The Structural Conservation of Panel Paintings

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 of paintings treated at the Hamilton
Kerr Institute (HKI) in Cambridge, England, have been on wooden
supports. This article uses examples to show the underlying causes
and mechanisms that determine treatment decisions in practice.

Scales ofdamage and treatment constraints


Large panels have sufficient weight and size in the cross-grain dimension^1
so that a number of considerations arise that are generally less significant
in smaller panels. Greater damages are found—breaks of greater number
and length and larger areas of biological deterioration—with correspond-
ing treatment implications. Liters of (usually toxic) consolidant may be
needed for a large volume of insect-damaged wood, requiring large-scale
application methods and large-capacity fume extraction. Thus, treatment
methods are scaled accordingly and should be made as efficient as possible,
while, ofcourse, being subject to conservation demands.
Structural stabilization concerns for large panels must be balanced
with restrictions in time, cost, and methodology. The greater logistics gen-
erally make treatment more difficult, demand more time and appropriate
methods, and therefore increase total costs. Satisfactory results may
require a complex treatment and some ingenuity.

Environmental considerations and wood movement


Environmental conditions are constantly changing, however slightly, so that
panels of wood are constantlymoving in response to changing moisture
content (MC).^2 Depending on the panel structure, such wood movementmay
be relatively small or slow, and therefore not easily perceived. Generally,
larger panels change MC more slowly, although movement may still be rel-
atively fast, especially for thinner panels. Even when housed with the best
environmental controls, panel paintings are unlikely to reach a stable equi-
librium moisture content (EMC) with level moisture gradients and cessa-
tion ofmovement.
Relative humidity (RH) should be as stable as possible during
treatment. Total lateralmovement (across the wood grain and in the plane
ofthe panel)^3 and warpmovement (perpendicular to the panel plane)
vary directly with the panel’s dimension across the grain.^4 The location

General Considerations


Practical Aspects of the Structural Conservation


of Large Panel Paintings


Al Brewer

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