Fall 2015 Intern
It’s easy for a work of art to be
lost to the ages and, unfortunately, all too common. But what about art that’s
been hidden behind other art? Though not as common as a piece simply being
destroyed, there is a surprising number of paintings underneath other paintings.
Discovering these hidden works has been almost impossible until recently, when
X-ray technology has given art historians the opportunity to see behind art
without damaging it. Nowadays, art and history lovers are able to have their
cake and eat it too.
Pablo Picasso’s The Blue Room (1901) has been part of the
Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, since 1927. Having long been suspected
to have something under the surface, the painting was subjected to X-ray technology
in the 1990s, which revealed a fuzzy image. More recent imaging has divulged
clearer results: a painting of a mustachioed
man. But why is he there? Curator Susan Behrends Frank says
that in 1901 Picasso “could not afford to acquire new canvasses every time he
had an idea that he wanted to pursue.”Thus, he repurposed the canvas for the
work we know today. X-ray imaging was also used to discover that a hidden N. C.
Wyeth painting was actually in full
color, not just black and white as was previously thought.
In a much lower-tech example, an
oil sketch by John Constable was
found beneath another painting of his, Branch
Hill Pond: Hampstead (ca. 1821–22). The oil painting was discovered beneath
a lining canvas after it came loose.
A 500-year-old wall with a mural by
Giorgio Vasari on it was believed to be hiding the lost Leonardo da Vinci
painting The Battle of Anghiari. Restorers
attempted to search for the painting through existing gaps in the Vasari mural
using endoscopic
technology. Unfortunately, the search was discontinued in September of 2012,
as many art historians saw the process as invasive and potentially damaging to
the Vasari mural. We may never know if da Vinci’s legendary painting is behind
the wall, but this mystery and other discoveries are leaving the door open to
whole new possibilities.
DID YOU KNOW?
Sometimes, hidden art is never meant
to be seen again. Artist and construction worker Pajtim Osmanaj turned
a job site into his canvas, using his off-time to create paintings that
would soon be bricked over. It’s an interesting project that adds artistic
value to the building, whether future tenants will know it or not.
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