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Wyszukujesz frazę "conservation of painting" wg kryterium: Wszystkie pola


Wyświetlanie 1-8 z 8
Tytuł:
SZTUKA NA KORZE PISANA MATERIAŁY, TECHNIKI, KONSERWACJA AUSTRALIJSKIEGO MALARSTWA NA KORZE
ART ON BARK MATERIAL, TECHNIQUES AND CONSERVATION OF AUSTRALIAN PAINTING ON BARK
Autorzy:
Tworek-Matuszkiewicz, Beata
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/536787.pdf
Data publikacji:
2006
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
AUSTRALIAN PAINTING ON BANK
CONSERVATION
Opis:
Conservation of the Australian Aboriginal bark paintings is a relatively new field. Bark paintings can be found in many museums and galleries in the world, but their unique properties and related preservation issues are researched in depth by Australian conservators. Conservation Department at the National Gallery of Australia has been actively involved in issues relating to the conservation of Aboriginal bark paintings for 20 years. Looking after the bark paintings collection is complicated by their unique structure and their cultural significance so different to any other paintings found in museums. The concept of material permanence found in European art tradition was, until relatively recently, not a part of Aboriginal experience. The prevailing environmental conditions and the inherent properties of materials used for bark paintings made them quite transient objects in their original environment and cultural context. Although a lot of time and skill was devoted to creating these objects, they were quite ephemeral and were not designed to last. It is only relatively recently that Aboriginal art has entered the Western art market and thus the concept of permanence and longevity has become an important issue for Aboriginal artists. The materials used for bark paintings include a sheet of bark (most commonly from Stringy bark Eucaliptus Tetradonta), naturally occurring, mostly mineral pigments (red, white, black, and yellow), and binders. It is only the binders which changed in the last 30 years, when Western art practices made their influence on Aboriginal bark paintings tradition. This involved a substitution of natural binders such as orchid juice or turtle eggs by the readily available, synthetic materials such as PVA (commonly in the form of a wood-glue Aquadehere). This substitution brought about an aesthetic change in the appearance of the painted surface - from a relative matte, porous paint made with natural, weak binders, to a shiny, cohesive, dense layer apparent in many later paintings. Preservation of bark paintings, as practiced by museum and gallery conservators is heavily based on the respect for the paintings and their cultural background and a thorough understanding of their structure and composition. The “rules” governing the extent of conservation treatments of bark paintings are different than those of European paintings. All conservation treatments are constrained by professional ethics and the respect for the original. They are limited to the least necessary interference, which aims to maintain the present condition of the painting. It is accepted by conservators, that the original painting should not be compromised by any cosmetic treatments (such as restoration). Most conservation problems related to bark paintings come as a result of the inherent properties of materials and techniques of their manufacture. For example, a very typical problem of bark support bowing and warping stems from the tendency of bark – as a part of a tree trunk – to return to its natural, cylindrical shape. The problem of cracking and splitting of the bark – apparent in many paintings – results from the bark’s natural movements in response to the changes in relative humidity of the environment. Frequent and rapid fluctuations in moisture levels bring about high stresses in the wood structure, which are released by cracking and splitting. There is little that can be done to rectify this problem once it occurs. Preventive steps can be taken which involve maintaining stable environmental conditions during storage and display, and not allowing the damage to occur or becoming worse. Another common problem visible in many paintings regardless of their age is the instability of the paint layer apparent by flaking paint and the resulting losses. There are many factors, which influence the longterm stability of the paint layer. They include inherent properties of the particular pigment used, artist’s technique of paint preparation, and the resulting paint behaviour, and environmental conditions to which the painting was subjected during its life. The treatment stabilising the paint involves choosing an appropriate agent, which when carefully introduced under each flake, adheres the lifting area back to the bark support. This very time consuming treatment is only carried out locally. There is no effective and ethically acceptable preventive treatment, which can be applied to a paint layer to prevent possible damages in the future. Powdering paint can be treated using an ultrasonic mister. This method allows loose pigment particles to be re-adhered without being physically disturbed. Some owners and collectors spray bark paintings with various “fixatives” in attempt to ensure the stability of the paint. The materials used for such treatment are frequently unstable, and in time show themselves signs of ageing, such as yellowing, cracking or lifting. Once applied to the paint, these “fixatives” cannot ever be removed and therefore significantly contribute to the deteriorating condition of the painting. It is most important to realize that good preventive or housekeeping measures are essential in caring for bark paintings. They are best stored flat and protected from dust to prevent any loss of paint layer and dust accumulation on the surface. The methods of displaying bark paintings are quite different to the usual practices in art galleries, as they aim to present the paintings without imposing Western European traditions upon these unique objects. Unlike European paintings, paintings on bark in the collection of the National Gallery are not framed, but simply rested on brackets or shelves and leaned against the wall. Seriously deteriorated paintings can be displayed horizontally or at an angle so to minimize the risk of any further damage. Preservation of bark paintings is a developing and interesting field. It requires finding new approaches and solutions to all aspects of their care, often stretching and altering the common museum practices. It also requires an understanding from conservators, who are confronted with some unusual concepts in treatments, exhibition presentation or transportation systems. This gradual process of evolution in appreciation will bring about a new, better level of understanding Aboriginal bark paintings as a unique art form. Transl. by author
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2006, 3; 55-71
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
IMPRESJONIZM ALEKSANDRA GIERYMSKIEGO NA PODSTAWIE KONSERWATORSKICH BADAŃ OBRAZU CHŁOPIEC NIOSĄCY SNOP
THE IMPRESSIONISM OF ALEKSANDER GIERYMSKI UPON THE BASIS THE CONSERVATION STUDIES OF THE PAINTING 'BOY CARRYING A SHEAF'
Autorzy:
Doleżyńska-Sewerniak, Ewa
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/537864.pdf
Data publikacji:
2007
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
GIERYMSKI ALEKSANDER ('BOY CARRYING A SHEAF')
Aleksander Gierymski
Chłopiec niosący snop
impresjonizm
malarstwo francuskie
technika fałszywych kolorów
kontrast symultaniczny
prawo kontrastu sukcesywnego kolorów
prawo barw komplementarnych
Opis:
A presentation of the painting 'Boy Carrying a Sheaf' by Aleksander Gierymski as seen by a conservator-technologist. Historians of art regard this composition to be one of the first and most important Impressionist works in the oeuvre of an artist who experimented with painting techniques. It was precisely the manner of executing this canvas that betrayed inspiration by French painting, which became the reason for subjecting the composition to interdisciplinary conservation research intent on demonstrating the analogies of its technique and technology with Impressionist art. Up to now, 'Boy Carrying a Sheaf' had not been the object of meticulous interdisciplinary analyses. The conducted investigations made it possible to identify the painting material applied by the artist and the manner of his painterly approach. They displayed a number of essential workshop features characteristic for Gierymski's oeuvre, such as familiarity with the properties of the used material and the techniques applied for the purpose of attaining the planned effect. The studies also revealed that Gierymski was acquainted with technical novelties of the period and sought individual workshop solutions, confirmed by his treatment of technology, stressed by historians of art, and the aptness of the laudatory appraisal of his works, formulated by the history of art.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2007, 4; 67-80
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Odkrycie i konserwacja renesansowej polichromii w kościele parafialnym w Polnej (pow. Gorlice)
DISCLOSURE AND CONSERVATION OF A RENAISSANCE POLYCHROMIC PAINTING IN THE PARISH CHURCH AT POLNA, GORLICE DISTRICT
Autorzy:
Śliwianka-Dziurawcowa, Zofia
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/537946.pdf
Data publikacji:
1971
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
drewniany kościół w Polnej
polichromie renesansowe w Polnej
polichromia temperowa
Opis:
In a seemingly styleless (seriously deformed by re constructions) wooden church a t Polna under boards of th e wall planking a rch ite c tu ra l paintings of medium-class, coming from the 18th century have been found. However, in the sanctuary under the above paintings some th irty high-class paintings have been discovered dating as fa r back as to the 16th century most of them depicting the scenes from the life and passion of Christ. On completion of a full scientific survey of the damaged 18th century p a in tings they were removed from the sanctuary and the Renaissance paintings have been disclosed and subjected to conservation. In the nave, where the 16th century paintings are preserved in the relic form only, the classical decoration has been left.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 1971, 1; 35-42
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Odnalezienie zaginionego obrazu autorstwa Andrzeja Wróblewskiego pod tytułem Portret z wnętrzem podczas prac konserwatorskich przy obrazie Pejzaż górski
Uncovering of a missing painting by Andrzej Wróblewski Portrait with the interior during a conservation of an oil painting on canvas Mountain Landscape
Autorzy:
Kozik, Regina
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/535516.pdf
Data publikacji:
2012
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
Andrzej Wróblewski
konserwacja obrazu olejnego na płótnie
"Portret z wnętrzem"
Opis:
Recently, more than 50 years after the artist’s death, the work of Andrzej Wróblewski has been re-discovered. Exhibitions and catalogues of his works are very popular and paintings are particularly sought after. In this renaissance of Wróblewski’s art, the unexpected finding of his missing painting is a significant event. Not every day a conservator is privileged to participate in such a discovery and it is my great pleasure to describe the process in this article. From the very beginning of the conservation process on oil painting Mountain Landscape there was a strong indication, that under the thick layer of average quality painting something far more interesting is hidden. Firstly, on the back of the canvas there was a figure of a standing man (painted in the window of the stretcher), in terms of its technique and artistic value far more superior to the Mountain Landscape. Secondly, in the corner of the back there was a paper label, with a phrase: Andrzej Wróblewski, “Portrait with the interior” and information that the painting was purchased on February the 7th 1953 at the exhibition in Kraków, Poland. It was very unlikely the sticker had been placed there by accident, and if it had concerned the painting on the back, it would have been located elsewhere. Therefore, it seemed very probable that under a thick layer of landscape, there was a painting by Andrzej Wróblewski. In this article the process of uncovering of the Portrait with the interior is described in detail, the conservation methods are explained, and the inquiry into documents and catalogues that helped to authenticate the painting before the start of a risky reconstruction. In the end, the conservation of one painting by an amateur painter uncovered a missing Portrait with the interior (on the front, under the layers of paint). Additionally, the painting on the back was identified as Wróblewski’s work. Finally, visible fragments of paint layer on the edges of the canvas, on the back (hidden under the stretchers), indicates the possible existence of a third painting of the same artist.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2012, 3-4; 53-58
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
PARA NIEZNANYCH LITERATURZE PORTRETÓW Z KRĘGU SZLACHECKIEGO KOŃCA XVIII W. PĘDZLA JÓZEFA FAWORSKIEGO. KONSERWACJA I PIERWSZE BADANIA TECHNIKI MALOWANIA
TWO UNKNOWN PORTRAITS BY JÓZEF FAWORSKI FROM THE GENTRY RANGE OF THE LATE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. CONSERVATION AND FIRST STUDIES OF THE PAINTING TECHNIQUE
Autorzy:
Szpor, Joanna
Soińska, Zuzanna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/537894.pdf
Data publikacji:
2008
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
FAWORSKI JOZEF
PAINTING TECHNIQUE (18TH C.)
Józef Faworski
portrety rodziny Wardęskich
konterfekty Garbowskich
portrety rodzinne
malarstwo dworskie
konserwacja obrazów
przemalowania obrazów
ingerencja w oryginał obrazu
technika malowania
Opis:
The collection of nine portraits of the Wardeski family of the Godziemba coat of arms, salvaged from a manor house in Dalikowo in the land of Sieradz, presents a series of ancestors from the end of the eighteenth century to the early twentieth century. The conservation of the collection was conducted in 2003-2008 in the atelier of Professor Joanna Szpor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw as part of a course for students. In view of the original inscriptions on the reverse of the canvases it was necessary to apply the transparent doubling method; the genealogy of the family was illustrated with the portraits. The earliest pair of portraits of Teresa Garbowska born Krosnowska and her husband, Jozef Garbowski (1789), is still part of the current of eighteenth-century gentry painting. The reverse of both likenesses features the signature 'Jozef Faworski', who was one of the leading painters of this current. The heretofore-unknown portraits increase the number of canvases signed by him to a total of seven. Due to the visible composition changes in the portrait of Garbowska, the painting became the topic of an M. A. dissertation written by Zuzanna Soinska. Physical-chemical studies and a comparative analysis of the technique applied in the other portraits by Jozef Faworski made it possible to recreate and, for the first time, to describe his workshop. The conventions of the depiction of the Polish nobility were established, and the fashion observed by the wives - predictable. Faworski received commissions for portraits of married couples in assorted manor houses and then prepared canvases of similar sizes; the colour of the priming ground depended on the planned tones, and the artist had at his disposal a painted version of the so-called female portrait. As a rule, he executed the most frequently requested composition, i.e. from the hips up, with a hand holding a fan on a table, and all the attributes and ornaments of the fashionable gentlewoman, which, as in the case of Teresa Garbowska, the sitter could reduce or change in the last stage of completing the painting, when she was already posing for a rendition of the facial features. In the case of the discussed portrait the alteration was so considerable that only comparative studies of the binder from the 'unquestionably auteur' parts and the 'secondary fragments' revealed that they had been executed by Faworski in fat tempera with an addition of gum. The binder was 'combined' tempera composed of egg yolk, flax oil and cherry gum for a better cohesion of the paint. An analysis of the inscriptions on the reverse of the earlier studied portraits signed by Faworski and the newly discovered portraits of Teresa and Jozef Garbowski indicates that they were executed by the same author using a paintbrush - which called for considerable ease in guiding it and for recurring lettering. The presented research findings became the first description of the workshop of Jozef Faworski, an author of portraits from the range of gentry painting. They also provided directives for the conservation of the portrait of Teresa Garbowska.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2008, 2; 17-32
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Dziedzictwo zachowane i na nowo odkryte. Prace konserwatorskie przed wystawą Obraz Złotego Wieku w Zamku Królewskim na Wawelu
Heritage preserved and rediscovered. Conservation work undertaken prior to the exhibition The Image of the Golden Age at the Wawel Royal Castle
Autorzy:
Buchwald-Zięcina, Oliwia
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/23352193.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
wystawa Obraz Złotego Wieku
konserwacja dzieł sztuki
malarstwo tablicowe
renesans
Wawel
exhibition Image of the Golden Age
conservation of works of art
panel painting
Renaissance
Opis:
Jesienią 2023 roku w Zamku Królewskim na Wawelu została otwarta monumentalna wystawa zatytułowana Obraz Złotego Wieku. Prezentowane na niej obiekty pochodzą z czasu panowania ostatnich trzech Jagiellonów (1501–1572), a zatem z okresu największej świetności tej dynastii. Organizacja ekspozycji stworzyła wyjątkową okazję do odnowienia wielu zabytków z epoki. Rozległe prace konserwatorskie przy eksponatach podjęto na długo przed otwarciem wystawy. Spośród ponad 400 obiektów około 100 zakwalifikowano do szeroko zakrojonych prac badawczo-konserwatorskich. Efekt tych działań stanowił dodatkową korzyść z wystawy jeszcze przed jej udostępnieniem. Wyniki podjętych działań przynoszą nowe odkrycia, pogłębiają wiedzę o prezentowanych dziełach, a przede wszystkim potwierdzają silne wpływy zachodnioeuropejskie na kulturę i sztukę monarchii polsko-litewskiej pod rządami Aleksandra Jagiellończyka, Zygmunta Starego i Zygmunta Augusta. Wsparcie finansowe Ministerstwa Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego pozwoliło na równoległe prowadzenie działań przez kilka zespołów konserwatorskich przy zabytkach bezcennych dla polskiej kultury. Wytypowanym obiektom zapewniono najwyższe standardy konserwatorskie, uwzględniające obowiązujące przepisy, doktryny konserwatorskie i doświadczenie ekspertów. Przygotowywane opracowania i dokumentacje tych prac powinny w przyszłości przybrać formę publikacji naukowej, stanowią bowiem przemyślaną metodologię konkretnych zagadnień konserwatorskich, a także rozwiązań technicznych i technologicznych. Dzięki wiedzy i otwartości rzeczoznawców oraz praktyków, choć niejednokrotnie to czasochłonny i skomplikowany proces, przejmowane są nowoczesne rozwiązania stosowane w czołowych europejskich ośrodkach konserwacji dzieł sztuki.
In the autumn of 2023, a monumental exhibition entitled The Image of the Golden Age opened at the Wawel Royal Castle. The artefacts on display date from the reign of the last three Jagiellonians (1501–1572), and thus from the dynasty’s heyday. The organization of the exhibition created a unique opportunity to restore many artefacts from the period. Extensive conservation work was undertaken long before the opening of the exhibition. Of the more than 400 objects, approximately 100 were qualified to undergo extensive research and conservation work. The outcome of these activities brought additional benefits to the exhibition even before it opened; they led to new discoveries being made, enhancing existing knowledge of the works on display and, above all, have confirmed the considerable Western European influence on the culture and art of the Polish-Lithuanian monarchy under Aleksander Jagiellon, Zygmunt the Old and Zygmunt August. Financial support from the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage made it possible for several conservation teams to carry out simultaneous activities on artefacts that are invaluable to Polish culture. The objects selected were guaranteed the highest standard of conservation, taking into account current legislation, conservation principles and expert experience. The studies and documentation of these artefacts should, in the future, take the form of an academic publication, as they demonstrate a well-conceived methodology for specific conservation issues, as well as technical and technological solutions. Although this is often a time-consuming and complicated process, owing to the knowledge and openness of experts and professionals, contemporary solutions used in leading European centres for the conservation of works of art are being adopted.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2023, 2; 125-145
0029-8247
2956-6606
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Nowe w starym – o dosłownej interpretacji Karty Weneckiej na przykładzie wybranych aranżacji malowideł ściennych w zabytkach architektury
New in the old – about literal interpretation of the Venice Charter on the example of selected arrangements of wall paintings in historic architecture
Autorzy:
Korpała, Małgorzata
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/539453.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
konserwacja malarstwa ściennego
Karta Wenecka
wall painting conservation
Venice Charter
Opis:
Od początku XX w. toczyły się dyskusje wokół konserwacji malowideł ściennych. Karta Wenecka wskazywała reguły postępowania i inspirowała w ustalaniu zakresu ingerencji podczas prac konserwatorskich. W latach powojennych podejmowane prace konserwatorskie wobec zniszczonych malowideł ściennych zmierzały do uzupełnienia dekoracji malarskich. Było to przywracanie kompozycji, kształtu czy kolorystyki zgodnie z wiedzą o tym, jak wyglądały w przeszłości. Uzupełnienia rozumiano jako odtworzenie lub rekonstrukcję dzieła oraz jako jego współczesną aranżację, której celem było uzyskanie spójności estetycznej wnętrza. Nowoczesne polichromie stanowiły zwrot od wiernej odbudowy lub stylizacji historycznej zniszczonych zabytkowych wnętrz. Formy współczesne kontrastujące z historyczną strukturą odbudowywanych i poddawanych konserwacji zabytków spełniały postulat odróżnialności substancji dawnej-autentycznej od uzupełnień noszących „znamiona naszych czasów”, który jest zawarty w Karcie Weneckiej.
Debates centred around the conservation of wall paintings have continued since the early 20th century. The Venice Charter indicated the rules of conduct and was an inspiration in setting the scope of interference during conservation work. In the post-war period, conservation work of destroyed wall paintings was aimed at replacing the missing elements of painted decorations. This involved restoring their composition, shape or colours in accordance with knowledge of how they had looked like in the past. This activity was understood as the restoring or reconstructing of a work of art and as its contemporary arrangement that was aimed to achieve aesthetic consistency of the interior. Modern painted decorations constituted a departure from the faithful reconstruction or restoring the historical look of destroyed historic interiors. Contemporary forms that contrasted with the historic structure of monuments under reconstruction or conservation met the postulate of distinctness between the old-authentic substance from replacements that “bear a contemporary stamp”, as stated in the Venice Charter.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2016, 2; 129-143
0029-8247
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Obraz „Matka Boska z Dzieciątkiem z różą w ramie relikwiarzowej” z XV wieku ze skarbca bazyliki Mariackiej w Krakowie. Nowe spojrzenie na proweniencje warsztatowe na podstawie techniki i technologii wykonania dzieła
The fifteenth century painting of the „Virgin and Child with a Rose in a Reliquary Frame” from the treasury of St Mary’s Basilica in Kraków. A new look at its provenance based on the techniques and technology used in its execution
Autorzy:
Zając, Maria
Goryl, Maria
Rodzik-Czałka, Łucja
Mikołajska, Anna
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/21151086.pdf
Data publikacji:
2023
Wydawca:
Narodowy Instytut Dziedzictwa
Tematy:
Małopolska
Kraków
bazylika Mariacka w Krakowie
gotyckie malarstwo tablicowe
technika i technologia
badania konserwatorskie
konserwacja malarstwa
St Mary’s Basilica in Kraków
Gothic panel painting
conservation research
conservation of paintings
techniques and technology
Opis:
Celem opracowania jest przedstawienie wyników badań i przeprowadzonych prac konserwatorskich obrazu pt. Matka Boska z Dzieciątkiem z różą w ramie relikwiarzowej datowanego na XV wiek, wchodzącego w skład kolekcji sztuki bazyliki Mariackiej w Krakowie. Ze względu na znikome informacje o obrazie, jego historii i pochodzeniu przystąpiono do przeprowadzenia badań konserwatorskich, korzystając z zasobów nauk humanistycznych, paleografii, badań fizyko-chemicznych czy analizy procesu projektowego (porównanie z innymi obrazami pochodzącymi z warsztatów krakowskich datowanych na mniej więcej XV wiek). Badania udowodniły przynależność obrazu do warsztatu Mistrza retabulum z Maciejowic. Przynależność warsztatową udowadnia analiza porównawcza stosowanych w malarstwie gotyckim szablonów twarzy i poznanie składu pierwiastkowego pigmentów tzw. ziemnych. Ponadto badania przyczyniły się do określenia stanu zachowania, wskazania czynników niszczących, przekształceń i nawarstwień. Miało to wpływ na przemyślane i dostosowane do obrazu postępowanie konserwatorskie, z troską o to, co oryginalne i stanowiące o wysokiej wartości artystycznej omawianego dzieła zabytkowego.
The aim of this study is to present the results of the research and conservation work carried out on the painting Virgin and Child with a Rose in a Reliquary Frame dated to the fifteenth century, which is part of the art collection of St Mary’s Basilica in Kraków.Given the paucity of information about the painting, its history and origin, conservation research was undertaken using the resources of studies undertaken in various fields: the humanities, palaeography, physico-chemistry, as well as an analysis of the painting process (a comparison with other paintings from workshops in Kraków dating to around the fifteenth century). The research has confirmed that the painting came from the workshop of the Master of the Retabulum of Maciejowice. A comparative analysis of the facial models used in Gothic painting and knowledge of the composition of the so-called earth pigments has proven its connection to this workshop. In addition, the research contributed to determining the state of preservation, identifying destructive influences, transformations and overpaintings. This has contributed to a well-considered conservation procedure adapted to the painting, with careful attention paid to what is original and constitutes the high artistic value of the monumental work in question.
Źródło:
Ochrona Zabytków; 2023, 1; 229-253
0029-8247
2956-6606
Pojawia się w:
Ochrona Zabytków
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
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