A multidisciplinary investigation was conducted on the painting Judith with the Head of Holofernes from about 1530, attributed to Lucas Cranach the Elder. The investigation started with a digital imaging approach using several techniques in the UV-VIS-IR range, as well as X-radiography. The imaging approach was combined with physico-chemical characterization of the wooden support and painting materials using various techniques such as micro-XRF spectrometry, optical microscopy (OM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and radiocarbon (C-14) dating. The imaging analysis revealed signs of degradation in the wooden support and in the paint layer along with some changes in the original composition of the painting. The elements detected by XRF suggested the presence of pigments typically found on paintings by Lucas Cranach such as lead white, lead-tin yellow, vermilion, iron oxides, azurite, carbon black, and bone black. Radiocarbon dating revealed that the painting was made on panel cut-out from the inner side of a tree that was over 100 years old when cut. The results supported the hypothesis that the painting under question was likely produced in the Workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder with consistent stylistic features and materials compatible with the estimated completion date 1530. (C) 2022 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
An analytical investigation of a wooden panel painting attributed to the workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder / A. Klisinska-Kopacz, M. Obarzanowski, P. Fraczek, M. Moskal-del Hoyo, M. Gargano, T. Goslar, F. Chmielewski, J. Dudala, J. Del Hoyo-Melendez. - In: JOURNAL OF CULTURAL HERITAGE. - ISSN 1296-2074. - 55:(2022 Jun), pp. 185-194. [10.1016/j.culher.2022.03.010]
An analytical investigation of a wooden panel painting attributed to the workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder
M. GarganoMethodology
;
2022
Abstract
A multidisciplinary investigation was conducted on the painting Judith with the Head of Holofernes from about 1530, attributed to Lucas Cranach the Elder. The investigation started with a digital imaging approach using several techniques in the UV-VIS-IR range, as well as X-radiography. The imaging approach was combined with physico-chemical characterization of the wooden support and painting materials using various techniques such as micro-XRF spectrometry, optical microscopy (OM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and radiocarbon (C-14) dating. The imaging analysis revealed signs of degradation in the wooden support and in the paint layer along with some changes in the original composition of the painting. The elements detected by XRF suggested the presence of pigments typically found on paintings by Lucas Cranach such as lead white, lead-tin yellow, vermilion, iron oxides, azurite, carbon black, and bone black. Radiocarbon dating revealed that the painting was made on panel cut-out from the inner side of a tree that was over 100 years old when cut. The results supported the hypothesis that the painting under question was likely produced in the Workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder with consistent stylistic features and materials compatible with the estimated completion date 1530. (C) 2022 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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