Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34946
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Title: | Biodeterioration in Art: a case study of Munch´s paintings. |
Authors: | Salvador, Cátia Sandu, Irina Sandbakken, Erika Candeias, António Caldeira, A. Teresa |
Keywords: | Cultural Heritage biodeterioration Edvard Munch paintings microbial communities Immunoenzymatic assays high throughput sequencing |
Issue Date: | 7-Feb-2022 |
Publisher: | The European Physical Journal Plus |
Citation: | Salvador, C., Sandu, I.C.A., Sandbakken, E. et al. Biodeterioration in art: a case study of Munch's paintings. Eur. Phys. J. Plus 137, 11 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjp/s13360-021-02187-0 |
Abstract: | Abstract Biocolonization and biodeterioration phenomena in Cultural Heritage is presently
considered a relevant issue when planning conservation strategies and preservation measures
in museum collections. Artworks such as easel paintings are source of various ecological
niches for microbial communities’ growth due to the presence of several organic resources.
Therefore, the identification of proteinaceous materials may play an important role in the
evaluation of their conservation status, in the characterisation of the artistic technique, and
in the definition of compatible conservation/restoration processes. Another challenge is to
understand the microbiota associated to the degradative processes when developing conservation strategies in CH artworks. For this study Edvard Munch paintings belonging to Munch
Museum in Oslo presenting surface alterations were analysed to increase the knowledge
about the materials used by the painter and try to understand the source and the dynamics of
the associated colonising microbiota, helping in devising a conservation intervention plan.
Immunoenzymatic assays was carried out in microsamples allowing the detection of casein
as the binder used by the artist. The high throughput sequencing approaches allowed us to
explore and characterise the microbial communities that colonise these artworks. Bacterial
communities found in these artworks were mainly composed by species characterised by proteolytic capacity, an important biodeteriogenic characteristic for these paintings. Simulation
assays performed in paint models prepared with casein as binder display signs of degradative
action promoted by the proteolytic strains isolated from the damaged areas. This approach
can be useful to promote effective intervention processes in E. Munch’s paintings with the
same pathologies. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34946 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | HERCULES - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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