Paul Ackroyd, Susan Foister, Marika Spring, Raymond White and Rachel Billinge
Technical Bulletin Volume 21, 2000
Abstract
A detailed technical examination was carried out on the panel painting often known as Madonna with the Iris, which has been described most recently as 'school of Dürer' and which was considered to have been painted soon after Dürer's death.
Many of the materials match in detail those found in contemporary paintings, for example: hairs or fibres reinforcing inserts where knots were, a red lake of kermes on a calcium-containing substrate, and verdigris with a small amount of copper chloride.
IR reflectography and an improved X-radiograph made after removal of a cradle enabled the evolution of the image to be compared to Dürer's work. GC-MS analysis of an early varnish layer as a spirit varnish such as sandarac, and of a varnish below the monogram as manila copal (only available from the end of the 18th century), led to a greater understanding of which parts of the composition could indeed have been painted by Dürer. An early 16th-century date is likely, and production in Dürer's workshop is entirely possible.
Keywords
Albrecht Dürer, attribution, infrared reflectography, panel paintings, radiography, workshops (organisations)
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A Virgin and Child from the Workshop of Albrecht Dürer?, Paul Ackroyd, Susan Foister, Marika Spring, Raymond White and Rachel Billinge (text-only RTF 0.22MB)
To cite this article we suggest using
Ackroyd, P., Foister, S., Spring, M., White, R., Billinge, R. 'A Virgin and Child from the Workshop of Albrecht Dürer?'. National Gallery Technical Bulletin Vol 21, pp 28–42.
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/technical-bulletin/ackroyd_foister_spring_white_billinge2000
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