Recovery is a process that attempts to restore cultural heritage to some previous countries that the diggers have imagined as "authentic". This is usually done in the past. However, by the end of the 20th century the concept of a separate conservation restoration was developed that prioritized preserving artwork for the future, and less by making it look pure. The restoration is controversial, as it often involves a permanent change to the original material of the artwork in order to make it "look good." The attitude that has grown in recent years with conservation development is an attempt to make all restorations reversible.
Video Restoration (cultural heritage)
Technique
Art preservation may involve cleaning and stabilizing artwork. Ideally, every process used is reversible, the departure from the ideal is not done lightly. Cleaning is not a reversible process and can sometimes be controversial due to concerns that cleaning will damage a piece, or on the grounds that damage or residue is part of a particular piece's history and should not be modified. Michelangelo's Michelangelo statue has undergone two cleansing to remove dirt accumulating on the statue's surface.
Art restoration is essential for the survival of classical paintings and is part of the scientific application of chemistry. It often involves research to determine the color and original material of a work.
Watercolor in fresco
The use of watercolor paint to anticipate damage to the fresco is an example of a technique used to achieve almost complete reversibility. This is a technique used in Da Vinci's 20th anniversary of The Last Supper in Milan. One of the most popular inpainting techniques used today is Tinted Varnish Treatment. This process is done after the piece is completely cleaned and varnished. The final step in the restoration process is to go to the points where the original paint may be lost, or where the holes are patched and other irregularities may be present. The restorer then enters with a colored varnish on top of an unpolluted varnish. This gives the illusion that the spots have been "repainted", when in fact they are just the point of colored lacquer. The most common "stippling" is used when using colored lacquer, so the light to reflect is similar to paint. This is done by using small dots in a single line for the variance.
Paint with light
In 2014, the Harvard Art Museum showcased the murals by Mark Rothko from 1961 and 1962 which have faded due to their original look in the dining room. It returns the work to their original appearance by projecting carefully calibrated digital light on each pixel of the original color photo, which makes the difference between the current and the original display without damaging the material.
Maps Restoration (cultural heritage)
History of art restoration
- An important event in the early history of art restoration was the restoration of the Chapist Sistine fresco, beginning in 1565.
- In the United States, the first art restoration company was founded in 1850 in New York City's Oliver Brothers Fine Art Restoration
- The world's first vacuum table for paint repainting was discovered in the 1920s. The patent was filed in 1937
See also
- Mending
- Conservator-restorer
- Paint preservation and restoration
- Arrange
- Kintsugi
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia