The Structural Conservation of Panel Paintings

(Amelia) #1
should be of only a single plank free from sapwood. The text of Beurs
implicitly suggests that the use of other wood species would probably have
been experimental in nature.
This recommendation for using oak is in accordance with prac-
tice. However, exceptions are seen rather early in the seventeenth century:
sometimes walnut, pearwood, cedarwood, or Indian wood were used
instead. Mahogany was already in use by a number of painters during
thefirst decades of the seventeenth century and was used often in the
Netherlands in the nineteenth century. Even so, when canvas or copper
was not used, the main oeuvre of the northern school was painted on
oak panels.

The quality of an oak panel can be seen from its grain. If the medullary
rays in an oak panel are visible, the quality should be good, because this
shows that the plank was radially split or cut out of the tree trunk (Fig. 2).
The density of the wood is also important to the quality. Before 1630–40
the year rings (whose formation depends on age, physical location, and
climatological factors) are often found to be narrower than those of oak
trees available after this date.^5
In the sixteenth century sapwood is rarely seen on panels, but in
the seventeenth century a narrow edge of it is often recognized on one
side—in violation of guild rules that threatened a fine for the use ofsap-
wood (Van Der Straelen 1855). However, as panels inspected by the guild
keurmeesters(assay masters/inspectors) also show faults in the wood, this
may well be a consequence of the higher price of wood during the politi-
cally turbulent years in the beginning of the seventeenth century; or
perhaps there was such a high demand for panels that less control was
exercised over their production.

Quality ofWood


H O  P-M T   N C 151

König sberg
Elb in g
Marie nburg
STATE OF THE TEUTO NI C ORDE R

KINGDOMOF
POLAND Wars aw MAZOVIA

Cra cow

Dan zig

LIT HUANIA

BALTIC

SEA

Thorn

Figure 1
Vistula River basin with the main sources of
wood (marked by dots). Political borders are
those of the first half of the fifteenth century.

Free download pdf