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Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping

The material study of ancient Egyptian paintings began with the advent of Egyptology during the 19th century. By the 1930s, a lot had already been sampled and described. The limited palette for example has been analysed from actual painted surfaces but also from pigments and painting tools retrieved...

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Autores principales: Martinez, Philippe, Alfeld, Matthias, Defeyt, Catherine, Elleithy, Hishaam, Glanville, Helen, Hartwig, Melinda, Hocquet, François-Philippe, Jaber, Maguy, Martinetto, Pauline, Strivay, David, Walter, Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37437004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287647
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author Martinez, Philippe
Alfeld, Matthias
Defeyt, Catherine
Elleithy, Hishaam
Glanville, Helen
Hartwig, Melinda
Hocquet, François-Philippe
Jaber, Maguy
Martinetto, Pauline
Strivay, David
Walter, Philippe
author_facet Martinez, Philippe
Alfeld, Matthias
Defeyt, Catherine
Elleithy, Hishaam
Glanville, Helen
Hartwig, Melinda
Hocquet, François-Philippe
Jaber, Maguy
Martinetto, Pauline
Strivay, David
Walter, Philippe
author_sort Martinez, Philippe
collection PubMed
description The material study of ancient Egyptian paintings began with the advent of Egyptology during the 19th century. By the 1930s, a lot had already been sampled and described. The limited palette for example has been analysed from actual painted surfaces but also from pigments and painting tools retrieved on site. However, most of these studies took place in museums while the painted surfaces, preserved in funerary chapels and temples, remained somewhat estranged from this primary physical understanding. The artistic process has been also reconstructed, mainly from the information presented by unfinished monuments, showing surfaces at different stages of completion. A lot of this modern and theoretical reconstruction is, however, based on the usual archaeological guessing game that aims at filling the remaining blanks. Our interdisciplinary project has decided to experiment on-site with state-of-the-art portable analysis tools, avoiding any physical sampling, to see if our knowledge of the work of the ancient Egyptian painters and draughtsmen could be taken at a further stage, while based on physical quantification that could be seen as a stronger and more reliable foundation for a redefined scientific hypothesis. The use of XRF mapping has, for instance, been applied to a known case of correction by surface repaint, something that is supposedly rare in the ancient Egyptian formal artistic process, while another fully unexpected one was discovered during the analytic exploration of a royal representation. In both cases, the precise and readable imaging of the physical composition of the painted surface offers a renewed visual approach based of chemistry, that can be shared through a multi- and interdisciplinary approach. However, this also leads to a more complex description of pigment mixtures that could have multiple meanings, where the practical often leads towards the symbolic, and from there hopefully to a renewed definition of the use of colours in complex sets of ancient Egyptian representations. At this stage, though the progress in this on-site material assessment of ancient works of art definitely means astonishing progress, one humbly has to face the fact that these ancient treasures shall still retain part of their defining mysteries.
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spelling pubmed-103378692023-07-13 Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping Martinez, Philippe Alfeld, Matthias Defeyt, Catherine Elleithy, Hishaam Glanville, Helen Hartwig, Melinda Hocquet, François-Philippe Jaber, Maguy Martinetto, Pauline Strivay, David Walter, Philippe PLoS One Research Article The material study of ancient Egyptian paintings began with the advent of Egyptology during the 19th century. By the 1930s, a lot had already been sampled and described. The limited palette for example has been analysed from actual painted surfaces but also from pigments and painting tools retrieved on site. However, most of these studies took place in museums while the painted surfaces, preserved in funerary chapels and temples, remained somewhat estranged from this primary physical understanding. The artistic process has been also reconstructed, mainly from the information presented by unfinished monuments, showing surfaces at different stages of completion. A lot of this modern and theoretical reconstruction is, however, based on the usual archaeological guessing game that aims at filling the remaining blanks. Our interdisciplinary project has decided to experiment on-site with state-of-the-art portable analysis tools, avoiding any physical sampling, to see if our knowledge of the work of the ancient Egyptian painters and draughtsmen could be taken at a further stage, while based on physical quantification that could be seen as a stronger and more reliable foundation for a redefined scientific hypothesis. The use of XRF mapping has, for instance, been applied to a known case of correction by surface repaint, something that is supposedly rare in the ancient Egyptian formal artistic process, while another fully unexpected one was discovered during the analytic exploration of a royal representation. In both cases, the precise and readable imaging of the physical composition of the painted surface offers a renewed visual approach based of chemistry, that can be shared through a multi- and interdisciplinary approach. However, this also leads to a more complex description of pigment mixtures that could have multiple meanings, where the practical often leads towards the symbolic, and from there hopefully to a renewed definition of the use of colours in complex sets of ancient Egyptian representations. At this stage, though the progress in this on-site material assessment of ancient works of art definitely means astonishing progress, one humbly has to face the fact that these ancient treasures shall still retain part of their defining mysteries. Public Library of Science 2023-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10337869/ /pubmed/37437004 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287647 Text en © 2023 Martinez et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Martinez, Philippe
Alfeld, Matthias
Defeyt, Catherine
Elleithy, Hishaam
Glanville, Helen
Hartwig, Melinda
Hocquet, François-Philippe
Jaber, Maguy
Martinetto, Pauline
Strivay, David
Walter, Philippe
Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title_full Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title_fullStr Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title_full_unstemmed Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title_short Hidden mysteries in ancient Egyptian paintings from the Theban Necropolis observed by in-situ XRF mapping
title_sort hidden mysteries in ancient egyptian paintings from the theban necropolis observed by in-situ xrf mapping
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10337869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37437004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0287647
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