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Chemists test laser cleanup of paintings. (The Dirt on Art).


To keep the world's treasury of paintings looking up to snuff not likely to be imposed upon; knowing; acute.
- Shak.

See under Snuff.

See also: Snuff Up
, museum conservators fight the beauty-stealing tides of dirt, age, and more acute forces, such as floods and fire. Now, it seems, they might consider adding lasers to their centuries-old closet of cleaning gear.

Conservators usually freshen up Verb 1. freshen up - make brighter and prettier; "we refurbished the guest wing"; "My wife wants us to renovate"
refurbish, renovate

gentrify - renovate so as to make it conform to middle-class aspirations; "gentrify a row of old houses"; "gentrify the old
 paintings with the equivalent of gentle scrubbing, often with chemical solvents. Because they have much higher precision, lasers can potentially improve on these techniques for removing unwanted soot soot, black or dull brown deposit of fine powder resulting from incomplete combustion of fuel of high carbon content, e.g., coal, wood, and oil. It consists chiefly of amorphous carbon and tarry substances that cause it to adhere to surfaces. , paint, or varnish varnish, homogeneous solution of gum or of natural or synthetic resins in oil (oil varnish) or in a volatile solvent (spirit varnish), which dries on exposure to air, forming a thin, hard, usually glossy film. , says Marta Castillejo of the Institute of Physical Chemistry Rocasolano in Madrid. Although restorers sometimes use lasers to bust dirt off museum pieces, they haven't embraced them widely, especially not for paintings.

"We all recognize that it's a valuable tool and has great potential," says conservator conservator n. a guardian and protector appointed by a judge to protect and manage the financial affairs and/or the person's daily life due to physical or mental limitations or old age.  Craig Deller of the Deller Conservation Group in Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
, Ill., "but I think there may be hesitance."

In the Sept. 15 Analytical Chemistry analytical chemistry: see under chemistry. , Castillejo and her coworkers report how pulses from an ultraviolet laser affect the condition of tempera paintings similar to ones hanging on many museum walls. They also used spectroscopy to monitor the material removed by the laser as it comes off the painting.

The research team prepared model paintings for the experiments using a variety of organic and inorganic pigments and artificially aged them with fluorescent light. Over some of their samples, the researchers also applied layers of varnish, which often cover real paintings and can yellow with time.

The studies show that the laser system can safely remove some varnish from a painting as long as a thin layer of it remains behind to protect the underlying paint, says Castillejo. On unvarnished samples, some types of paint fared better than others under laser cleaning. For instance, some pigments--mostly inorganic paints--showed signs of discoloration dis·col·or·a·tion  
n.
1.
a. The act of discoloring.

b. The condition of being discolored.

2. A discolored spot, smudge, or area; a stain.

Noun 1.
.

"The results of this research demonstrate the viability of the laser cleaning ... of paintings," says Castillejo.

"They're doing the right thing," says Charles Tumosa of the Smithsonian Center for Materials Research and Education in Suitland, Md. "You have to show the technique is safe before you use it."

Even so, Tumosa says, the data don't merit an enthusiastic acceptance of laser cleaning. For example, he says that he's unconvinced that a painting remains unharmed when a laser removes some of its varnish. Moreover, lead white--the pigment most susceptible to color change--is one of the most widely used in art.

"It's not the magic solution for every problem," Castillejo admits.
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Article Details
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Author:Gorman, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUSP
Date:Sep 21, 2002
Words:401
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