Technical analysis of a Central Asian wall painting detached from a Buddhist cave temple on the northern Silk Road

A great number of Central Asian wall paintings, archeological materials, architectural fragments, and textiles, as well as painting fragments on silk and paper, make up the so called Turfan Collection at the Asian Art Museum in Berlin. The largest part of the collection comes from the Kucha region,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in conservation 2016-03, Vol.61 (2), p.113-122
Hauptverfasser: Schmidt, Birgit Angelika, Ziemann, Martin Andreas, Pentzien, Simone, Gabsch, Toralf, Koch, Werner, Krüger, Jörg
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container_end_page 122
container_issue 2
container_start_page 113
container_title Studies in conservation
container_volume 61
creator Schmidt, Birgit Angelika
Ziemann, Martin Andreas
Pentzien, Simone
Gabsch, Toralf
Koch, Werner
Krüger, Jörg
description A great number of Central Asian wall paintings, archeological materials, architectural fragments, and textiles, as well as painting fragments on silk and paper, make up the so called Turfan Collection at the Asian Art Museum in Berlin. The largest part of the collection comes from the Kucha region, a very important cultural center in the third to ninth centuries. Between 1902 and 1914, four German expeditions traveled along the northern Silk Road. During these expeditions, wall paintings were detached from their original settings in Buddhist cave complexes. This paper reports a technical study of a wall painting, existing in eight fragments, from the Buddhist cave no. 40 (Ritterhöhle). Its original painted surface is soot blackened and largely illegible. Grünwedel, leader of the first and third expeditions, described the almost complete destruction of the rediscovered temple complex and evidence of fire damage. The aim of this case study is to identify the materials used for the wall paintings. Furthermore, soot deposits as well as materials from conservation interventions were of interest. Non-invasive analyses were preferred but a limited number of samples were taken to provide more precise information on the painting technique. By employing optical and scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, micro X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction analysis, and Raman spectroscopy, a layer sequence of earthen render, a ground layer made of gypsum, and a paint layer containing a variety of inorganic pigments were identified.
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Central Asia
EDX
Microscopy
Pigments
Raman spectroscopy
Silk Road
Wall paintings
XRF
title Technical analysis of a Central Asian wall painting detached from a Buddhist cave temple on the northern Silk Road
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