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Upon finding where they wanted the mural to go, the next step was figuring out how to get it there. It took months of preparation before the entire mural wall was removed from the apartment in 2008 in what curator Judy Guston called a "brute force, but delicate, operation." "It was bittersweet that it was the end of the era where it was, but its future is to be seen by children from all over the world," Nina Chertoff said. "Even the doormen were cheering as it came out of the building; they wanted their pictures taken in front of it . the whole thing was one of those rare moments in time where everything happened the right way, for the right reasons." The 1,400-pound plaster-covered masonry wall had to be split into two pieces, to get it onto an elevator and out of the apartment building, then was loaded onto a truck to Philadelphia. Several years of evaluation, planning and construction later, it now rests in its permanent home inside the Rosenbach's first-floor gallery, where conservation work is under way to stabilize flaking paint and remove layers from housepainters who accidentally covered parts of the characters as they painted around them. Equipped with a scalpel, cotton swabs and patience, conservator Cassie Myers works at the Rosenbach nearly every day to meet an April completion deadline. The museum has created public viewing hours on Wednesdays for the curious to see the restoration as it progresses. "It's really satisfying to have it here and see the progress," Guston said. "We hope that when Maurice sees it, it'll be like seeing an old friend again. I think he'll be delighted." The Chertoffs and Sendak said they hope to make the trip to Philadelphia when the restored mural is unveiled. "We're so happy that it can be shared with everyone," Larry Chertoff said. "Our mom passed away, Eugene passed away, our dad is gone, but it felt like their spirits went with the mural and are wrapped up in it somehow. That's a beautiful feeling." ___ Online:
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