Spectrofluorimetric study of the ageing of mixtions used in the gildings of mediaeval wall paintings |
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Authors: | Aurélie Mounier Colette Belin Floréal Daniel |
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Affiliation: | 1.Institut de Recherche sur les Archéomatériaux–Centre de Recherche en Physique Appliquée à l’Archéologie (IRAMAT–CRPAA, UMR 5060),Université Bordeaux–CNRS,Pessac,France;2.Institut des Sciences Moléculaires, UMR 5255,Université de Bordeaux 1/CNRS,Talence,France |
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Abstract: |
Introduction In the Middle Ages, we could find gildings on mural paintings. Gold, silver or tin leaves were applied according to distemper or mixtion technique. For the first one, a binder as glue is necessary, and for the second, a lipidic binder is used to stick the metallic leaf. Studies of gildings materials characterization show that the mixtion technique, with a mordant, is the most common. Linseed oil seems to be the binder used. It is always mixed with a siccative agent as lead. Because of bad conditions of conservation, the gildings do not resist anymore, only remain traces of metal or the adhesive under-layer. Thanks to the binder fluorescence, we can nowadays detect ancient gildings. |
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