18 research outputs found

    Proceeding Book of 12th European Symposium on Religious art, Restoration & Conservation

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    Fundamental contribution to filling out the condition reports of the work of arts involved in temporary exhibitions is provided by non-invasive investigation techniques. Investigation, carried out before and after the movement, allow to collect objective data to monitoring the surface or structural alterations and defining the state of conservation, representing an important moment of deepening of knowledge. Generally, these aspects often are left to photographic documentation and observations by conservators and curators. An example of good practice is represented by the case of the Saint Gregory Polyptych (Antonello da Messina, 1473) belonging to the Regional Museum of Messina (Italy). This artwork, constituting by five wooden panels [Madonna and Child, 129×77 cm; San Gregorio and San Benedetto, both 125×63 cm; Announcing Angel 65 × 62 cm, and Announced Virgin, 65 × 55 cm] has recently undergone to non-invasive investigations aimed to evaluate the conservation state of the wooden support and the pictorial layers before the moving to the temporary exhibition “Antonello da Messina” (Palazzo Abatellis, 14 December 2018 - 10 February 2019). This exhibition was the largest dedicated to the painter Antonello da Messina containing half of his existing works. Specifically, Raman and X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) spectroscopy investigation was carried out in situ with the aim to identify the molecular species, organic and inorganic respectively, present in the pictorial layer both in the pigment and binder form. In situ XRR (X-Ray Radiography imaging) was carried out to move the precious panels, through a conservative actions

    Results of diagnostic campaign promoted by AIAr in the deposits of the Archaeological Museum of Paestum

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    Thirty artefacts from the Archaeological Park of Paestum were investigated by means of scientific techniques on the occasion of the 2016 exhibition 'Possessione. Trafugamenti e falsi di antichita a Paestum'. The multi-analytic diagnostic campaign was aimed at identifying forgeries. Results provided a deeper understanding of both ancient technology and contemporary forgery techniques

    Religious colonialism in early modern Malta : inquisitorial imprisonment and inmate graffiti

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    Early modern Malta was governed by three institutions—the Order of St. John, the Bishopric, and the Roman Inquisition—which all ultimately answered to the Holy See. By focusing on the institution under the most direct Papal control, the inquisition, this paper seeks to explore the role of imprisonment in furthering the Vatican’s cultural and political control on the island. Through analyses of the prison cells and the inmate’s graffiti, I argue that the inquisition’s ability to imprison and negate the spectacle of public suffering was crucial to the Vatican’s colonial position in Malta
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