Historical Painting Techniques, Materials, and Studio Practice

(Steven Felgate) #1

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  1. Elam, C. 1982. The Splendours oj the Gonzaga. Catalog. London: Victoria & Albert
    Museum, 122, entry no. 32.

  2. Lightbown, R. W 1986. Mantegna. Oxford, Berkeley, and Los Angeles, 446.

  3. I am indebted to Dusan Stulik, Michele Derrick, Michael Schilling, and Eric
    Doehne from the Getty Conservation Institute for their extensive media analysis.

  4. Mills,]., and R. White. 1978. National Gallery Technical Bulletin (2):71-76.

  5. White, R. 1984. The characterization of proteinaceous binders in art objects.
    National Gallery Technical Bulletin (8):5-14.

  6. Thompson, D. L. 1982. Mummy Portraits in the J. Paul Getty Museum. Malibu,
    California: The]. Paul Getty Museum, 7.

  7. Wolf thai, D. 1989. The Beginnings oj Netherlandish Canvas Painting: 1400 -15 30.
    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

  8. Leonard, M., F. Preusser, A. Rothe, and M. Schilling. 1988. Dieric Bouts's An­
    nunciation. The Burlington Magazine Guly): 517-522.

  9. Wolf thaI, op. cit., 6. See also 38-87 in catalogue.

  10. Illuminated manuscript artists used media, such as gum arabic, that are similar to
    watercolors and have very similar optical properties to distemper paint.

  11. Mantegna was known to have been an exasperatingly slow painter, as revealed
    in the correspondence with his benefactor, Ludovico Gonzaga, the Marquis of
    Mantua.

  12. Kristeller, P 1902. Andrea Mantegna. London, 534, doc. 69.

  13. Cennini, C. 1960. The Crciftsman's Handbook. Translated by D. V Thompson. New
    York: Dover Publications, 87.

  14. White, op. cit., 5-14.

  15. Merrifield, M. P 1849. Original Treatises on the Arts oj Painting. London: John
    Murray, 232.

  16. Ibid., 89-90.

  17. Ibid., 255.

  18. Ibid., 262.

  19. Ibid.

  20. Ibid., 262-64.

  21. Ibid., 282.

  22. De Arte Iliuminandi. 1933. Translated from the Latin (Naples MS XII.E.27) by
    D. V Thompson and G. H. Hamilton. New Haven: Yale University Press, 12-



  23. Eastlake, C. L. 1960. Methods and Materials oj Painting oj the Great Schools and
    Masters. Vol. 1. New York: Dover Publications, 106-7.

  24. De Arte Iliuminandi, op. cit., 13.

  25. Strainers differ from stretchers in that they have no keys. Stretchers became
    widely used after the eighteenth century.

  26. The Ecce Homo has the original panel, confirmed by carbon-14 dating, on which
    the original canvas is glued only by its edges to the back of the panel. The
    Presentation still has its original strainer with two original backing boards inserted
    into the strainer, as if it were on panel. The Lamentation in the Brera, which no
    longer has its original support, quite probably had one similar to the Presentation.

  27. Newberry, T., G. Bisacca, and L. Kanter. 1990. Italian Renaissance Frames. New
    York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, no. 63 (diagram erroneously under no.
    64).

  28. So far, not a single painting of Mantegna's has been identified as painted in
    oil, even though there are records of his having ordered walnut oil.


Historical Painting Techniques, Materials, and Studio Practice
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