TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of colorants on XVIII century scientific hand-coloured print volumes
AU - Zannini, Paolo
AU - Baraldi, Pietro
AU - Aceto, Maurizio
AU - Agostino, Angelo
AU - Fenoglio, Gaia
AU - Bersani, Danilo
AU - Canobbio, Eleonora
AU - Schiavon, Elisabetta
AU - Zanichelli, Giusi
AU - De Pasquale, Andrea
PY - 2012/11
Y1 - 2012/11
N2 - Two series of printed volumes, respectively, created in Parma and in Vienna at the end of XVIII century, were analysed in order to characterise the palettes used in the hand-coloured miniatures and to determine whether decoration had been carried out simultaneously to, or shortly after, the time of printing. The application of complementary non-invasive analytical techniques allowed to yield a thorough knowledge of the colorants present and to determine that artists used a mixing of ancient, traditional materials such as cinnabar, minium or indigo, and materials of recent introduction in late XVIII century such as gamboge, Prussian blue or blue verditer. There was no evidence of colorants created successively to the age of printing, so that it can be concluded that decoration could have been done at the time of printing. Interesting is the use of metal pigments in the Vienna volumes, either in powder form and in foil form as a basis to obtain iridescence effects, a clue to evaluate the great skillfulness of the artist. Among the colorants identified, particularly relevant is the identification of gamboge, a colorant almost exclusively used among Far Eastern Asian painters according to the literature; this fact suggests that information on the use of pictorial materials can be strongly updated by diagnostic analyses.
AB - Two series of printed volumes, respectively, created in Parma and in Vienna at the end of XVIII century, were analysed in order to characterise the palettes used in the hand-coloured miniatures and to determine whether decoration had been carried out simultaneously to, or shortly after, the time of printing. The application of complementary non-invasive analytical techniques allowed to yield a thorough knowledge of the colorants present and to determine that artists used a mixing of ancient, traditional materials such as cinnabar, minium or indigo, and materials of recent introduction in late XVIII century such as gamboge, Prussian blue or blue verditer. There was no evidence of colorants created successively to the age of printing, so that it can be concluded that decoration could have been done at the time of printing. Interesting is the use of metal pigments in the Vienna volumes, either in powder form and in foil form as a basis to obtain iridescence effects, a clue to evaluate the great skillfulness of the artist. Among the colorants identified, particularly relevant is the identification of gamboge, a colorant almost exclusively used among Far Eastern Asian painters according to the literature; this fact suggests that information on the use of pictorial materials can be strongly updated by diagnostic analyses.
KW - gamboge
KW - hand-coloured
KW - metal pigments
KW - prints
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84870249913&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/jrs.4119
DO - 10.1002/jrs.4119
M3 - Article
SN - 0377-0486
VL - 43
SP - 1722
EP - 1728
JO - Journal of Raman Spectroscopy
JF - Journal of Raman Spectroscopy
IS - 11
ER -