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News from PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Office of Communications
22 Chambers St., Suite 201
Princeton, NJ 08542 USA
Telephone 609-258-3601; Fax 609-258-1301

For immediate release: September 16, 2002

CONTACT: Ruta Smithson (609) 258-3763
 

Art Conservation is Focus of Exhibition at Princeton University Art Museum

Exhibition Dates: September 21, 2002, through January 5, 2003

PRINCETON -- "Beyond the Visible: A Conservator's Perspective," an exhibition devoted to art conservation organized by museum conservator Norman Muller, will be on view at the Princeton University Art Museum from September 21, 2002, through January 5, 2003.

The exhibition will focus on the techniques and materials of nine old master paintings in the museum's collection. It will present documentary material and technical photographs that describe the examination process of each work preceding actual conservation treatment.

In one example, an infrared reflectogram digital composite of the Madonna and Child with Saints by the sixteenth-century Sienese artist Girolamo Genga shows an underdrawing of tiny black dots -- the traces from a cartoon used to transfer the design from the sheet of paper to the white-grounded panel.

In another painting the artist's technique is illustrated in an enlarged color photograph of a cross-section of the double-ground layer.

For a very damaged Madonna and Child by the fifteenth-century Sienese artist Andrea di Bartolo, the original colors are reproduced in a color photograph based on a technical examination of tiny pigment samples.

Two of the paintings on view have never before been exhibited due to their fragile condition.

Web Site Project on Conservation

The di Bartolo Madonna and Child altarpiece also will be the subject of a special project on the museum's web site entitled "Recapturing the Image," which will be launched this fall in conjunction with the exhibition "Beyond the Visible: A Conservator's Perspective."

Through a series of interactive experiences, the site will lead visitors through the construction of a fifteenth-century altarpiece: from the carpenter's preparation of the wood support and the painter's application of the pigments and gold and silver leaf, to the joining of the panels.

As part of the painting's recent conservation, Bruce Hardin Suffield, assistant conservator at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, created a digital reconstruction of the panel as it might have looked in its original state. The web project will walk viewers through his examination process, including the methods he used to determine the original pigments.

Conservator Norman Muller's insights into changes in Italian altarpiece construction will be explored through X-rays and photographs taken under raking illumination. While the panel will not always be on view, this site will serve as a permanent resource for students, scholars, and the museum's general audience. The project is designed by Janet Strohl, the museum's technical computer support specialist.

Related Event
Gallery Talk

"Beyond the Visible: Materials and Techniques of Old Master Paintings"
Norman Muller, museum conservator
November 22, 12:30 p.m., and November 24, 3:00 p.m.

The museum is open to the public without charge. Free highlights tours of the collection are given every Saturday at 2:00 p.m. The museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and on Sunday from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. It is closed on Monday and major holidays. The museum shop closes at 5:00 p.m. The museum is located in the middle of the Princeton University campus, next to Prospect House and Gardens. Due to construction, visitors should use the staff entrance on the west side of the building, across the green from Dodd Hall. For further information, please call (609) 258-3788, or visit our new web site at www.princetonartmuseum.org.


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