X RENAISSANCE

 

Considered by Vasari as one of the greatest Italian masters, Ercole de’ Roberti is now almost forgotten as few of his works have survived. The restoration of these two panel paintings, now preserved in Dresden, depicting the Garden of Gethsemane and the Way to Calvary, reveals the magnificence of his art in all its vivid colour. Veronica Biolcati of Tyndall worked at the J. Paul Getty Museum in 2019 on the technical examination of the two panels. The study was done in view of their exhibition at the Getty to inform conservators, curators, art historians, and scientists themselves. Both panels were examined to address two main questions: what do the varnishes present on each panel tell us about the conservation history, and what does the palette of pigments tell us of the artist’s technique?

A series of non-invasive and micro-invasive analytical techniques were used, before and after the varnish removal. The conservation scientists used X-ray fluorescence (XRF) scanning, a non-invasive technique, to identify the rich array of materials that were on the artist’s palette in the late 15th Century - pigments based on lead, copper, mercury, iron, gold, and many other elements. The images also revealed pentimenti and many other ‘lost’ details in the paintings. Another discovery, made by analysing a cross-section of a small painting sample, was a greyish toning layer covering much of the painting - with the notable exception of the figure of Christ - possibly applied during an early restoration. The natural ageing/yellowing of the varnish is one of the reasons the painting has become so dark. 

The Ascent to Calvary, panel 35cm x 117cm, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen / Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden.  Restoration: Getty Conservation Institute.

READ MORE ABOUT THE CONSERVATION PROJECT AT THE GETTY MUSEUM WEB SITE:

XRF map of three elements

Red pixels/Mercury (Hg)/Vermilion.

Green pixels/copper (Cu)/copper-based pigment/s

Blue pixels/tin (Sn)/Lead-tin yellow

O7 OCT

29 NOV

2 0 2 0

InvisibleLight.html
InvisibleLight.html

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