Abstract

Caspar David Friedrich (1774–1840), one of the most famous German 19th c. painters, created paintings throughout his artistic life using different paint palettes, including many new pigments from the turn from the 18th to the 19th century. In that regard especially blue and yellow pigments are the focus of this non‐invasive chemical study using X‐ray fluorescence imaging, as these are a landscape painter's major colours. Four paintings from the collection of the Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin‐Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, spanning over two important decades of Friedrich's artistic career, were investigated in situ to determine the chemical composition of the blue pigments used in the sky and the yellow hues used in the sunsets and moonlight. The results indicate the use of iron based yellow pigments as well as smalt based blue pigments in Friedrich's early works, while chromium‐based yellow pigments and cobalt blue are used in later paintings. The finding of cadmium sulphide in a painting dated in 1817, probably as a historical retouching, is interesting and requires further research. This in situ non‐invasive imaging study, although limited to one analytical technique, shows Friedrich's introduction of new synthetic pigments into his paint palette, which varies over the time. These results are important to better understand the painting technique of Caspar David Friedrich and his contemporaries.

Highlights

  • While visually engaging, paintings are valuable for their material nature

  • In that regard especially blue and yellow pigments are the focus of this non-invasive chemical study using X-ray fluorescence imaging, as these are a landscape painter's major colours

  • Four paintings from the collection of the Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin-Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, spanning over two important decades of Friedrich's artistic career, were investigated in situ to determine the chemical composition of the blue pigments used in the sky and the yellow hues used in the sunsets and moonlight

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Paintings are valuable for their material nature. The choice of pigments reflects the artistic, economic and technological circumstances of a painting's creation, namely the training of artists, their preferences, the price, as well as the availability and the perceived value of pigments. The material character of a painting is important for conservation purposes and has motivated the development of a multitude of instruments for the investigation of historical paintings.[1,2] A mayor development of the last years was a trend from the analysis carried out on carefully selected points to imaging techniques. That the study covered the aforementioned decades of the late 1810s and 1820s, which is the presumed period of a possible shift in Friedrich's choice of pigments from smalt to cobalt blue and from Naples yellow to chrome yellow. This investigation of the elemental composition and distribution of the blue and yellow pigments in the paintings was performed by XRF imaging. Spectra that were selected in this manner are labelled with an “*” and the areas they were selected from are indicated in the elemental distribution images

| RESULTS
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call