(ANSA) - ROME, MAR 29 - The great Renaissance masters added
egg yolk to their oil paints in order to protect their
masterpieces against yellowing and humidity and to prevent the
formation of cracks during drying, according to research
published in Nature Communications and led by Italian
scientists.
"So far, scientific investigations of paintings have mostly been
aimed at identifying the materials used by painters, but this is
not enough to understand the reasons behind the artistic
practice," Ilaria Bonaduce, an associate professor at the
Department of Chemistry and Industrial Chemistry at the
University of Pisa, told ANSA.
In their study, the researchers from the University of Pisa, the
National Research Council's Institute of Chemistry of
Organometallic Compounds and the National Interuniversity
Consortium for Materials Science and Technology (Instm) in
Florence focused on the practice of adding egg yolk to oil
paint, which was used by many famous painters, from Leonardo and
Botticelli to Durer, Vermeer and Rembrandt, among others.
"In the lab, we prepared paints with the addition of the yolk
and laid them out to study their chemical and physical
behavior," said Bonaduce.
The scientists found that the egg proteins coat the pigment
particles and prevent the absorption of ambient moisture.
In addition, the yolk makes the colour mixture more consistent,
prevents small cracks from forming during drying, and prevents
the pigments from yellowing.
"Now we are continuing to work using other analytical techniques
to investigate the microstructure, so we can then move on to
study famous paintings," Bonaduce continued.
"Samples of Sandro Botticelli's 'Lamentation over the Dead
Christ,' preserved in Munich, are already available, but we will
also work on other works by Titian and Ghirlandaio," she said.
(ANSA).
Great masters used egg yolk to preserve their paintings
Proteins protected against yellowing, cracking and humidity