Abstract

Sixteenth century wall paintings were analyzed from a church in an advanced state of decay in the Apennines of central Italy, now a remote area but once located along the salt routes from the Po Valley to the Ligurian Sea. Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR-ATR), X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with a microprobe were used to identify the painting materials, as input for possible future restoration. Together with the pigments traditionally used for wall painting, such as ochre, ultramarine blue, bianco di Sangiovanni, cinnabar/vermilion, azurite, some colors were also found to have only been used since the 18th century. This thus suggests that a series of decorative cycles occurred after the church was built, confirmed by the multilayer stratigraphy of the fragments. Some of these colors were also unusual, such as clinochlore, Brunswick green, and ultramarine yellow. The most notable result of the analytical campaign however, was the ubiquitous determination of aragonite, the mineralogical form of calcium carbonate, mainly of biogenic origin. Sources report its use in Roman times as an aggregate in mortars, and in the literature it has only been shown in Roman wall paintings. Its use in 16th century wall paintings is thus surprising.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 12 September 2021Conservation science helps preserve the memory of monuments which have been shown to be in such a declining state of neglect and decay that time is running out.Monuments that very probably cannot be restored as part of a conservation project risk disappearing without a trace

  • The fragments analyzed had different colored layers that were identified by IR spectra and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis of the powders or suggested by EDX elemental spectra and maps (Table 1)

  • Yellow and red ochre were identified based on XRD and FTIR patterns, and confirmed by iron associated with silicon and aluminum in EDX maps

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Summary

Introduction

Conservation science helps preserve the memory of monuments which have been shown to be in such a declining state of neglect and decay that time is running out. Monuments that very probably cannot be restored as part of a conservation project risk disappearing without a trace. An analytical campaign of what is still possible to characterize can reveal the materials, artistic techniques, decorations to future memory of a disappearing beauty. The church of Santo Stefano in Selva (Cerignale) (Figure 1), in the Apennines of Piacenza (central Italy), is in a declining state of neglect and decay. Given its location in a remote area, with no tourism, it is not a high priority for the national heritage. The local community pressed for an analytical campaign on the fragments of the few surviving paintings, in order to preserve their memory

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