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51 articles
Article
A ‘David and Goliath’ by Artemisia Gentileschi rediscovered
03/2020 | 1404 | 162
Pages: 188-195
related names
Author:
Chaplin, Tracey (Chaplin, Tracey)
Author:
Gillespie, Simon (Gillespie, Simon)
Author:
Papi, Gianni (Papi, Gianni)
Subjects
dates:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. David with the head of Goliath, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1639. Oil on canvas, 202 by 137 cm. (Private collection).
Attributed works:
10. X-radiograph of Fig.1. 2019. (Courtesy AAR and Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
11. Fig.1 shown before treatment. 2018.
Attributed works:
12. Infra-red photograph of Fig.1. 2019. (Courtesy AAR and Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
13–16. Details of Fig.1, photographed in raking light to show the incisions on (clockwise from top left) David’s heel; David’s left foot; David’s right hand; and David’s neck. (Courtesy Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
17–20. Cross-section of a paint sample from David’s waistcoat photographed at x200 magnification, fragmented into an upper part, showing evidence of red lake, angular blue/grey smalt, lead white and ochre, shown in reflected white light (top left); and UV light (top right); and a lower part, showing evidence of blue smalt grains from the overlying paint layer, shown in reflected white light (bottom left); and UV light (bottom right). (Courtesy Tracey D. Chaplin).
Attributed works:
2. Detail of Birth of St John the Baptist, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1635–36. Oil on canvas, 184 by 258 cm. (Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid).
Attributed works:
21. Artemisia Gentileschi’s signature as it was discovered during cleaning. (Courtesy Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
22. Detail of a false colour rendering of Fig.1, showing Artemisia’s signature on David’s sword. (Courtesy Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
23. Detail of an infra-red photograph of Fig.1, showing Artemisia’s signature on David’s sword. (Courtesy AAR and Simon Gillespie Studio).
Attributed works:
3. Self-portrait as the Allegory of Painting, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1626–30. Oil on canvas, 93 by 74.5 cm. (Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica in Palazzo Barberini, Rome)
Attributed works:
4. David with the head of Goliath, by Domenico Fetti. 1614–15. Oil on canvas, 160 by 112 cm. (Gemäldegalerie, Dresden).
Attributed works:
5. Detail of Fig.1, showing David’s face.
Attributed works:
6. Detail of Esther before Ahasuerus, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1627–28. Oil on canvas, 208.3 by 273.7 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
7. Bathsheba, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1635–40. Oil on canvas, 265 by 219 cm. (Formerly Gosford House, East Lothian).
Attributed works:
8. Allegory of painting, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1639. Oil on canvas, 98.6 by 75.2 cm. (Hampton Court Palace, Royal Collection Trust; © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2020).
Attributed works:
9. Black-and-white photograph of Fig.1. 1975. (Courtesy Sotheby’s, London).
Article
The Art of Conservation XVI: Scientific examination of works of art in museums and galleries
12/2019 | 1401 | 161
Pages: 1004-1017
related names
Author:
Kirby, Jo (Kirby, Jo)
Subjects
artists:
dates:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Johannes Wilde holding an X-radiograph plate in front of The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine, by Ciro Ferri, in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, in the 1930s. (IPD Photographic Agency, Vienna; Courtauld Institute of Art, London, Wilde Special Collection).
Attributed works:
10. Joyce Plesters working with the Zeiss laser microspectral analyser, in the Scientific Department, National Gallery, London. Photograph, c.1977. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
11. Microsectioner mounted to a binocular microscope on an adjustable stand in preparation for sampling. Photograph, undated. (Harvard Art Museums Archives, Harvard University, Cambridge MA.).
Attributed works:
12. Cross-section of a sample of orange paint from St Joseph’s robe in Fig.14, taken during conservation treatment in 1953. Black-and-white photograph taken at a magnification of about 35x by balancing a camera on the body tube of an 1895 Leitz microscope in place of the eyepiece, then hand coloured by Joyce Plesters, included in the conservation dossier for the painting. (© The National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
13. The same cross-section photographed recently using a camera integrated into modern microscope equipment, repolished before photography. The pigments and layer structure – a layer of bright orangeyellow realgar, probably mixed with orpiment, over layers of orange-yellow earth pigment and red and yellow earth pigments mixed with lead white – are revealed in far greater detail. The translucent material at the top of the cross-section is varnish. (© The National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
14. The Holy Family with a shepherd, by Titian. c.1510. Oil on canvas, 99.1 by 139.1 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
2. Rutherford John Gettens seated at the microscope, photographed by Walter R. Fleischer, Harvard News Office, at an unknown date. (HUP Gettens, Rutherford (1), Harvard University Archives).
Attributed works:
3. Walter Gräff in his examination studio in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich, in 1933. (Doerner Institut, Munich; reproduced by permission of the Doerner Institut).
Attributed works:
4. Narayan Khandekar with the Art-X portable X-ray machine (replacing the Picker) commissioned by Alan Burroughs for the Fogg Museum in 1939 with Philip III of Spain, from the workshop of Pantoja de la Cruz, at the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Harvard University. (President and Fellows of Harvard College; photograph © Caitlin Cunningham Photography, 2019).
Attributed works:
5. X-radiograph of the detail in Fig.6. Date unknown. (Harvard Art Museums/Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Alan Burroughs Collection of X-Radiographs).
Attributed works:
6. Detail of two standing nymphs from Feast of the Gods, by Giovanni Bellini and Titian. 1514/1529. Oil on canvas, 170.2 by 188 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
7. Detail of Arnolfini’s hand from Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his wife, by Jan van Eyck. 1434. Oil on panel, 82.2 by 60 cm. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
8. Infra-red photograph showing change of position of the hand between drawing and painting, the painted hand only partly obscuring the drawing as it is thinly painted. (© National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
9. Infra-red reflectogram of the hand, recorded using the experimental SIRIS instrument with an InGaAs (indium gallium arsenide) array sensor c.2003. The images obtained with these more recent systems are sharper than those published in 1995 using the Hamamatsu vidicon (see note 39), but all reveal more drawing than in the infra-red photograph, notably in Arnolfini’s arm, the position of which was altered between drawing and painting. (© National Gallery, London).
Article
Supplementing the eye: the technical analysis of Frans Hals’s paintings – i
11/2019 | 1400 | 161
Pages: 934-941
related names
Author:
Tummers, Anna (Tummers, Anna)
Subjects
artists:
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Portrait of a woman, by Frans Hals. c.1632–35. Oil on canvas, 76 by 61.4 cm. (Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Gemäldegalerie).
Attributed works:
10. MA-XRF scan of Fig.1, showing the element iron (Fe).
Attributed works:
11. Neutron-Autoradiograph of Fig.1 (second recording).
Attributed works:
12. MA-XRF scan of Fig.1, showing the element copper (Cu).
Attributed works:
13. Neutron-Autoradiograph of Fig.1 (fifth recording).
Attributed works:
14. MA-XRF scan of Fig.1, showing the element calcium (Ca).
Attributed works:
15. MA-XRF scan of Fig.1, showing the element mercury (Hg).
Attributed works:
16. Hyperspectral image of Fig.1 (detail), juxtaposing the ground layer with the adjacent collar.
Attributed works:
17. Hyperspectral image of Fig.1, showing the partially exposed ground layer.
Attributed works:
18. Hyperspectral image of Fig.1, showing the spectral characteristics of flesh tones in the face and hands.
Attributed works:
2. X-radiograph of Fig.1.
Attributed works:
3. Details of Fig.2 showing bottom strip aligned with top part.
Attributed works:
4. Automated Canvas Analysis, showing the cusping (thread intersection angle in degrees).
Attributed works:
5. Photomicrograph of Fig.1, showing the incised line at the right edge.
Attributed works:
6. Reconstruction of the formats of Fig.1. Yellow margins: format of 1767, probably identical to the original dimensions; Blue margins: format of 1786, when the image was clearly reduced in size (the cuffs were covered by the frame at the bottom and slightly at the left edge); Red margins: present format, with extensions at lower and left edges.
Attributed works:
7. Infrared reflectogram of Fig.1.
Attributed works:
8. Neutron-Autoradiograph of Fig.1 (first recording).
Attributed works:
9. MA-XRF scan of Fig.1, showing the element manganese (Mn).
Article
Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi and ‘Judith and her maidservant’ in Oslo
07/2019 | 1396 | 161
Pages: 532-543
related names
Author:
Ford, Thierry (Ford, Thierry)
Author:
Gram Bischoff, Nina (Gram Bischoff, Nina)
Author:
Papi, Gianni (Papi, Gianni)
Subjects
dates:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Detail of Fig.4.
Attributed works:
10. Virgin and Child, by Orazio Gentileschi. 1609. Canvas, 98.5 by 75 cm. (National Museum of Art of Romania, Bucharest).
Attributed works:
11. Weaning Virgin, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1611. Canvas, 131 by 91 cm. (Galleria Corsini, Rome).
Attributed works:
12. Opposite Susanna and the Elders, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1610. Canvas, 170 by 119 cm. (Graf von Schönborn, Schloss Weissenstein, Pommersfelden).
Attributed works:
13. David and Goliath, by Orazio Gentileschi. 1607–08. Canvas, 185.5 by 136 cm. (National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin).
Attributed works:
14. Virgin and Child, by Orazio Gentileschi. c.1614–15. Canvas, 99.5 by 85 cm. (Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge MA).
Attributed works:
14. Virgin and Child, by Orazio Gentileschi. c.1614–15. Canvas, 99.5 by 85 cm. (Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge MA).
Attributed works:
15. Portrait of a lady, by Agnolo Bronzino. c.1550. Panel, 109 by 85 cm. (Galleria Sabauda, Turin).
Attributed works:
16. Lucretia, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1612. Canvas, 100 by 77 cm. (Private collection).
Attributed works:
17. Judith slaying Holofernes, by Artemisia Gentileschi. 1620–21. Canvas, 199 by 162.5 cm. (Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
18. Detail of Fig.4, showing Judith’s hair and ornamentation.
Attributed works:
19. Micro-graph of Fig.4, showing the helical decoration of Athena’s helmet on Judith’s brooch.
Attributed works:
2. Opposite left Judith and her maidservant with the head of Holofernes, by Orazio Gentileschi. 1612. Canvas, 132 by 100 cm. (Private collection).
Attributed works:
20. Detail of Fig.17, showing the arc of blood and Judith’s bracelet.
Attributed works:
3. Opposite right Judith and her maidservant with the head of Holofernes, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1613–14. Canvas. 114 by 93.5 cm. (Palazzo Pitti, Florence).
Attributed works:
4. Judith and her maidservant with the head of Holofernes, here attributed to Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1611–12. Canvas. 136 by 159 cm. (National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo).
Attributed works:
5. Judith with the head of Holofernes, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1609. Canvas, 129 by 96.3 cm. (Lemme Collection).
Attributed works:
6. Judith slaying Holofernes, by Artemisia Gentileschi. c.1612. Canvas, 158.8 by 125.5 cm. (Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte, Naples).
Attributed works:
7. X-radiograph of Fig.4 (National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo).
Attributed works:
8. Detail of Fig.4, showing Judith holding the sword, with infra-red detail showing dark indentation lines.
Attributed works:
9. Detail of Fig.7, showing a change in the positioning of the thumb.
Exhibition Review
Picasso: Blue and Rose Musée d’Orsay, Paris; The Young Picasso: Blue and Rose Periods. Fondation Beyeler, Basel
02/2019 | 1391 | 161
Pages: 154-156
related names
Reviewer:
Cowling, Elizabeth (Cowling, Elizabeth)
Subjects
art literature:
artists:
dates:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
18. Woman in blue, by Pablo Picasso. 1901. Canvas, 133 by 100 cm. (Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; exh. Fondation Beyeler, Basel).
Attributed works:
19. The embrace, by Pablo Picasso. 1903. Pastel on paper, 98 by 57 cm. (Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris; exh. Musée d’Orsay, Paris).
Attributed works:
20. Absinthe drinker, by Pablo Picasso. 1901. Canvas, 81 by 60 cm. (Kunstmuseum, Basel; exh. Fondation Beyeler, Basel).
Attributed works:
21. La coiffure, by Pablo Picasso. 1906. Canvas, 174.9 by 99.7 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; exh. Fondation Beyeler, Basel).
Article
The Art of Conservation XV. The conservation history of the Ghent Altarpiece
09/2018 | 1386 | 160
Pages: 754-765
related names
Author:
Dubois, Hélène (Dubois, Hélène)
Subjects
collectors and dealers:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. The adoration of the Mystic Lamb, by Hubert and Jan van Eyck. Completed by 1432. Panel, shown open, 375 by 514 cm. Before restora- tion. (Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent; © lukasweb.be – Art in Flanders vzw).
Attributed works:
2. Diagram showing the extent of mid-sixteenth century overpaint on the outside wings of the polyptych. (©KIK-IRPA, Brussels).
Attributed works:
3. Detail of Fig.4, showing Joos Vijd’s right eye after varnish removal. The pink scumbles around the eyes, which cover the original eyelashes, are typical of the mid-sixteenth-century overpainting campaign. (©KIKIRPA, Brussels).
Attributed works:
4. The adoration of the Mystic Lamb, by Hubert and Jan van Eyck. Completed by 1432. Panel, shown closed, 375 by 257 cm. Photographed after restoration. (Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent; © lukasweb.be – Art in Flanders vzw).
Attributed works:
5. Detail of Fig.4, showing Elisabeth Borluut’s drapery before the removal of varnish and overpaint. (Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent).
Attributed works:
6. Fig.5 after the removal of overpaint and restoration. (Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent; © lukasweb.be – Art in Flanders vzw).
Attributed works:
7. The Virgin Annunciate and Angel musicians (recto and verso of the same panel), by Hubert and Jan van Eyck. Photographs taken in Berlin before the restoration of 1894. Original hinges are present on the left side of the frame of the Virgin’s panel. Metal reinforcements were added to the extremities of the crossbar. Later, wrought metal hinged braces were attached by large screws fitted through the frame and visible on the front of the Angels panel. (Deutsches Dokumentationszentrum für Kunstgeschichte – Bildarchiv Foto Marburg).
Attributed works:
8. The prophet Micah, detail of Fig.4, shown in the frame designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel with a hatch covering the inscription beneath the prophet. Photograph, before 1878. (RKD, Netherlands Institute for Art History, M.J. Friedländer Archive, The Hague).
Attributed works:
9. The Ghent Altarpiece as installed in the Vijd chapel between 1865 and 1920. It comprises Eyckian central panels, Lagye’s fur-clothed Adam and Eve and Coxcie’s copies of the other shutters. Photograph, c.1910–13. (© Stadsarchief, Ghent).
Western art unattributed:
10. Jef Van der Veken in his studio in Brussels. Photograph, before 1929. (RKD, Netherlands Institute for Art History, Jef Van der Veken Archive, The Hague).
Western art unattributed:
11. Albert Philipott applies wax to the surface of Eve in order to consolidate the paint layers. Photograph, 1951. (© KIK-IRPA, Brussels).
Western art unattributed:
12. Albert Philipott removes the overpainted clouds around the dove in The Adoration of the Lamb. Photograph, 1951. (© KIK-IRPA, Brussels).
Article
Caravaggio’s ‘Crucifixion of St Andrew’ and the problem of autograph replicas
06/2018 | 1383 | 160
Pages: 454-461
related names
Reviewer:
Spear, Richard E. (Spear, Richard E.)
Subjects
dates:
media:
museums and institutions:
places:
subjects:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Detail of Fig.3, showing the soldier’s armour.
Attributed works:
2. Detail of Fig.4, showing the soldier’s armour.
Attributed works:
3. Crucifixion of St Andrew, by Caravaggio. 1606–07. Canvas, 202.5 by 152.7 cm. (Cleveland Museum of Art; Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund, 1976.2).
Attributed works:
4. Crucifixion of St Andrew, here identified as a copy after Caravaggio. Canvas, 198 by 148.5 cm. (Spier Collection, London).
Attributed works:
5. Detail of Fig.3, showing St Andrew’s head.
Attributed works:
6. Detail of Fig.4, showing St Andrew’s head.
Attributed works:
7. Detail of Fig.3, showing St Andrew’s right foot (Photograph author).
Attributed works:
8. Detail of Fig.4, showing St Andrew’s right foot (Photograph author)
Attributed works:
9. Overlay of the contours of Flagellation, by Caravaggio (Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte, Naples) in green, onto a copy of Flagellation in S. Domenico Maggiore, Naples, in red. From G.S. Ghia and C. Strinati, eds.: Caravaggio nel patrimonio del Fondo Edifici di Culto. Il Doppio e la Copia, Rome 2017.
Article
The Modigliani Technical Research Study. Modigliani’s late portraits
05/2018 | 1382 | 160
Pages: 400-407
related names
Author:
Bezur, Anikó (Bezur, Anikó)
Author:
Campos, Pedro H.O.V. (Campos, Pedro H.O.V.)
Author:
Centeno, Silvia A. (Centeno, Silvia A.)
Author:
Duvernois, Isabelle (Duvernois, Isabelle)
Author:
Gonçalves Magalhães, Ana (Gonçalves Magalhães, Ana)
Author:
Josenhans, Frauke V. (Josenhans, Frauke V.)
Author:
Londero, Pablo (Londero, Pablo)
Author:
Rizzutto, Márcia (Rizzutto, Márcia)
Author:
Schwarz, Cynthia (Schwarz, Cynthia)
Subjects
art literature:
dates:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Portrait of a young woman, by Amedeo Modigliani. Here dated 1918–19. Canvas, 45.7 by 28 cm. (Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven).
Attributed works:
10. Infra-red reflectography detail of the background of Fig.9, showing underdrawing and pentimenti (photograph Pedro Campos and Márcia Rizzutto).
Attributed works:
11. Portrait of the artist’s wife, Jeanne Hébuterne, by Amedeo Modigliani. 1918 (1919?). Canvas, 101 by 65.7 cm. (Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena).
Attributed works:
2. Head of Jeanne Hébuterne, by Amedeo Modigliani. 1918. Canvas, 46 by 29 cm. (Private collection).
Attributed works:
3. X-radiograph of Fig.1.
Attributed works:
4. Infra-red photograph of Fig.1.
Attributed works:
5. Infra-red reflectogram of Fig.8.
Attributed works:
6. Transmitted light photograph of Fig.8.
Attributed works:
7. Raking light detail photograph of Fig.8.
Attributed works:
8. Jeanne Hébuterne, by Amedeo Modigliani. 1919. Canvas, 91.4 by 73 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
9. Self-portrait, by Amedeo Modigliani. 1919. Canvas, 100 by 64.5 cm. (Museum of Contemporary Art of the University of São Paulo; photograph Pedro Campos and Márcia Rizzutto).
Attributed works:
[Appendix. Summary of the results of pigment, media, ground preparation and varnish analyses, and of the canvas thread counts.]
Article
The Modigliani Technical Research Study. Modigliani in the South of France
05/2018 | 1382 | 160
Pages: 394-399
related names
Author:
Centeno, Silvia A. (Centeno, Silvia A.)
Author:
Duvernois, Isabelle (Duvernois, Isabelle)
Author:
Fronek, Joe (Fronek, Joe)
Author:
King, Annette (King, Annette)
Author:
Townsend, Joyce H. (Townsend, Joyce H.)
Subjects
dates:
media:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. The little peasant, by Amedeo Modigliani. c.1918. Oil and tempera on canvas, 100 by 64.5 cm. (Tate, London).
Attributed works:
10. The Italian woman, by Amedeo Modigliani. c.1918–19. Canvas, 102.6 by 67 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
11. Photomicrograph of Fig.1 showing top of split in sitter’s shirt.
Attributed works:
12. Details of Fig.1 showing (a) sleeve of sitter’s right arm; and (b) sitter’s right knee.
Attributed works:
13. Details of signatures from (a) Fig.1; (b) Fig.2; and (c) Fig.10.
Attributed works:
2. Young woman of the people, by Amedeo Modigliani. 1918. Oil (and possibly water-based media) on canvas, 100.3 by 65.1 cm. (Los Angeles County Museum of Art).
Attributed works:
3. Detail from the infra-red reflectogram of Fig.1, showing underdrawing circling the face.
Attributed works:
4. Detail from the infra-red reflectogram of Fig.2, showing underdrawing of a bracelet.
Attributed works:
5. X-radiograph of Fig.1.
Attributed works:
6. Fig.1 in transmitted light.
Attributed works:
7. Macro-XRF map details of Fig.10: (a) iron; (b) mercury; (c) calcium.
Attributed works:
8. Detail of Fig.10.
Attributed works:
9. Detail of Fig.2.
Attributed works:
[Appendix. Table showing the results of pigment, media, ground preparation and varnish analyses, and of the canvas thread counts, of Figs.1, 2 and 10.]
Book Review
Felipe III de Velázquez: Donación de William B. Jordan. With contributions by John Elliott, Jaime García-Máiquez, M. Dolores Gayo, William B. Jordan and Javier Portús
05/2018 | 1382 | 160
Pages: 431
related names
Reviewer:
Delaforce, Angela (Delaforce, Angela)
Subjects
art literature:
dates:
museums and institutions:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
3. Portrait of Philip III, by Diego Velázquez. 1627. Canvas, 45.9 by 37 cm. (Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid).
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