Retouching for Days; The Restoration of a Jacopo Bassano Painting - Narrated
In this video the focus is the retouching process. Follow along as the losses and damage are reintegrated and the image comes together.
This painting arrived at the studio of Baumgartner Fine Art Restoration in Chicago in desperate need of attention. A previous conservation attempt proved to be unsuccessful and the painting was left in an unfinished and damaged state. Julian Baumgartner works to reintegrate the losses and unify the image including recreating a missing foot.
The painting was first cleaned of any existing grime and varnish residues and the areas of loss were filled in and textured to match the surrounding impasto. The painting then received an isolation layer of synthetic UV-stable resin before the retouching. Executed in Maimeri Restuaro and B72/Dowanol the retouching is isolated form the original paint layer, archival and fully reversible. Finally the piece received an additional layer of synthetic UV-stable varnish.
While the video is edited to show the most interesting parts of the retouching process and sped up to nearly 900 times the actual speed the total time spent was approximately 30 hours over a two week period.
Support me on Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/baumgartnerrestoration
Official Baumgartner Merch
https://teespring.com/stores/bfars-store
http://bfar.com/
https://instagram.com/baumgartnerrestoration
https://facebook.com/baumgartnerfineart
Stock Media provided by Major_minor / Pond5
Видео Retouching for Days; The Restoration of a Jacopo Bassano Painting - Narrated канала Baumgartner Restoration
This painting arrived at the studio of Baumgartner Fine Art Restoration in Chicago in desperate need of attention. A previous conservation attempt proved to be unsuccessful and the painting was left in an unfinished and damaged state. Julian Baumgartner works to reintegrate the losses and unify the image including recreating a missing foot.
The painting was first cleaned of any existing grime and varnish residues and the areas of loss were filled in and textured to match the surrounding impasto. The painting then received an isolation layer of synthetic UV-stable resin before the retouching. Executed in Maimeri Restuaro and B72/Dowanol the retouching is isolated form the original paint layer, archival and fully reversible. Finally the piece received an additional layer of synthetic UV-stable varnish.
While the video is edited to show the most interesting parts of the retouching process and sped up to nearly 900 times the actual speed the total time spent was approximately 30 hours over a two week period.
Support me on Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/baumgartnerrestoration
Official Baumgartner Merch
https://teespring.com/stores/bfars-store
http://bfar.com/
https://instagram.com/baumgartnerrestoration
https://facebook.com/baumgartnerfineart
Stock Media provided by Major_minor / Pond5
Видео Retouching for Days; The Restoration of a Jacopo Bassano Painting - Narrated канала Baumgartner Restoration
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
The Conservation of a Cornelius Janssens Portrait - NarratedThe Conservation of Salvator Mundi, No Not That One.The Brawler - Round 1 of 3The Conservation of George Inness' "The Roman Campagna"Norman Rockwell - Case Of The Missing InscriptionWood That It Were So Simple: Conserving A Split Panel Painting Part 1Blue Skies Smilin' At Me; Conserving A Henry Ranger SeascapeCompletely Different, Completely the SameThe Italian Job - Part 1 of 2Ex Multis Ad Unum - Restoring A Split Painting - NarratedThe Bold and BeeautifulWood That It Were So Simple: Conserving a Split Panel Painting Part 5Big Isn't Better, It's Just Better; The Restoration of St. FrancisScraping, Scraping, Scraping Or A Slow Descent Into Madness. The Conservation of Mathias J. AltenA New Dawn: The Restoration of L'Aurora Part 1A Heady Proposition - Part 1What Lies Beneath - Conserving Prince George - Episode 1Revisiting an Old Friend; The Second Conservation of AnneWhat Is Adequacy? Conserving Sir Winston Churchill