The Structural Conservation of Panel Paintings

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  a sur vey of the history of structural panel
painting treatments in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Since
much historical research remains to be done on this subject, the
present discussion must be somewhat schematic.

Beginning in the late eighteenth century, some literature about restoration
appears in the German language. Contemporary journals in technology
and fine arts published news about art techniques and gav e information
about recent restoration treatments of famous works of art. Articles pub-
lished in French or English were usually translated into German, very often
within the same year. For example, a translated extract from the important
English book The Handmaid to the Artsappeared immediately in 1758
(Bibliothek1758). Names of prominent eighteenth-century restorers, such as
Robert Picault, were well known among the educated German classes. The
first Ger man report about Picault appeared in 1759 (Bibliothek1759:830).
From 1816 to 1849 the historian Ludwig Schorn edited the Kunstblatt(Dahn
1953), which presented, among other subjects, much information about
current restoration treatments and discussions about critical conservation
situations in museums, such as the circumstances in the Dresden Painting
Gallery during the early nineteenth century. Recent research about the
activities of Italian restorer Pietro Palmaroli in Dresden proves that these
journals received much public attention (Schölzel 1994:1–24).
All of the eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century literature
shows a lack of precise technical information about restoration. Due to
the zeitgeist, only a change in the aesthetic quality of a painting was con-
sidered worthy of description. Except for some small restoration books,
not one word concerning treatments of wooden painting supports appears
in the literature.
Three of the earliest important German-language books on
restoration appeared between 1827 and 1828 (Wagner 1988:11–30). The
firstsmall work, Über Restauration alter Oelgemäldeby the painter-restorer
Christian Köster (1784–1851) came out in 1827 in Heidelberg. It was fol-
lowed by two more booklets, in 1828 and 1830 (Köster 1827, 1828, 1830). In
the third booklet we find an appendix by Jacob Schlesinger entitled “Über
Tempera-Bilder und deren Restauration” (Köster 1830:35–47). Together
Köster and Schlesinger, who belonged to the group of so-called romantic
painter-restorers, carried out some restoration for the Boisserée brothers in

Critical Survey of the
Historical Sources

200


Ulrich Schiessl


History of Structural Panel Painting Conservation


in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland

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