Green pigment in paintings turns brown with time
To anyone living in the 21st century, it might not be obvious that
Renaissance paintings were once much colorful than they look now. “If
you look at the paintings of, say, Leonardo da Vinci, they are very,
very dark,” says Didier Gourier, a chemist at the French National Centre
for Scientific Research and an author of the study. “But they didn’t
always look this way.”..
Presented with incredibly high-resolution images of the paint chips,
they contrasted the color changes in verdigris sampled from the center
of Bronzino’s painting against verdigris sampled right next to the
frame, a shaded area that would have offered protection from light.
Their suspicions were proven right when they found the frame-protected
paint was far less deteriorated. When Gourier magnified a cracked paint
sample from “Pietà,” he found that each crack had darkened,
likely due to the diffusion of oxygen in the cracks. “The darkening is
not systematic,” Gourier says. This inconsistency helps researchers pick
out now-brown verdigris from originally brown paint, he says.
More at
Atlas Obscura, via
Neatorama.
I'm guessing I might find their original colors 'gaudy' in comparison.
ReplyDeleteSimilar to people who paint statuary that we are used to seeing as white marble, but was actually painted in its day.
http://tywkiwdbi.blogspot.com/2010/05/reminder-that-ancient-statuary-was.html
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