9
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: not found
      • Article: not found

      MOLAB®meets Persia: Non-invasive study of a sixteenth-century illuminated manuscript

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisher
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Related collections

          Most cited references18

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          In situ noninvasive study of artworks: the MOLAB multitechnique approach.

          Driven by the need to study precious and irreplaceable artworks without compromising their integrity, researchers have undertaken numerous efforts to develop noninvasive analytical tools and methodologies that can provide a chemical description of cultural heritage materials without any contact with the object. The challenge is that artworks are made of complex mixtures, often with heterogeneous and unknown layered materials. Their components must be identified over a range of size scales, from the molecular identification of constituent compounds to the mapping of alteration phases. In this Account, we review recent research in spectroscopic techniques accessible from the mobile laboratory (MOLAB). The lab is equipped with an array of state-of-the-art, portable, and noninvasive instruments specifically tailored to tackle the different issues confronted by archaeologists, curators, and conservators. The MOLAB approach is suitable for studying a variety of objects, from ceramics to manuscripts or from historical wall paintings to contemporary canvases. We begin by discussing issues related to the acquisition and interpretation of reflectance or backscattered spectra from the surface of heterogeneous materials. Then we show how the selectivity needed for the noninvasive identification of pigments in paintings, even in mixtures or in layered matrices, can be acquired by combining elemental information from X-ray fluorescence with molecular and structural insights from electronic and vibrational spectroscopies. Discriminating between original pigments and restoration retouches is possible, even when both comprise similar chromophores, as highlighted in the study of paintings by Jordaens and Raphael. The noninvasive approach permits the examination of a very large number of artworks with a virtually limitless number of measurements. Thus, unexpected and uncommon features may be uncovered, as in the case of a lead pyroantimonate yellow doped with zinc that was discovered by micro-Raman and X-ray fluorescence on an Italian Renaissance majolica. For characterizing binding media, we discuss the strengths and limitations of using mid- and near-FTIR (Fourier transform infrared) spectroscopies supported by a multivariate statistical analysis, detailing the study of organic materials in a wall painting by Perugino and a survey of the painting technique on 18 contemporary paintings by Burri. In Michelangelo's David, we show how the noninvasive mapping of contaminants and alteration phases might inform decisions on preventive conservation plans. The multitechnique MOLAB approach overcomes the intrinsic limitation of individual spectroscopic methods. Moreover, the ability to analyze artworks without the need to move them is an invaluable asset in the study and preservation of cultural heritage.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            FT-NIR spectroscopy for non-invasive identification of natural polymers and resins in easel paintings.

            In the present study, the analytical strengths and limitations of near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy to non-invasively characterize organic components in painting materials have been investigated. In spite of the increased amount of information available today from advanced modern analytical instrumentations dedicated to cultural heritage, the non-invasive identification of materials belonging to the wide class of organic compounds historically used in paintings is still a challenging task. Near-infrared spectroscopy offers several attractive features that make this technique particularly suitable to this purpose. In fact, it is non-invasive, allows for non-contact measurements in reflectance mode, gives molecular information on complex macromolecules, and can be performed on-site by means of portable devices. First-derivative transformation of reflectance spectroscopic data has been applied to provide a simple and fast way to deduce more information from NIR spectra. This approach has allowed spectral features to be identified that can be useful to distinguish different compounds belonging to the classes of lipids, proteins, and resins. To this purpose, at first, a spectral database of pure standard has been collected. Our analytical approach was then successfully validated on pictorial models reproducing the typical stratigraphy of an easel painting. As final step, the study of a real painting has been attempted and a drying oil, animal glue, and a terpenic natural resin, as well as an earth pigment were clearly identified, as cross-validated by GC-MS analysis.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              CO2 entrapment in natural ultramarine blue

                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Studies in Conservation
                Studies in Conservation
                Maney Publishing
                0039-3630
                2047-0584
                September 10 2015
                September 10 2015
                : 60
                : sup1
                : S185-S192
                Article
                10.1179/0039363015Z.000000000223
                13993136-db8b-419e-9d1a-d90e441f8c33
                © 2015
                History

                Comments

                Comment on this article