6533b86ffe1ef96bd12cd35a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

XRF analysis to identify historical photographic processes: The case of some Interguglielmi Jr.’s images from the Palermo Municipal Archive

Luigi TranchinaMaurizio BrunoM. L. Di BellaMaria Francesca AlberghinaMaria BraiAurora ModicaDorotea Fontana

subject

Diagnostic techniqueShot (filmmaking)media_common.quotation_subjectConservation02 engineering and technologyImage layer01 natural sciencesVisual artsNon destructiveDegradation processXRF measurementComposition (language)Conservation treatmentmedia_commonPCARadiation010401 analytical chemistryAlbumen printMatte-collodionArt021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumIdentification (biology)0210 nano-technologyAlbumen print

description

Abstract In the early period, even though professional photographers worked with similar techniques and products, their artistic and commercial aims determined different choices and led them to follow different, often personal, recipes. For this reason, identification of the techniques through date and name of the photographer or through some visual features like colour, tonality and surface of the image layer, often needs further investigation to be proved. Chemical characterization, carried out in a non or micro destructive way, can be crucial to provide useful information about the original composition, degradation process, realization technique, in obtaining an indirect dating of the photograph and/or to choose the most correct conservation treatment. In our case, x-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis was used to confirm the chemical composition of eleven historical photographs dated between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, shot in Palermo (Sicily) by a renowned photographer of the time, and pasted on their original cardboards. The elemental identification, obtained with a non destructive approach, provided important information to distinguish among different photographic techniques in terms of distribution and characterization of chemical elements markers in the photographic surface.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radphyschem.2017.02.026