A place for friends to meet... with reflections on politics, history, art, music, books, morals, manners, and matters of faith.
A blog by Elena Maria Vidal.
Ancient
sculptors were very much interested in color as well as form; the white
marble statues we admire looked stunningly different in antiquity. They
were painted with a palette that displayed a sophisticated
understanding of color and shading.
To illustrate how a marble Aphrodite might have appeared to the
ancients, we asked German archaeologist Vinzenz Brinkmann, who has
pioneered techniques of color restoration, to create a photomechanical
reconstruction—never before published—of the first-century A.D. Roman
Lovatelli Venus. It was excavated from the ruins of a villa in Pompeii.
Unlike most ancient statues, this one gave Brinkmann a head start,
because copious evidence of original paint survived. “There are rich
traces of pigment which we analyzed using noninvasive methods such as
UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy,” he explains. “What we do is absolutely
faithful, based on physical and chemical measurements.”(Read entire article.)
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would never have guessed!
ReplyDeleteI have heard of this. I think the statues were much more garish than we realize.
ReplyDeleteAnd BLOND! that is too much.
Isn't it funny how we think they are so "classically" done all white when in reality they were so very decorative. btw I love smithsonian's website.
ReplyDelete