News Release

Dali gets a health check: Using medical devices to diagnose art

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University College London

Scientists and conservators have developed a new method to diagnose painting canvases from the back, without disturbing a single fibre, to see if they can withstand the stress of handling and travel.

Using the method - which is similar to the way doctors measure blood sugar without the need for needles – scientists examined 12 paintings by the surrealist painter Salvador Dalí.

They assessed the 'health' of the canvases, which are known to degrade with time due to acidity and environmental conditions. Once a canvas is brittle, expensive conservation is required.

While all 12 were shown to be in a good condition and can continue to be enjoyed safely, there was evidence of the early canvases approaching the threshold for safe travel. Interestingly, it was also shown that these same canvases were made of inexpensive low-quality cotton, used by the young Dalí who later became known also for his extravagant lifestyle.

The research is published in Royal Society of Chemistry journal Analytical Methods.

By shining invisible near infrared light on the canvas through fibre optics, scientists obtained information about the 'health' of the painting from the reflection of the light. Since canvas is the carrier of paint, any tears or other mechanical degradation could lead to loss of the image if the canvas is too brittle.

"While distressed paint layers can be evaluated visually from the front, there has been no method available so far to evaluate the fragility of canvas without actually cutting off a piece of it, which is certainly unacceptable" explained Irene Civil, Head of the Conservation Department of the Gala-Salvador Dalí Foundation from Figueres, Spain. The Foundation greets in excess of 1.5 million visitors annually, and relies on visitor income to take proper care of the invaluable artworks, some of which may also travel to exhibitions.

The development of the method to assess the health of the canvases was carried out in unique collaboration between researchers and conservators at the UCL (University College London) Centre for Sustainable Heritage, University of Barcelona's Department of Conservation, University of Ljubljana, University of London's Birkbeck College, and The British Library.

The research is part of Marta Oriola's (University of Barcelona) PhD Thesis on condition assessment of painting canvases. She said: "The method finally gives conservators the possibility to non-invasively evaluate the brittleness of a canvas, this was previously impossible. Also, we can now quickly assess what fibres the canvas is made of, which is important when designing a conservation treatment".

Dr Matija Strlic, Senior Lecturer from UCL's Centre for Sustainable Heritage, who has been supervising the method's development said: "In galleries and museums, one would usually wish to see a painting from the front. Well, not in the case of this research, where we have shown that looking at the back of a painting is not as surreal as it seems."

He added: "As in medical diagnostics, only close interdisciplinary collaboration between curators, conservators and researchers can lead to truly useful development. The non-invasive canvas health check can now improve the standard of management and care in any gallery or museum."

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Notes for editors

1. 'Looking beneath Dalí's paint: non-destructive canvas analysis' by M. Oriola, A. Možir, P. Garside, G. Campo, A. Nualart Torroja, I. Civil, M. Odlyha, M. Cassar, M. Strlic is published today in Analytical Methods (2013).

2. Copies of the paper are available from this link, once the embargo has lifted: http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2013/ay/c3ay41094

3. For copies of the paper before the embargo breaks, please contact Clare Ryan in the UCL Media Relations Office on tel: +44 (0)20 3108 3846, mobile: +44 (0)7747 565 056, out of hours +44 (0)7917 271 364, e-mail: clare.ryan@ucl.ac.uk.

Image

1. The Image Self-Portrait Splitting into Three, 1926 is available to journalists on request from UCL Media Relations

2. Caption: "I do not paint a portrait to look like the subject, rather does the person grow to look like his portrait," is one of Dalí's famous quotes particularly fitting to the featured Self-Portrait Splitting into Three, 1926. This is one of his early works on canvas made of cotton, prone to chemical splitting due to acidity and environmental influences. Researchers devised a technique to non-invasively diagnose the health of canvas to prevent tears and consequential image loss, thus helping to avoid unnecessary costly repair. © Salvador Dalí, Fundació Gala-Salvador Dalí, VEGAP, 2013.

Contacts

Press Department

Imma Parada
Fundació Gala- Salvador Dalí
Figueres, Spain
T: +34 972 677 518
comunicacio@fundaciodali.org

Marta Oriola Folch
Associate Professor
Department of Conservation
Faculty of Fine Arts
University of Barcelona
T: +34 93 126 00 11
martaoriola@ub.edu

Matija Strlic
Senior Lecturer
UCL Centre for Sustainable Heritage
The Bartlett School of Graduate Studies
University College London
T: +44 79 6492 5660
m.strlic@ucl.ac.uk


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