his work, he uses analytical chemistry techniques for identification of materials, including X-ray fluorescence and diffraction, IR, UV-Vis, GC-MS, HPLC, and scanning electron microscopy.
“To be a good candidate in this field, you can’t afford to be too specialized,” Winter says. Originally a natural products chemist, he has forayed into botanical multivariate statistical analysis.
Photo By Paul Coyle
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Tumosa |
Charles Tumosa echoes those ideas. With a doctorate in physical chemistry, he worked on 4,000 homicides during his 18-year tenure running the crime lab for the Philadelphia Police Department before switching gears to set up the analytical laboratory at the Smithsonian Center for Materials Research & Education (SCMRE) in Suitland, Md. The mandate was to help to preserve the collection. “I always joked that it was a place where we watched paint dry,” he quips. But “no one has ever done a linear study on how paint ages, and that is one example of what we were doing.”
Tumosa enjoyed working at the Smithsonian Institution for 12 years. “What we learned we learned the hard way, and that knowledge is not in books, it’s not on the Web.”
On Sept. 16, however, he lost his job. Positions were abolished for six of the seven research scientists who worked on independent projects at SCMRE. “We were probably one of the last places to do materials science in the arts,” he says.
“It is curious that the National Academy of Sciences thought very highly of our research when they reviewed it and wanted the work expanded rather than curtailed or eliminated,” Tumosa says. “It’s a very unsettled time at the Smithsonian, and I think we are a little bit of the collateral damage that occurred.”
Winter calls the cut “an anomaly to the field as a whole.” Recent infusions of money from private foundations provided for new permanent positions at museums in Baltimore, Chicago, and New York City.
Tumosa sees temporary hires as the newest trend and is looking into teaching. People at various universities and colleges who are in science departments get involved as well, either as a sideline or as their main area of research.
COVER STORY
Employment Outlook - Introduction
Demand
Chemists at all levels who are entering the workforce will face a tight job market. Most of the employers C&EN spoke with about prospects for chemists, biochemists, chemical engineers, and scientists in related disciplines say that hiring is pretty much what it was last year. It's not good, but there are some jobs out there for scientists with the right qualifications.
Salaries & Employment
American Chemical Society members are posting solid pay gains; unemployment is down but still near its 2004 record.
Analytical Chemists
Analytical chemists have a variety of career options at all degree levels. Hiring is slow but steady, and many analytical chemists have branched out into instrument sales or take a variety of temporary positions and do quite well.
Art And Science
Smithsonian Chemists Squeezed Out Of Analytical Jobs.
Consulting
You're over 50 and your employer has made you a buyout offer you can't refuse. Many retirees turn to consulting in their areas of expertise. Others start their consulting careers much earlier. What do consultants do? What questions must every consultant be able to answer?
Technicians
Today's chemical technicians who have associate's degrees are increasingly called upon to do work that bachelor's-level chemists were doing not long ago. Their expertise makes them valuable members in today's team-oriented industry.
Online Exclusives
Outlook: The Lastest Technician Employment Numbers
Career Resources
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- Career & Employment C&EN Archive
Photo By Paul Coyle