6533b86dfe1ef96bd12c9dce

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A Raman spectroscopic and combined analytical approach to the restoration of severely damaged frescoes: the Palomino project

Michael D. HargreavesAntonio Doménech CarbóM. Teresa Doménech-carbóHowell G. M. Edwards

subject

ConservationPaintingOpticsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectForensic engineeringGeneral Materials ScienceArtbusinessFrescoSpectroscopymedia_common

description

The deterioration of art objects is normally relatively minor, controllable and attributable to environmental changes or bacterial invasion, and until now there has not been any recorded attempt to analyse an artwork that has been deliberately and significantly destroyed. The analytical problems are correspondingly larger but the potential reward from any information that can be forthcoming is thereby proportionately greater. The 17th Century Palomino frescoes on the vaulted ceiling of the Church of Sant Joan del Mercat in Valencia were largely destroyed by insurgents in the Spanish Civil War in 1936. The ensuing gunfire and a series of seven conflagrations inside the church had a devastating effect upon the artwork, and the surviving areas were also rendered unstable with respect to their detachment from the substrate. During the current restoration project being undertaken on these frescoes, an opportunity was provided for the application of several analytical techniques to secure information about the original pigment palette employed, the technology of application used by Palomino and the changes consequent upon the destruction process. Here, we report for the first time the use of analytical Raman spectroscopy, supported by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and voltammetry of microparticles, for the combined identification of pigments, binders, substrate treatments and pigment alteration in an important, although badly damaged, wall painting for the informing of the ongoing conservation and restoration strategy. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

https://doi.org/10.1002/jrs.1854