Bartc
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This article goes into the controversy surrounding recreation of color painting on top of ancient marble sculptures. While the scientifically verified certainty is that much of the "white" statuary was actually painted, I too find these recreations jarring.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/17/arts/design/reproductions-museums-sculpture-met-brinkmann-antiquity-polychromy.html?te=1&nl=the-morning&emc=edit_nn_20220826
Part of my problem is not about doubting the accuracy, rather about what those colors obscure. Firstly, even using verifiable pigmentation, those colors are so chromatically saturated and flat that they almost make the statues lose some of their 3D qualities to my eye; certainly in photos, if not also in person.
Much of the real genius evident in the best ancient statuary is in the extraordinary ability to suggest skin, the drape of fabric, bodies underneath garments, and compositional dynamism. Those become really apparent when you see them live without paint. To my view the paint obscures those effects too well.
Imagine you painted a masterpiece, then covered it over with layers of dense varnish that had yellowed. I guess that implies that when overpainting sculpture you are doing the reverse of over-varnishing (or aging varnish) on paintings, but the effect for my taste and view is essentially the same: something good is lost!
See what you think.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/17/arts/design/reproductions-museums-sculpture-met-brinkmann-antiquity-polychromy.html?te=1&nl=the-morning&emc=edit_nn_20220826
Part of my problem is not about doubting the accuracy, rather about what those colors obscure. Firstly, even using verifiable pigmentation, those colors are so chromatically saturated and flat that they almost make the statues lose some of their 3D qualities to my eye; certainly in photos, if not also in person.
Much of the real genius evident in the best ancient statuary is in the extraordinary ability to suggest skin, the drape of fabric, bodies underneath garments, and compositional dynamism. Those become really apparent when you see them live without paint. To my view the paint obscures those effects too well.
Imagine you painted a masterpiece, then covered it over with layers of dense varnish that had yellowed. I guess that implies that when overpainting sculpture you are doing the reverse of over-varnishing (or aging varnish) on paintings, but the effect for my taste and view is essentially the same: something good is lost!
See what you think.