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Images
The fine art of
stripping
Careful chemistry has revealed a rich history in a Melbourne school hall
Media release
23 August
Careful chemistry has peeled
back two layers of house paint to unveil a rich world of Victorian murals at
Mandeville Hall-Loreto Girls School in Toorak. Called the Indian Room, the walls
were decorated in the 1870s with paintings of lush green foliage and vegetation,
bordered with red draperies and golden architectural detail.
But for the past 50 years, the exotic artworks have lain
under a shroud of thick white and grey paint. Stripping the overlying paint
without eating into the murals beneath presented quite a challenge. That’s where
art conservator and applied chemist Jocelyn Evans from Melbourne University’s
Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation (CCMC) stepped in.
“Overpaint—where the original paint layer of an art-work
or mural is covered by later paint like house-paint—is a common problem in
conservation,” she says. “The difficulty lies in trying to remove the overpaint
without damaging the original. Most chemical systems that attack the overpaint
also harm the original paint.”
Evans had to develop her own paint removal system. It was
based around a slow-acting paint stripper, called a dibasic ester. “In essence,
dibasic esters have a strong softening effect on paint films. But unlike other
chemicals commonly used in paint-strippers, they penetrate quite slowly,
allowing us to remove the upper paint layer before they can reach the original
layer underneath.”
While conservators have already used commercial paint
strippers based on dibasic esters to remove non-original paint in a variety of
contexts, the idea that they could be used to remove overpaint from an original
paint layer, leaving it intact, had not been fully explored. In the meantime,
commercial paint strippers based on dibasic esters were withdrawn from the
Australian market, apparently due to poor sales.
In her investigation, Evans looked at how dibasic esters
act on paint layers, and how conservators could use them to remove non-original
paint. This involved devising (and testing) a range of formulations from
materials that Australian conservators would have ready access to. The end
result was the paint-removal system used successfully at Mandeville Hall.
“It’s impossible to describe the feeling when uncovering
these astonishing murals, and being the first to see them in decades” says
Evans. “Conservation is such an exciting blend of science and art. In this
project I was able to apply chemical principles to a real-life problem, with
such a visually beautiful result at the end of it all.”
- Stripping in action:
removing house-paint from a 19th century mural (Jocelyn Evans and
Raaf Ishak from The Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation)
Images:
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The finished product:
reinstated mural at Mandeville Hall (Loreto Girls School)
Bottom
edge of the frieze showing red drapery with gold detail.
The top of the wall
shows lush green foliage and gold detail. |
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| Working
on a piece of the wall the size of an A4 page at a time, it comes down
to a razor blade to remove the house paint. |
Conservation under
construction: scaffolding and partly-treated mural |
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