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The use of pottery clay for canvas priming in Italian Baroque – An example of technology transfer
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SYSNO ASEP 0492724 Document Type J - Journal Article R&D Document Type Journal Article Subsidiary J Článek ve WOS Title The use of pottery clay for canvas priming in Italian Baroque – An example of technology transfer Author(s) Hradil, David (UACH-T) RID, SAI
Hradilová, J. (CZ)
Holcová, K. (CZ)
Bezdička, Petr (UACH-T) SAI, RID, ORCIDNumber of authors 4 Source Title Applied Clay Science. - : Elsevier - ISSN 0169-1317
Roč. 165, DEC (2018), s. 135-147Number of pages 13 s. Language eng - English Country NL - Netherlands Keywords Clay-based grounds ; Italian Baroque paintings ; Nannofossils ; Powder X-ray micro-diffraction ; Terracotta Subject RIV DB - Geology ; Mineralogy OECD category Mineralogy R&D Projects GA17-25687S GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF) Institutional support UACH-T - RVO:61388980 UT WOS 000445980400015 EID SCOPUS 85051679334 DOI 10.1016/j.clay.2018.08.011 Annotation In the Baroque European painting technology, various coloured clays had been used to prime canvases. These clays are generally considered to be carefully selected in terms of colour and other technological properties (adhesiveness, ductility etc.), as the painting represented the most delicate field of fine art. However, it seems that the availability of the material at a given place as well as its price often played a much more significant role than previously thought. It led to the usage of highly heterogeneous cheap pottery clays in painting, even though they often had to be additionally coloured. For the first time, a clear evidence is provided that a very similar pottery clay material was applied in three different technological ways: i) as a clay body of an unfired terracotta statue created in Florence or Bologna at the end of 16th century, ii) as a secondary putty on the Renaissance painting by Antonello da Saliba (1466–1535), and iii) as a preparation layer – ground – of an oil-on-canvas paintings attributed to Italian Caravaggists (17th century) or also to Carlo Maratta or workshop (1655–1713). The identity of the material was confirmed by mineralogical analyses as well as description of nannofossils, which enable to date the clay to Eocene – Oligocene. Workplace Institute of Inorganic Chemistry Contact Jana Kroneislová, krone@iic.cas.cz, Tel.: 311 236 931 Year of Publishing 2019
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