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Moisture uptake and permeability of canvas paintings and their components

Canvas paintings may show significant dimensional changes and experience internal stresses with fluctuating relative humidity. The relatively high and rapid absorption and drying of moisture within the different layers makes them more vulnerable than panel or wall paintings in comparable conditions....

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of cultural heritage 2016-05, Vol.19, p.445-453
Main Authors: Hendrickx, Roel, Desmarais, Guylaine, Weder, Markus, Ferreira, Ester S.B., Derome, Dominique
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Canvas paintings may show significant dimensional changes and experience internal stresses with fluctuating relative humidity. The relatively high and rapid absorption and drying of moisture within the different layers makes them more vulnerable than panel or wall paintings in comparable conditions. The dynamics of the moisture response is controlled by the water vapour permeability of the different layers. This paper presents a quantitative investigation of the vapour sorption and permeability of a selection of canvas painting components and of reconstructed paintings made of them. The selection of test samples was based on a survey of the materials used by Cuno Amiet in his early work and encompasses linen canvas, collagen glue sizing, chalk-glue ground and brown umber pigmented oil paint. Dynamic Vapour Sorption (DVS) tests were performed to obtain sorption isotherms. The vapour permeability was analysed in terms of the vapour resistance of layers and measured by means of wet cup and dry cup tests as well as in double chamber tests. The principle of incremental resistances was used to discriminate between the properties of the different layers. Whereas glue and canvas are comparable in being strongly absorbent, it appears that their vapour resistance is very different: a continuous glue film has a much higher vapour resistance than a canvas. In this context, we found that the method of applying glue sizing on a canvas influences the permeability of the resulting sized canvas: a gel size forms a more continuous glue film and hence leads to higher vapour resistance of the system, as opposed to a liquid size. Chalk-glue grounds have low moisture sorption, when compared to the high absorption of the proteinaceous glue, because they consist largely of chalk particles, which are not hygroscopic. The umber oil paint stands out for its low sorption and its high resistance to vapour transfer. These results characterise the highly heterogeneous nature of the multi-layered system of a painting in a quantitative way, enabling to better interpret damage phenomena and to make computational predictions of the influence of changing boundary conditions.
ISSN:1296-2074
1778-3674
DOI:10.1016/j.culher.2015.12.008