Analysis of Modern Paints

Analysis of Modern Paints

Author: Tom Learner

Publisher: Getty Publications

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 232

ISBN-13: 9780892367795

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Outlines the techniques that are currently employed to analyze the synthetic resins used in modern painting materials, such as pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and direct temperature-resolved mass spectrometry. For each technique, results are given for standard samples of the principal classes of synthetic binding media, various pigments and extenders, tube paint formulations, and microscopic paint fragments taken from actual works of art.


The Impact of Modern Paints

The Impact of Modern Paints

Author: Jo Crook

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 204

ISBN-13:

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This text examines the role that the latest paints have played in the work of ten influential artists, including Peter Blake, David Hockney and Roy Lichenstein. Their careers are recounted, from around 1960 onwards, via detailed interviews with them or their assistants.


House Paints, 1900-1960

House Paints, 1900-1960

Author: Harriet A. L. Standeven

Publisher: Getty Publications

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 1606060678

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The versatility of modern commercial house paints has ensured their use in a broad range of applications, including the protection and decoration of historic buildings, the coating of toys and furniture, and the creation of works of art. Historically, house paints were based on naturally occurring oils, gums, resins, and proteins, but in the early twentieth century, the introduction of synthetic resins revolutionized the industry. Good quality ready-mixed products became available and were used by artists worldwide. While the ubiquity of commercial paints means that conservators are increasingly called upon to preserve them, such paints pose unique challenges including establishing exactly which materials are present. This book traces the history of the household paint industry in the United States and United Kingdom over the first half of the twentieth century. It includes chapters on the artistic use of commercial paints and the development of ready-mixed paints and synthetic resins; oil paints, oleoresinous gloss and enamel paints, water paints, nitrocellulose lacquers, oil-modified alkyds, and emulsion paints; and the conservation implications of these materials. The book will be of interest to conservators and conservation scientists working on a broad range of painted surfaces, as well as curators, art historians, and historians of architectural paint.


Conservation of Modern Oil Paintings

Conservation of Modern Oil Paintings

Author: Klaas Jan van den Berg

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2020-02-17

Total Pages: 611

ISBN-13: 3030192547

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Artists’ oil paints have become increasingly complex and diverse in the 20th Century, applied by artists in a variety of ways. This has led to a number of issues that pose increasing difficulties to conservators and collection keepers. A deeper knowledge of the artists’ intent as well as processes associated with material changes in paintings is important to conservation, which is almost always a compromise between material preservation and aesthetics. This volume represents 46 peer-reviewed papers presented at the Conference of Modern Oil Paints held in Amsterdam in 2018. The book contains a compilation of articles on oil paints and paintings in the 20th Century, partly presenting the outcome of the European JPI project ‘Cleaning of Modern Oil Paints’. It is also a follow-up on ‘Issues in Contemporary Oil Paint’ (Springer, 2014). The chapters cover a range of themes and topics such as: patents and paint manufacturing in the 20th Century; characterization of modern-contemporary oil paints and paint surfaces; artists’ materials and techniques; the artists’ voice and influence on perception of curators, conservators and scientists; model studies on paint degradation and long term stability; approaches to conservation of oil paintings; practical surface treatment and display. The book will help conservators and curators recognise problems and interpret visual changes on paintings, which in turn give a more solid basis for decisions on the treatment of these paintings.


The Science of Paintings

The Science of Paintings

Author: W.Stanley Jr. Taft

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2013-04-24

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781475773880

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The physics and materials science behind paintings: the pigments, binders, canvas, and varnish that go into making a painting appear the way it does. The text discusses the physical principles behind the colors seen and how these change with illumination, the various types of paint and binders used in both old and modern paintings, and the optics and microscopic structure of paint films. Chapters on dating, binders, and dendochronology have been contributed by experts in the respective fields.


Scientific Examination of Art

Scientific Examination of Art

Author:

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 2005-01-01

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 0309096251

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Examines the application of scientific methods to the study and conservation of art and cultural properties. This work addresses scientific topics of broad interest, cutting across the boundaries of traditional disciplines and attracting up to 250 leadingresearchers in the field.


Paint Analysis

Paint Analysis

Author: Roger Dietrich

Publisher: Vincentz

Published: 2009-11-05

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9783866309128

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The book deals with the applications of modern techniques in paint analysis with a special focus on surface analysis. Topics covered include: Surface cleaning, and how to be sure a visually clean surface is truly free from residues before applying a coating Ensuring the paint and painted substrate match on a chemical basis, in order to achieve good adhesion results Pretreatments to improve paint adhesion Ingredients of paint and how they behave with respect to the surface to be painted The effect paint additives have on paint adhesion The effect polymer substrates, including various polymer additives, have on paint adhesion New polymer types and polymer additives used in the automotive industry and their implications for paint manufacture and application The questions surrounding paint adhesion commonly can't be answered by simple tests or classical chemical analysis because they require the ability to analyze very small amounts of substances with a high surface sensitivity at the same time. Roger Dietrich sets out in detail the methods needed for these analytical processes.