Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies

The most important and rich collection of wooden sculptures in Italy is conserved at the National Museum of Palazzo Venezia in Rome. Some years ago, the study of this collection was carried out by the University of Urbino in collaboration with the Institute for Conservation and Valorization in Flore...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grazia Maria Fachechi, Susanna Bracci
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Instituto de Estudos Medievais 2019-06-01
Series:Medievalista
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/2281
id doaj-da60b848445e40109a19ecd1d1b1091a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-da60b848445e40109a19ecd1d1b1091a2020-11-25T01:22:54ZdeuInstituto de Estudos MedievaisMedievalista1646-740X2019-06-012610.4000/medievalista.2281Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studiesGrazia Maria FachechiSusanna BracciThe most important and rich collection of wooden sculptures in Italy is conserved at the National Museum of Palazzo Venezia in Rome. Some years ago, the study of this collection was carried out by the University of Urbino in collaboration with the Institute for Conservation and Valorization in Florence (ICVBC-CNR) thanks to funding by the Getty Foundation. This was an extraordinary opportunity for interdisciplinary research, between art history and technical-material scientific analysis, concerning the almost two hundred works preserved there, of different dating and provenance. Among them is the so-called Madonna di Acuto, one of the most fascinating wooden sculptures of the Romanesque period in Italy, remarkable for its stylistic quality and state of preservation. And it is precisely the interest aroused by this Madonna at the origin of a new research project, just started by the same team, dedicated to the polychrome sculpture of the Romanesque era in Italy; a subject that is still little frequented by scholars. The aim is to collect data concerning the historical-artistic and technical-material aspects, with particular attention to polychromy, and to create a digital database, to verify if, between the 11th and the third quarter of the 13th century, existed a “typical behaviors" by the masters of lumber operating in a specific geographical area. This will help to establish the relationship, which was certainly created, between the nature of pigments, iconography, and symbolism of colors.http://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/2281Museum of Palazzo Venezia in RomeMadonna di AcutoRomanesque Italian wood sculptureDigital databaseInterdisciplinary research
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grazia Maria Fachechi
Susanna Bracci
spellingShingle Grazia Maria Fachechi
Susanna Bracci
Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
Medievalista
Museum of Palazzo Venezia in Rome
Madonna di Acuto
Romanesque Italian wood sculpture
Digital database
Interdisciplinary research
author_facet Grazia Maria Fachechi
Susanna Bracci
author_sort Grazia Maria Fachechi
title Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
title_short Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
title_full Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
title_fullStr Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
title_full_unstemmed Romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in Italy: towards a Corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
title_sort romanesque polychrome wood sculptures in italy: towards a corpus and a comparative analysis of the data from art-historical and technical studies
publisher Instituto de Estudos Medievais
series Medievalista
issn 1646-740X
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The most important and rich collection of wooden sculptures in Italy is conserved at the National Museum of Palazzo Venezia in Rome. Some years ago, the study of this collection was carried out by the University of Urbino in collaboration with the Institute for Conservation and Valorization in Florence (ICVBC-CNR) thanks to funding by the Getty Foundation. This was an extraordinary opportunity for interdisciplinary research, between art history and technical-material scientific analysis, concerning the almost two hundred works preserved there, of different dating and provenance. Among them is the so-called Madonna di Acuto, one of the most fascinating wooden sculptures of the Romanesque period in Italy, remarkable for its stylistic quality and state of preservation. And it is precisely the interest aroused by this Madonna at the origin of a new research project, just started by the same team, dedicated to the polychrome sculpture of the Romanesque era in Italy; a subject that is still little frequented by scholars. The aim is to collect data concerning the historical-artistic and technical-material aspects, with particular attention to polychromy, and to create a digital database, to verify if, between the 11th and the third quarter of the 13th century, existed a “typical behaviors" by the masters of lumber operating in a specific geographical area. This will help to establish the relationship, which was certainly created, between the nature of pigments, iconography, and symbolism of colors.
topic Museum of Palazzo Venezia in Rome
Madonna di Acuto
Romanesque Italian wood sculpture
Digital database
Interdisciplinary research
url http://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/2281
work_keys_str_mv AT graziamariafachechi romanesquepolychromewoodsculpturesinitalytowardsacorpusandacomparativeanalysisofthedatafromarthistoricalandtechnicalstudies
AT susannabracci romanesquepolychromewoodsculpturesinitalytowardsacorpusandacomparativeanalysisofthedatafromarthistoricalandtechnicalstudies
_version_ 1725124793293864960