Polychrome Eng
Polychrome Eng
Polychrome Eng
CONSERVATION OF POLYCHROMED
WOODEN ALTARPIECES
Consejera de Cultura
Timothy P. Whalen
Director
Editor
Franoise Descamps
Assistant editor
Jennifer Carballo
Copy editor
Kate Macdonald
Translations
Cris Bain-Borrego
Alessandra Bonatti
Graphic design
Marcelo Martn Guglielmino
Printer
Escandon SA - Sevilla
Cover
Center
Drawing of Ornamental Top, Alonso Cano. Hamburger Kunsthalle. Photographs by Elke Walford, Hamburg
(Copyright Bildarchiv Preuischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, NY)
Top left
Main Altarpiece of Santos Juanes, Capilla Real de Granada, Spain. Photograph by Jos Manuel Santos, Madrid
(Copyright IAPH, Spain)
Center left Main Altarpiece of Santo Domingo de Guzmn, Yanhuitln, Oaxaca, Mxico. Photograph by Guillermo Aldana
(Copyright INAH, Mxico)
Bottom left Main Altarpiece of the Minor Baslica of San Francisco, La Paz, Bolivia. Photograph by Fernando Cuellar Otero
Every effort has been made to contact the copyright holders of the material published in this book and to obtain
permission to publish. Any omissions will be corrected in future volumes if the publisher is notified in writing.
Table of contents
Foreword
10
Preface
14
Myriam Serck-Dewaide
20
Carlos M. Ra Landa
34
48
54
66
78
94
Timothy P. Whalen,
Romn Fernndez-Baca Casares
110
126
136
162
Franoise Descamps,
Blanca Noval Vilar,
Irene Sen
187
198
210
Agns Le Gac
216
Francesca Tonini
224
231
235
Contributor biographies
References (CD-Rom insert)
The Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico (IAPH) is a scientific institution of the Comunidad Autnoma de Andaluca, an entity of the Consejera de
Cultura. Its objectives are the study, research, documentation and conservation
of Andalucian cultural heritage, as well as specialized training in the protection of that heritage. Its responsibilities also include the dissemination of all
things related to heritage research, and collaboration with distinct public and
private organizations and institutions.
IAPH
GCI
Viewing heritage as a community of action where diverse disciplines collaborate with the aim of perpetuating the memory of the future, the IAPH acts in
an interdisciplinary manner, paying special attention to the methodology of
study, research, and implementation in cultural heritage. Likewise, it supports
a permanent updating of heritage thought, integrating a variety of policies
into distinct programs of applied research among them, the conservation and
restoration of cultural heritage and provides an active link between cultural
heritage professionals and institutions and the Andalucian community.
The Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) is a program of The J. Paul Getty Trust,
a cultural and philanthropic organization dedicated to the visual arts and the
humanities, including an art museum, and programs of education, research
and of conservation.
At the international level, the GCI works to advance conservation practice and
education, and to strengthen and promote conservation, understanding and
interpretation of the visual arts in all its dimensions: objects, collections, architecture and sites. To this end, the Institute develops scientific research, education and training, and field projects, and diffuses its results through a website,
publications, conferences and workshops.
The Institute has developed experience in the field of preventive conservation,
the management and conservation of archaeological sites, the conservation of
building materials, the preservation of collections, and the adaptation of conservation technologies.
Each project is unique but varied in size, complexity and topic. Nevertheless,
each one is considered within an inter-disciplinary field and looks for new
ways to generate methodologies and to promote the application of the highest
possible principles to strengthen cultural heritage preservation.
Foreword
7
It is our pleasure to present this publication, Methodology for the Conservation of
Polychromed Wooden Altarpieces, which represents a collaborative effort of the
Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico (IAPH) and the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI), as well as the involvement of a number of our colleagues
working in conservation. This publication is part of a series of monographs
published by the IAPH, and is one of the many ways that both institutions
seek to advance the conservation field by disseminating information to a
broad audience of professionals.
Methodology for the Conservation of Polychromed Wooden Altarpieces contains the
proceedings of a May 2002 seminar on the conservation of wooden polychromed retablos that was attended by professionals from the Americas and
Europe specializing in the conservation of altarpieces. The meeting held in
Seville, Spain, and jointly organized by Franoise Descamps of the GCI and
Lorenzo Perez del Campo of the IAPH focused on issues related to altarpiece
conservation and the need for a conservation methodology adapted to these
works of art.
At the Seville meeting, scientific representatives from the field shared their
experiences with an international audience, with particular emphasis on Latin
America. Conservation specialists from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador,
Mexico, and Peru attended, as well as individuals from conservationrelated
institutions in Belgium, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. The results of the seminar,
presented in this publication, include the principles and considerations agreed
to by the participants during the event the Documento de Retablos 2002.
During the seminar, participants recognized the need to better disseminate
knowledge related to the field and to provide a series of tools that could contribute to altarpiece conservation. Following the event, a bibliography and a
multilingual glossary were compiled in collaboration with workshop participants. The bibliography covers the construction, building materials, and conservation of altarpieces, while the glossary describes altarpieces in their
design, building systems, and materials composition. These documents, available on CD-ROM, will also be accessible on the web pages of both institutions.
It is our hope that this multifaceted effort will provide a variety of useful tools
for individuals and organizations charged with the responsibility for caring
for retablos.
As is typically the case with such events, the Seville workshop was made possible by the dedicated work of professionals from the organizing institutions,
as well as the collaboration of its participants, and required the intelligence,
talent, and enthusiasm of a great many people. First and foremost, thanks are
due to the participants for their contributions. From the outset, they embraced
the aims of the workshop and offered their time and ideas to the preparation
of the documents and articles presented in this volume. The event itself and
this publication would not have been possible without them.
Preface
10
Polychromed wooden altarpieces are unique artifacts that combine a wide
range of artistic, technical and material expression. Given their composition,
function, and the nature of the physical and cultural contexts in which they are
found, altarpieces comprise a very distinct category of cultural heritage. Created to transmit a religious message and cherished by churchgoers, these
objects of devotion are now seen to embody a multiplicity of values. Their
artistic and historic values have long been acknowledged. However, altarpieces are not only historic objects and works of art, but also important components of the religious and social life of a community and, potentially, focal
points for social and economic development.
Given the physical complexity of polychromed wooden altarpieces and the
rich socio-cultural environments in which they are found, the conservation of
these unique objects presents considerable challenges. These challenges can
only be met through the adoption of a sound methodological approach that
considers the object in all its aspects, including its built environment and social
context. Such an approach must be guided by established principles of conservation and take into consideration available resources, both financial and
human. It should ensure the transmittal of the object to future generations but
also allow for its continued use.
In order to address these issues and promote a broad exchange of ideas, the
Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Historico (IAPH) and the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) joined forces to convene a meeting of conservation
professionals from Europe and Latin America in Seville in May 2002. The
overall objective of the workshop was to define a clear methodology in the
form of a reference document or guidelines that would assist in developing
a conservation strategy for any altarpiece, from the very simple to the most
complex.
11
cultural contexts. Ultimately, a diverse group of professionals from Belgium,
Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Italy, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Spain and
the United States participated in the workshop. Representing both public
institutions and the private sector, the group included architects, conservatorrestorers and art historians. Each participant was asked to present a case
study based on personal experience that highlighted the issues involved and
the approach taken to the conservation and management of a significant
altarpiece.
Prior to the meeting, each case study was documented according to a standardized format to facilitate comparison of experiences and identification of
both common and specific issues. This documentation, prepared by each participant, provided fundamental information on the respective altarpiece, its
physical and cultural context, the values ascribed to it and the approach taken
to its conservation and management. Particular attention was paid to the
management process and the methodology followed that is, the sequence and
interplay of activities in both the study and implementation phases as well as
the criteria used to justify the chosen conservation approach. Emphasis was
placed on describing the process rather than the intervention per se. Finally,
space was reserved in the conclusions of each case for the author's own reflections. All the case studies were then compiled into a notebook that served as
the reference document for the event.
Once assembled in Seville for the three-day workshop, the twenty-five participants exchanged ideas through their case study presentations, through visits
to various retablos in the region, and through organized discussions of three
previously defined topics.
Clearly, the conservation of wooden polychromed altarpieces involves decision-making processes of some complexity. In general, the case studies reflect
strong, well-established processes for addressing the conservation of objects,
as well as structures. They give importance to defining the object being studied and its context, to an understanding and assessment of condition and,
finally, to establishing a strategy for conservation, management and continued
use. Many case studies emphasize the importance of undertaking appropriate
conservation work that ensures the integrity and survival of the work of art
while, at the same time, confronting and respecting the expectations, fears and
sometimes unexpressed desires of the community. Related to this issue is the
actual role of heritage conservation as a tool for promoting continuity of community life and social development, again without compromising the conservation of the object itself.
12
In addition to these general over-riding concerns, the case studies also raise a
number of more specific questions. How do we support the need for in-depth
documentation? How do we justify intensive and often expensive preliminary
studies? How can we promote a critical approach to assessment and treatment
as opposed to ad hoc actions? Considering limited human and financial
resources, how do we define the most appropriate tools for documentation,
analysis and intervention, and balance use of the most sophisticated technology with low-tech alternatives? These questions reflect the reality that professionals face on a daily basis and formed an important part of the debate.
As a result of these intensive days of exchange and discussion, a representative group of participants drafted the Documento de Retablos 2002. This document constitutes a guideline for the conservation of polychromed wooden
altarpieces that considers these objects in all their complexity: their morphology and intimate relationship to their architectural environment, as well as
the religious, social and cultural contexts in which they are found. Based on
established conservation principles, the Documento de Retablos 2002 advocates an integrated methodological approach that should form the basis for
sustainable conservation and continued use of these remarkable works of art
and devotion.
About this publication
Of course, it is extremely difficult to capture the richness and subtlety of
exchange and discussion that occurred during the workshop. However, an
attempt has been made to present the most important ideas and issues to
emerge from the event through various components of the proceedings.
The bulk of the publication is devoted to the case studies presented by each
participant. Though still largely in the format developed for the workshop
notebook, some of these cases have been further elaborated to emphasize
particular issues and concerns. The cases are presented in the order in which
they were given at the workshop and represent a great diversity of material
expression, cultural context and conservation approach. All illustrate the everpresent challenge of reconciling theory with practice in complex physical and
cultural environments.
As noted earlier, the workshop also included organized discussion sessions
centered around three previously identified topics. The most salient points to
emerge from these discussions have been synthesized into a chapter titled
Summary of the Debates. Emphasis is placed on the issues that had most
resonance among participants, including the multiplicity of values represented by any altarpiece, the need for collaboration between conservation professionals and local communities in making decisions about the care and conservation of retablos, and the importance of an approach that considers not just
the object but its physical, social and cultural context.
Following this summary, the publication includes the entire text of the guideline document entitled Documento de Retablos 2002 that sets out an agreed
approach to the conservation and management of polychromed wooden altarpieces. Obviously, this document is not the last word on the subject. However,
it is our hope that it will provide a useful starting point for both conservation
professionals and communities charged with the stewardship of these extraordinary objects.
Finally, the publication includes a CD-Rom containing a bibliography of
selected references useful for understanding the history and construction of
altarpieces, the choice of appropriate research tools, causes of deterioration
and relevant intervention techniques.
13
On many levels, this workshop provided an exceptional opportunity to
exchange ideas and develop shared approaches to issues of common concern.
It is our hope that the dissemination of these proceedings will contribute to a
better understanding of the significance of polychromed wooden altarpieces,
and a more integrated and sustainable approach to their conservation and continued use.
14
Theoretical framework
The theory of conservation has evolved over time in response to the social,
political and cultural circumstances of each era, generating the concepts and
theoretical axioms which drive intervention proposals and approaches. Since
the 1960s, the focus of conservation work has been redefined, moving beyond
merely addressing monuments or works of art, to encompass the notion of
heritage, which addresses a myriad of tangible and intangible cultural expressions. Today, the theoretical framework for conservation, which reflects the
particular processes of each nation, serves as an essential reference, a filter of
thought for understanding cultural objects, for determining conservation
goals and developing intervention proposals.
In 1963, Brandi stated that restoration is the methodological moment in
which a work of art is appreciated in its material form and its historical and
aesthetic duality with a view of transmitting it to the future (231). Since the
1980s, the function of a work of art has been added to that definition, as a
dimension giving us more specific insights. The functional aspect contributes to our understanding that cultural objects fulfill a need of the society in which they are created and help us understand the dynamics of their
usage, as well as the associative and symbolic values that social groups
attribute to them. It has been recognized that a restoration process should
never aim to restore the state of a work of art to the moment of its creation.
Rather, the evolution of the item since that time should be carefully considered, so as to reach a desirable equilibrium between what the work originally was and what its potential is now.
As part of the process of analyzing the evolution of the object over time, particular emphasis needs to be placed on the concept of patina. Brandi (1963),
adopting the viewpoint of Baldinucci (1681), defines patina as being that general darkness which time causes to appear on paintings and which often
enhances them (381) and which, upon treatment, should remain subordinated to the image. Therefore, from an aesthetic point of view, patina is that
imperceptible muting placed on the materials that are compelled to remain
subdued within the image (378).
For Philippot (1966) patina is the normal effect that time has on the materials
over time (373). If both these concepts are considered, patina should also be
analyzed from an art critic's point of view, given that no restoration could
ever hope to re-establish the original state of a painting. It can only reveal the
present state of the original materials. Even if restoration could determine the
original state, it would still be impossible to abolish the second historicity of
the work, the span of time it has crossed to appear before us (373).
After almost forty years of restoration as a modern discipline, it is worth revising its initial definition to better adapt it to the present, with an emphasis on
Latin American societies, possibly as follows: restoration is a social science that
makes it possible to intervene on cultural property, based on knowledge gathered through the scientific study of objects' material make-up; history; aesthetic, scientific, historic, and social values; the intangible elements that record
the cultural property's origin; and the function for which it was created. Once
documented, researched, cataloged, conserved and restored, this heritage can
be enjoyed and transmitted to future generations in the fullest state of integrity and authenticity attainable in our times.
15
Using the above definition, this article develops an initial proposal in hopes of
reinforcing theoretical foundations, considering both the values and the functions of altarpieces as fundamental elements for pre-intervention analyses.
16
Thus, before making proposals for action, it is essential to assimilate the various aspects of the altarpiece's usage with the restorer's analysis, to guide their
work and understanding of its current social function.
serving altarpieces becomes a source of information based on research, disseminating knowledge of techniques and constitutive materials in an effort to
achieve the best conservation and restoration practices and results.
The methodology for intervening on altarpieces starts by analyzing the altarpiece in its context, to understand the place it occupies within the religious
complex that contains it. This makes it possible to comprehend its hierarchical
standing in the community and in the liturgy, as well as to identify those
responsible for the administration of the church, who are essential participants
in future decisions on the altarpiece.
The specificities of altarpieces, including their size and the complexity of their
make-up, demand extensive and detailed documentation. This sometimes
makes it necessary to use additional resources, which in themselves could
place restraints on the intervention.
The material elements of an altarpiece create a dichotomy between image and
structure. Accordingly, intense research is required. This places extensive
demands on time and resources, for preparing the historic documentation and
in surveying deterioration of the altarpiece's ornamental front and supporting
structure.
In addition to conducting an analysis of the altarpiece's physical condition, in
analyzing the work's historic evolution, the life of the altarpiece should be
treated as two discrete periods. The first historical period would be that of its
creation. Consideration should be given to all the known elements associated
with the work and the altarpiece's creation belonging to that time. This calls
for meticulous research on the society in which the work was created, and on
the community for which it was designed and constructed. Research should
involve art historians to determine the importance and scope of the work, the
religious figure to whom it was dedicated and the work's relationship to the
building in which it is housed. The second historical period of focus would
cover the time elapsing between the creation of the object and the point at
which it came before the restorers. This means that, during the documentation
process, all the information related to events associated with the altarpiece
must be gathered together. That information will generally be found in
archives and in the memory of the community where the altarpiece is located.
In order to document the aesthetic values embodied in the altarpiece's creation, research should be coordinated with other disciplines. Such an approach
yields the most complete version of the prevailing aesthetic values that guided the altarpiece's builders and the process that led to its placement in that
geographic region. The altarpiece's functionality should also be documented
using an interdisciplinary approach, so as to better understand the information required for identifying how and for what purposes the altarpiece was
built in that community. Understanding the needs behind an altarpiece being
dedicated to a particular religious figure is insufficient. Documentation indicating what role the altarpiece played in fulfilling the aspirations and religious
needs of the community with which it is associated during its second historical period is also needed.
17
The factors referred to above are necessary in restoration analysis, since our
subject is a very complex representation of ritual structures, conceived as the
most important element of worship within a religious setting.
An analysis of the testimonies and documents collected will generate a base of
knowledge to support decision-making, to fully respect and properly conserve
each of the altarpiece's aspects and values, in accordance with their importance in the altarpiece's creation and subsequent life, and in the eyes of the
society for which the altarpiece holds significance today.
All these considerations mean that a conservation strategy, consisting of a
statement of the altarpiece's present history and condition, and protocols and
guidelines for its subsequent treatment, based on all the factors identified so
far, needs to exist before any restoration processes can be begun. If this is carried out, then adequate preparations for the restoration can be made. This conservation strategy should closely follow an outline like the one detailed below.
18
introduction
description of the work of art
historic, aesthetic and functional antecedents
techniques of manufacture
state of conservation
previous interventions
mechanisms and causes of alteration
intervention proposal and development of the process
theoretical justification of the intervention
treatment of patina, missing elements and losses
reintegrations, integration, protective layers, etc
presentation of the work of art
maintenance recommendations
budget: economic, human, technological resources, etc
schedule or work plan
bibliography.
Final considerations
This article does not intend to set a universal methodology for technical interventions, but simply to point out certain general aspects to bear in mind for
decision-making processes, so that decisions will be meaningful and wellfounded. This keeps in mind the theory of restoration as one of the governing
elements, along with proper documentation and analysis of the factors
involved in the conservation of altarpieces.
Few professional groups have developed documents or practical guidelines
that allow us to standardize interventions on altarpieces. Altarpiece restoration has been and, in most cases, continues to consist of repair work normally
entrusted by the community and certain cultural authorities to the most distinguished local carpenter. It is therefore essential to develop standards, with
consensus from the academic community, approved of by the cultural authorities of each country. Indeed, all conservators are called upon to work towards
the cultural authorities and decision-making bodies accepting the products of
this joint effort, encouraging the active participation of the altarpiece's host
community in conservation interventions. As part of this effort, each working
group should produce documents that are easy to comprehend, distribute and
read, so that the altarpiece's host communities will understand the importance
of protecting and conserving this special heritage. This also contributes to
enhancing an appreciation of the altarpiece's values and to increasing contributions to its conservation and subsequent maintenance.
19
Social participation in the conservation of altarpieces is essential, and should
form a part of the methodological approach to the altarpiece. Such collaboration should be incorporated starting with preventive conservation, should be
clearly incorporated in maintenance efforts and also be featured in subsequent
protective actions and follow-up, consistent with available funding and
human resources.
With respect to the theoretical body of knowledge for the restoration of altarpieces, several discussion forums about direct interventions on altarpieces
have taken place in recent years, with varying degrees of success. Academic
efforts have also been carried out, focusing on cataloging processes, diagnostic methodologies and guidelines for intervention. These elements have contributed to devising systems for similar exercises, and work methodologies for
the restoration and conservation of altarpieces are thus developing. The analysis and the intangible elements of altarpieces, so important in Latin American
contexts, must be considered as the basis of action. Altarpieces today are part
of a living cultural heritage that supports the social identity and sense of
belonging within communities.
The cultures of Latin America are shaped by a series of intangibles that comprise particular ideologies. As such, research on heritage and its conservation
and restoration is an action of high importance for conserving the identity of
present and future generations.
References
BRANDI, Cesare: Teora del Restauro. Rome: Edizione di Storia e Letteratura, 1963. (English version:
Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage. In Readings in
Conservation. Los Angeles, Getty Conservation Institute, 1996.
CARTA de Mxico en defensa del Patrimonio cultural. Mexico: INAH, 1976.
CARTA de Venecia. Venice, 1964.
PHILIPPOT, Paul: La nocin de Ptina y la limpieza, translated by CRLA Mxico (1969). In Boletn
de l'Institut Royal du Patrimoine Artistique. Belgium: Institut Royal du Patrimoine Artistique, 1966.
(English version: Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage. In
Readings in Conservation. Los Angeles, Getty Conservation Institute, 1996.
Myriam Serck-Dewaide
20
Name of the work of art: Altarpiece of Vie de la Vierge (Life of the Virgin)
forests along the Baltic Sea. Surface: the original polychromy and painting
are applied on a ground layer of calcium carbonate (chalk). The gold and
silver gildings are applied by one of two techniques: in the first, the leaf is
applied over a transparent orange-color bole and then polished, while in
the second, it is applied over an oil mixtion and is thus a matte gilding.
were identified on the case and architectural elements. The sculptures are
The pigments used for glazes and paints are bound with glue or oil (made
attributed to the studio of Robert Moreau, while the wings and predella
21
Since its creation a little over fifty years ago, the Belgian Institut Royal du Patrimoine Artistique (Royal Institute of Artistic Heritage, IRPA) has been dedicated
to the study, conservation and restoration of polychromed wooden altarpieces.
Some forty altarpieces of the Brabant region originating in Brussels, Mechelin,
Antwerp and other local workshops have been treated by the Institut or by private conservators working closely with the IRPA and its conservation laboratories, together with scientific analyses and detailed documentation.
Two cases of the treatment of altarpieces from the school of Antwerp, dating
from the sixteenth century, are presented here to illustrate the reasons for
choosing a minimalist in situ conservation treatment for the altarpiece of
Enghien, and for the in-depth restoration treatment in a laboratory for the
Bouvignes altarpiece.
The Enghien altarpiece is of very high quality, but above all it is exceptionally
conserved. All its parts, the predella, the painted wings and the totality of its
sculpted scenes, are still in place. This is rare, as these works of art often
become mutilated by numerous thefts.
Conservation context
MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
The altarpiece greatly suffered from its last transfer. Extracted from the cold
and damp abandoned castle chapel, and then placed in the drier environment
of the heated Church of Saint-Nicolas, the altarpiece dried out. Due to the
effect of wood shrinkage, the decorated surfaces suffered numerous flaking
and losses. Fortunately, the losses occurred mostly on the frames of the painted wings.
Although the altarpiece is protected from theft by a pane of glass, this security measure does not protect it from dust. Thus the work as a whole is very
dirty. The chapel is protected by an alarm system, and access by the public is
allowed only during services or by special request. Lighting is very weak, and
the electrical installation is rather old.
22
Establishment of the
treatment proposal
First inspection of the altarpiece followed the treatment request, and consisted
of meticulous observation accompanied by some photography, note-taking
and hand-drawn sketches to help in writing up a first report or preliminary
assessment of the present state of the altarpiece.
Hidden behind the protective glass and covered by the dust that dulled its
appearance, the altarpiece's conditions were difficult to assess. Concerns were
raised regarding the original state and the repainting of the sculptures, as well
as the gilding.
At first, answers to these questions were found through archival research and
study of documents on the history of the work of art. Later, at the time of a second visit, in-depth examinations by conservators and testing by laboratory
technicians, revealed that the original polychromy of the carved sculptures
was, on the whole, well-preserved under the overpainting. An earlier restoration with limited overpainting appears to have been executed before the general overpainting executed by J. F. Thijs in 1835-36, which was followed by
some additional interventions in 1946. The 1835 polychromy had been carried
out with the intention of copying the original as closely as possible. In fact, the
regilding is so thin that most of the underlying original punchwork is quite
visible. However, the gilding technique does not respect the original alternating water gilding (polished gold on bole) and matte oil gilding (matte gold on
mixtion). Some of the decorative motifs, in the sgraffito technique, are partially overpainted, but most have been redone so closely respecting the original
appearance that they cannot be suspected, even by a specialist, without meticulous scrutiny under magnification or by material analysis.
OF THE
CHURCH
OF
SAINT-NICOLAS, ENGHIEN
Once the preliminary study was written up, treatment proposals were elaborated. Considering all these observations and the fact that the original polychromy was in a good state of conservation below the overpainting, it was
deemed absolutely out of the question to remove the subsequent layers of
paint. In fact, the 1835 polychromy is not very thick and does not alter the legibility of the work of art much. In general, it respects the original appearance
of the object (except for the alternating polished and matte gold), and, moreover, appears to be strongly adhered to the surface of the early polychromy.
This intervention was not considered to have disturbed the original object, and
it was agreed to have become an integral part of the object's material history.
The choice of treatment would be conservation work carried out in situ and
limited to fixing the flaking, cleaning and retouches. After the decision was
approved by a scientific committee, preparation work was finalized by detailing specifications in a cahier des charges (notebook of tasks and responsibilities), the estimates were studied and the conservators selected.
Intervention
23
MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
24
reassembling these elements and the wings with brass screws and dowels
final retouching
4 days.
In situ conservation treatment: 4 weeks.
Report, drawings and drafting of article:
1 week.
Profile of the study/intervention team:
Documentation: one art historian, one conservator-restorer, two photographers.
In situ conservation treatment: 18 conservator-restorers (seven painting specialists, ten
sculpture specialists, one woodwork specialist), one chemist, one dendrochronologist,
one driver and two photographers.
photographic documentation after completion of the treatment of the altarpiece and before reinstallation of the protective glass
drafting the final report including laboratory analysis and historical research
preparation for transport to and from the exhibition, as well as control during exhibition.
Several materials and techniques, including variants of the originals, underwent preliminary testing on different surfaces to evaluate potential treatments.
An overall dry cleaning was chosen for the altarpiece, with solvent used only
in some places, and spectacular results were achieved.
OF THE
CHURCH
OF
SAINT-NICOLAS, ENGHIEN
MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
OF THE
CHURCH
OF
SAINT-LAMBERT, BOUVIGNES
Support: Part of the original case had disappeared, so the scenes were
council)
sculptures are made of oak from the forests along the Baltic Sea.
and the sgraffito, while matte gold and matte blue are present in the archi-
tectural elements. Some 80% of the work was repainted with modern, raw
27
An early request for conservation and restoration treatment from the Fabrique
d'glise had led to provisional fixing of some areas on the altarpiece being carried out free of charge in 1979. Continuation of the treatment required financing, which was obtained by exhibiting Antwerp altarpieces in the Antwerp
Cathedral.
The altarpiece is a rare example from the late period of the Antwerp school.
This masterpiece of pure Renaissance style has remained in its original location since its creation.
The altarpiece has suffered successive losses. First its wings, then numerous
sculpted pieces from the foreground of the altarpiece, and finally, the panels of
the predella and the entire hutch were removed. Since the altarpiece was created, its polychromy had suffered two partial overpaintings and two partial
removals of paint.
Conservation context
Establishment of the
treatment proposal
MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
28
Detailed in situ observation of the altarpiece's decorative architectural elements, sculpted parts and their assembly was carried out. The original polychromy was examined with the help of a binocular magnifying glass and was
found to be eroded but preserved under two layers of overpainting. The first
overpainting was applied around 1766, and the second, unaesthetic, oil layer
was lavishly applied by Boreux d'Evrehailles in 1847-48.
This second overpainting covered the sculpted groups and the architecture,
but did not touch the rocky and verdant background settings that remain in
their original state. The case was painted to imitate the appearance of marble,
while the fluting of the columns and the bases of the pilasters were painted
white, as evidenced in a photograph from 1892.
Owing to damage suffered during the First World War, the altarpiece was then
restored by a sculptor, Jean Leuthard. He reconstructed a part of the upper
frame and all the moldings not visible in the 1892 photograph. After the Second World War, the painter Joseph Claes removed the overpainting on the case
and architectural elements. This partial stripping was pretty rough and was
followed by several retouchings of yellow ochre and bronzing on the gilded
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areas, and vivid red and blue repainting on all the architecture. Fortunately,
the statuettes were left untouched. At this time, the textile pieces were probably inserted to replace the lost predella paintings.
Finally, in 1979, severe flaking of the original polychromy was detected, and
an emergency intervention was carried out in situ by IRPA's sculpture restoration experts. The altarpiece was then placed on a waiting list for complete
restoration, which took place for the Antwerp exhibition.
Previous interventions had given the altarpiece an incongruous and unaesthetic appearance. The loss of the hutch, the deep coat of dirt, and the stripping of the paint layers called for an in-depth intervention on the support as
well as the surface. Therefore a complete restoration treatment was proposed.
This decision was approved by a scientific committee and detailed specifications were drafted.
29
Intervention
In situ treatments:
photography prior to treatment
installing the scaffolding
temporary fixing of the polychromy
dismantling the altarpiece, documented by step-by-step photography
drawing, numbering and packaging the pieces
transporting to the laboratories.
Laboratory treatments:
photography of the dismantled elements before treatment
examining the pieces under a binocular microscope; examining pictorial
stratigraphy
listing of samples taken for analyses
selecting pieces for dendrochronological studies
complete fixing of the polychromy
treatment trials for cleaning and removal of the two partial overpaintings
and final decision to remove the overpainting; trials for cleaning the bronze
layer on the architecture
verifying that the central Christ figure in the upper compartment is a
baroque sculpture that was not originally part of the altarpiece but was
inserted later on; a specific study and treatment proposal for this piece were
then added to the initial project
MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
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MYRIAM SERCK-DEWAIDE
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The works of art are inspected on a regular basis. The individuals in charge
of the artistic heritage of the church of Bouvignes are particularly attentive.
Six years after the intervention they ordered a condition survey of the altarpiece, and the team dispatched there found practically no lifted areas of paint
and noted that the retouching had remained stable. While a slight dusting
was required, three people working for two days were sufficient to complete
the job.
Monitoring and maintaining works of art on a regular basis guarantees good
management of artistic heritage. It is an integral component of Preventive
Conservation, which is itself an essential part of sustainable development.
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Acknowledgments
We are grateful to all the participants named below.
Enghien:
Painting restorers under the direction of Nicole Goetghebeur: Dominique Verloo, Griet Steyaert,
Vinciane Jadoul, and graduate trainees Margit Kuiper, Loreto Perez de Guzman and Sophie Deyrolle.
Sculpture restorers under the direction of Myriam Serck-Dewaide: Christine Cession, Jean-Albert
Glatigny, Tiamat Molina, Luc Reper, Erika Rabelo, Frederike Schaffer, Nathalie Pruha, Susana Ortiz,
Xavier Llerena (under contract, freelancers and interns).
Cabinetwork: Jean-Paul Jankoviak.
Laboratory: Joseph Vynckier, Jana Sanyova.
Photography: Jacques Declercq, Jean-Louis Torsin.
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Bouvignes:
Dismantling: Jules Torfs.
Treatment: Sculpture restorers under the direction of Myriam Serck-Dewaide: Christine Cession,
Marianne Decroly, Georges de Wispelaere, Emmanuelle Mercier, Tiamat Molina, Luc Reper, Frederike
Schaffer, Jacques Vereecke, Jeanne Theyskens, Franoise Van Hauwaert, Erika Rabelo, Sandy Van
Wissen, Xavier Llerena, Suzana Ortiz, Nathalie Pruha, Margit Kuyper.
Fabrication of the new hutch, rebuilding: Jean-Albert Glatigny, Jean-Paul Jankoviak.
Laboratory: J. Vynckier, J. Sanyova and colleagues.
Photography: Daniel Soumeryn, Georges Hiclet, Alain Delers, Jean-Louis Torsin.
Photographic credits
IRPA-KIK, Brussels
References
BAURET, C., and SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Le retable de la Vraie Croix (vers 1556) (Bouvignes-surMeuse, glise Saint-Lambert). Bruxelles: Fondation Roi Baudouin, 1993.
DE BOODT, R., JANSEN, J., SANYOVA, J., and SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Le retable d'Oplinter. In
Scientiae Artis - La fabrication des retables anversois dduite de l'tude technologique et de la restauration du retable d'Oplinter, n 1. Bruxelles: KIK/IRPA, 1999, p. 51-99. (Idem in Dutch: De vervaarding van Antwerpse retabels, afgeleid van de technologische studie en de restauratie van het retabel
van Oplinter.)
SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Examens, conservation et restauration. In BUYLE, M., and VANTHILLO, C.
(ed.). Retables flamands et brabanons dans les monuments belges. Bruxelles: Ministerie van de
Vlaamse Gemeenschap, Afdeling Monumenten en Landschappen, 2000, p. 105-116.
SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Examen et restauration de huit retables anversois. In NIEUWDORP, H. (ed.).
Les retables anversois XV e -XVI e sicles, catalogue d'exposition. Antwerpen: Museum voor
Religieuse Kunst, 1993, p. 129-141.
SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Les retables anversois sous le regard des restaurateurs. In NIEUWDORP, H.
(ed.). Les retables anversois XV e -XVI e sicles, catalogue d'exposition. Antwerpen: Museum voor
Religieuse Kunst, 1993, p. 114-128.
SERCK-DEWAIDE, M.: Matriaux, techniques et polychromies. In BUYLE, M., and VANTHILLO, C.
(ed.). Retables flamands et brabanons dans les monuments belges. Bruxelles: Ministerie van de
Vlaamse Gemeenschap, Afdeling Monumenten en Landschappen, 2000, p. 87-104.
Carlos M. Ra Landa
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Study: From Bolivia, there were four restoration specialists, one chemist,
one restoration architect, one civil engineer, one photographer, and one
representative from the National Herbarium. From Germany, there were
two consultants.
wood, carved and gilded throughout. There are some polychromed details
and silver mirrors. All the frames are carved and gilded. The carved wooden sculptures are fully dressed with glue-treated cloth, polychromed and
gilded in part. In the central part of the upper horizontal register the only
canvas painting.
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The main altarpiece of San Francisco in La Paz was chosen in part because it
provided a good example for launching a methodological intervention plan. It
was also chosen in response to a request by the Franciscan community for the
altarpiece's restoration. This request was directed to the Centro Nacional de
Conservacin y Restauracin de Bienes Muebles (National Center for the Conservation and Restoration of Movable Objects) of the Vice-Ministry of Culture,
who undertook management of the project.
To address the main objective of the project, the development of a method-
CARLOS M. RA LANDA
ological approach, a multidisciplinary team of German and Bolivian conservators and professionals from different fields was created. A work schedule
and budget were developed. The project itself was designed as two phases: the
study and diagnosis phase, followed by the implementation phase.
The first phase was marked by the decisions and final conclusions made by
consensus among the consultants and restoration specialists. The second
phase established the responsibilities to be distributed among the restoration
specialists, architects and support personnel.
36
Since their initial construction, both the church and convent of San Francisco
have been under the administration and custody of the Franciscan order. The
church represents the meeting point of several different cultures, including
Spanish, criollo (Bolivians of Spanish descent), mestizo (Bolivians of Spanish
and indigenous descent), and the indigenous Andean population, while also
serving visitors and tourists.
The altarpiece symbolizes both the history of the Franciscan order and the
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dedication of the order to the Virgin. Integrated into the architecture of the
church's interior, the altarpiece plays a central role by providing the backdrop
for daily religious ceremonies. On the dates that mark the commemorative celebrations of the altarpiece's principal images, it enhances the festivals and religious ceremonies promoted by the Franciscans and churchgoers.
The eighteenth-century altarpiece of San Francisco is an excellent example of
the art style known as baroque-mestizo. This peculiar Andean expression developed from the fusion of the two cultures, which forms the basis for its mestizo
interpretation. The monumental and religious art brought by the Spanish
monks combined with the spontaneous expression of indigenous artists. Influenced by their own traditions as well as the natural environment, the indigeneous artists incorporated highly decorative elements of flora, fauna, anthropomorphic and prehispanic figures in the altarpiece, marking it with the unique
style and techniques that developed during the eighteenth century in Bolivia.
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An example of this style can be noted in the predella, which has four figures
reclined in the manner of Atlantes, but with indigenous features. Almost
naked, they wear feathered headdresses. Their arms are behind their backs, as
if carrying or supporting the altarpiece. These images are in turn flanked by
female figures, whose features are also indigenous, posed as caryatids, and
combined with floral elements. Above these figures are the symbols of the four
Evangelists.
Gilding combined with silver in a series of mirrors and religious images predominates on the altarpiece, beginning with the first horizontal register and
continuing up the altarpiece to its crowning elements. This decoration may be
related to the sun and the light, following the idea that the lower, non-gilded
part of the altarpiece represents earth, while the upper part represents the glory of the heavens. A large part of the ornamentation is represented by flora,
some from the region and some tropical, combined with winged creatures and
animals.
Although no precise information was found pertaining to the altarpiece's construction, related referential data was compiled and carefully evaluated in a
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Documentation
Documentation included photographs and photogrammetry as well as a
detailed architectural survey. Measurements of the altarpiece's elements
including its structure were taken and scientific analyses of wood, polychromy
and decorative treatment by sampling were executed, the results of which are
described below.
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Extensively detailed drawings were made of the presbytery and the altarpiece
in all its details. All the data collected were eventually recorded on blueprints.
This documentation was used for diagnostic purposes, but also constitutes a
primary record of the current state of the work of art. The particularities of the
architecture and iconography of the altarpiece were also interpreted and represented in the drawings.
As a work method, a grid-based coding was adopted for the altarpiece to summarize the data and facilitate its interpretation. The system followed the architectural design of the altarpiece:
predella (right, left)
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central altar
first, second, and third horizontal registers (first, second, and third vertical
registers)
CARLOS M. RA LANDA
crown.
Other individual divisions (columns or other individual decorations) could
also be added to this system of codification. Research was conducted starting
at the base of the altarpiece, working up. Two mobile scaffolds were obtained
for the in situ research work. The data logging took place on site, and the
results were recorded on technical control cards.
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The back of the presbytery, which faces west (towards the setting sun), has an
opening at the height of the tabernacle, intended to use the sunset light to
enhance the Holy Sacrament. This illumination is complemented by two large
windows at the top of the presbytery on each side, leaving the lower area of the
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The altarpiece case was assembled on site from the bottom up, from right to
left. Projecting panels and cornices were fastened to the supporting structure
and wall bracings. The enclosures, niches, columns, and coves were then
assembled, followed by the production of the decorative panels, bas relief,
lambrequins and high relief on the columns.
For the bracings and original supports, the wood used was alder and walnut.
The original case was built from cedar wood, but all the parts used in the nineteenth century to build the central part in neogothic style were of pine. It is
assumed that the cedar was brought from Central America as deadweight cargo for the ships that transported gold and silver from Bolivia.
Dovetail joints were used to connect horizontal beams, mortise and tenon
joints were used for columns and crossbeams were also used for other assemblies. Animal glue was added to these joints, and clamps pressed the pieces
dry. Pieces were also fastened together with iron nails and wooden pins to
reinforce the joints.
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Craftsmanship
No documentation on the contracting of craftsmen for the building of the main
altarpiece has been found to date. One would suppose, nonetheless, that the
persons involved were master craftsmen, such as master carpenters, assemblers, carvers, whitewashers, master gilders and painters.
The marks left by the cutting and manipulation of the wood show the use of
several colonial-period tools, such as the hatchet, adze, bow saw, splitter, hand
saw (for the planks and cutting of the individual parts), and carpenter's saw for
rough hewing. Backsaws, chisels, gouge chisels, knives, wooden mallets and
rasps were used for carving and decorating the altarpiece's minor elements.
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Polychromy
After the altarpiece's structure had been assembled and the carved ornaments
were in place, it was evident that the polychromy and gilding were applied on
site, since the structural nails were covered by polychromy or gilding.
Most of the altarpiece is gilded, with the exception of a few small sculpted figures, which were polychromed or employed corladuras, and the predella,
which was polychromed.
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State of conservation
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As mentioned earlier, one can observe at the top of the altarpiece a horizontal
displacement in a forward direction of 15 to 20 cm as compared to the altarpiece base. It was assumed that this was intentional, with the purpose of
increasing the perspective effect for viewers.
The altarpiece structure is seated on a stone masonry platform that dates from
the construction of the church. The difference in levels observed on the bottom
right of the altarpiece is due to construction defects from that era. No settling
was detected that would directly influence the altarpiece's stability and the
wall displays no settling or fissures.
The weight of the altarpiece's components (supporting structure, decorative
and ornamental elements) subjects the altarpiece structure to loads and stress
initially uniformly distributed over the beams and struts. Still, due to the altarpiece's construction and subsequent modifications, displacements can be
observed. The projecting parts are particularly affected, on account of the
excessive load to which they are subjected from the statuettes, mirrors and
other decorative elements.
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The support has a good number of gaps and some displacements. The central
vertical register has the worst alterations of the entire structure, due to a fire at
the turn of the century.
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the bases of the second and third horizontal registers, and on some pieces of
the central vertical register. This repainting has two layers: first, a red preparation layer (which probably served as an imitation of bole) and second, a
metallic layer, applied with brushwork.
Currently the altarpiece has seven sculptures placed in the niches. The four
saints in the first and second horizontal registers are wearing the respective
contemporary vestments, fashioned from glue-treated, polychromed cloth,
and have structures formed by maguey. Their hands and heads are made of
polychromed, carved wood, and their eyes are glass. Their size is 1.50 x 0.80 x
0.40 meters. The two saints on the third horizontal register were made using
the same technique. They do not have cloth garments, their eyes are painted,
and they measure 1.30 x 0.60 x 0.43 meters 4. In general, the sculptures are in
good condition, with the exception of some missing fingers (for example, on St
Thomas Aquinas). The polychromy of the faces and hands is slightly stained.
Nonetheless, the damage is minor. The face of San Leonardo de Porto Mauricio has been repainted.
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The canvas painting has severe separation of paint layers and warping at its
bottom edge. Additional minor damage is present and the surface is dirty.
For the intervention on the altarpiece, a technical team was formed and divided into two groups. A restoration architect and his support personnel, working on the structural aspects of the altarpiece, comprised the first group, while
restoration specialists working on the ornamental features of the altarpiece
comprised the second group.
Both teams participated in a general cleaning of the entire altarpiece. The divisions between the vertical registers were the most laborious, with great quantities of soil, debris, and impregnated wax. Starting at the third horizontal register and working down to the predella, the altarpiece was cleaned mechanically and with the use of organic solvents. Concurrently, the entire system of
wiring, accessories and lighting of the various electrical installations was
removed.
Structure
In the back of the altarpiece, a circulation system was installed independent of
the bracings to reduce stress and overload. The original wood bracings were
adjusted and set. In order to improve the bracings' behavior overall, it was
important to replace those braces that had been cut, removed or modified in
their geometry, reinforcing the upper parts of the horizontal registers with
steel turnbuckles.
The support structures for the central vertical register of the second and third
horizontal registers were stabilized, and several metallic turnbuckles were
placed, braced to the back wall. Several pieces of the structural wood were
reinforced in order to consolidate the structure of the various upper modules.
Intervention
CARLOS M. RA LANDA
The entire back was vacuumed and cleaned. For access to the various back levels, several platforms and stairways were reinforced and adapted, remaining
independent of the original structure so that passage would be safer. Lighting
was also installed, which had not been present before this intervention.
A preventive insect disinfection treatment was applied to the entire support or
exposed wood, through a top layer of wax dissolved in solvent.
Decorative features
46
The polychromed or gilded sectors needed to have the paint and color set at
certain specific points. This task was accomplished using protein adhesive or
organic glue applied with a brush and syringes. All the loose pieces were also
set in place. Most were fastened with wooden pegs reinforced with an organic consolidant.
Several pieces and ornaments had to be taken down from the altarpiece to be
treated individually, including the mirrors, columns, canvas paintings, sculptures, cartouches and other minor elements.
Elements determined to be detrimental to the work for aesthetic reasons or in
keeping with conservation needs were removed. To a lesser degree, elements
deemed essential for a harmonious integration of the original were readapted
or replaced. The task involving the most work was the reintegration and aesthetic improvement of the entire central vertical register.
Gaps in the base preparation layer were stuccoed with calcium sulfate in animal glue, after which the color and gilding was restored using watercolor and
varnish pigments. For new pieces, gold leaf was used.
The mirrors on the attic, the side registers' crowns, and the canvas painting
and crown of the third horizontal register were set back in place. Similarly, the
side columns of the third horizontal register's central vertical register were
restored. Also restored were the cartouches and columns of the second horizontal register, as well as the mirrors situated over the entablature. Intervention was performed on the seven sculptures and a canvas painting of the Virgin. Finally, the central sculpture of the Virgin was replaced by another whose
proportions were better suited to the central niche, with a baroque style from
the eighteenth century.
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Acknowledgments
Our sincere thanks go to all those who collaborated directly or indirectly on this project. A very special thanks goes to Angela Hckel, the expert German restorer, and to her colleague, Thomas
Schoeller, with whom the plan was developed; to Joseph Bornhorst, who was then the Director of the
Goethe Institut in La Paz, to Barbara Haeming, interpreter, to the Reverend Father Orlando Cabrera,
Guardian of the Convent of San Francisco, and Father Julio Calatayud.
Thanks are also due to the institutions that provided the economic support: The Getty Grant Program
of the United States of America, the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Goethe Institut,
the Convent of San Francisco in La Paz, the Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico in Spain, and
the Vice Ministry of Culture of Bolivia.
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Participants
Technical consultants: Angela Hckel and Thomas Schoeller (November 26 to December 9, 1995)
Restorers: Carlos M. Ra Landa, Beatriz Loaiza B., Roberto Montero and Lucio Trujillo
Technical assistants: Roger Churata and Jos Luis Daz
Structure: Viviana Fernndez, architect
Photographers: Gilberto Vargas and Fernando Cuellar
Photogrammetry: Wilfried Seufert
Architectural documentation: Fidel Cossio, architect
Structural analysis: Ramiro Tirao, engineer
Laboratory analysis: Mara del Carmen Amusquvar
Studies of the flora: Emilia Garca, National Herbarium
Photographic credits
Carlos M. Ra Landa
Notes
1. The present church of San Francisco is the third structure built on the same site since the arrival of
missionaries in 1548-49. Its construction began in 1744 and ended in 1772, as noted in an inscription on the central vault.
2. See: Documentacin del Retablo, investigacin y concepto de conservacin del Retablo Mayor de
la Baslica Menor de San Francisco, 1996, and Informe final de la segunda fase de Ejecucin,
Centro Nacional de Conservacin y Restauracin de Bienes Mueble of the Vice Ministry of Culture,
1997.
3. Generally 5 cm x 5 cm and 5 cm x 7.5 cm, with a length of 1.20 meters, embedded into the wall
to an average estimated depth of 0.30 meters.
4. According to information provided by the Reverend Father Julio Calatayud and the "Documentos
del Arte Colonial Sudamericana. El Templo de San Francisco de La Paz, (1949), the two saints on the
third horizontal register were exchanged for the two sculptures on the side walls of the presbytery.
Nonetheless, it is not known for certain whether they formed a part of the original structure. The only
painting, located in the central top horizontal register, represents "The Coronation of the Immaculate
Virgin" from the eighteenth century, with dimensions of 2.18 x 1.60 meters. It was placed there in the
1950s (according to the Reverend Father Calatayud). It is an oil painting on canvas, bearing a gilded
frame with a shell pattern.
Catarina, Brazil
2000
Landscaping Heritage and at the federal level has been registered in the
Book on Archaeology, Ethnography, and Landscaping since April 1995.
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Initiated by the Instituto do Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional (Institute for National Artistic and Historical Heritage, IPHAN), this project was
developed to study the condition of the main altarpiece of the Church of Santo Antonio de los ngeles, formulate intervention guidelines and raise community awareness, so that the local community of Laguna would value its cultural property.
Through the Programa Nacional de Incentivo Cultura (National Cultural
Incentive Program, PRONAC), a government program that earmarks funds
for cultural purposes, sponsorship was obtained from the Banco Nacional de
Desenvolvimento Econmico e Social (National Economic and Social Development Bank, BNDES). The parish provided financial administration under
the supervision of the Instituto, and the coordination of project activities was
carried out by the 11th Regional Superintendency of IPHAN. These institutions involved in the project made technical decisions jointly.
Located in the subtropical maritime zone, Laguna is a small city with an urban
core of 37,255 inhabitants covering 29 km2. The city as a whole covers a total
area of 445 km2 with a population of 47,543 people.
The city of Laguna as a whole is recognized as national historic architectural
heritage, and provides an important frame of reference for the history of
Brazil's colonial period. The altarpiece is located in the city's church, which is
considered to be one of the city's most important cultural properties for its
architectural value, the decoration of its constituent features, and as a factor in
the city's social and religious integration.
This church played a vital role within the context of southern Brazil's colonial
history. The city of Laguna represents the last landmark of the Treaty of Tordesillas, forming the former borderline with the Spanish province of Ro de la
Plata. The city also played an important role in the history of the revolutionaries Anita and Giuseppe Garibaldi, the Catarina Republic, and other significant historical events.
Constructed in the late seventeenth century, the Church of Santo Antonio de
los ngeles is located in a main plaza of the city, two blocks from the sea. Its
main doors are permanently open to the public, which causes excessive
humidity within the church. A number of recent restoration tasks on the building have been completed and include work on both the interior and exterior
plaster, the roof and the electrical and lighting systems. A sound system and a
security installation to protect against fire and lightning were also installed,
while archaeological and architectural probes were performed in search of relevant historical data and original materials. Security for the building is as yet
inadequate, since there is no continual guard service, and historic works of art
have been stolen in the past.
The church's altarpieces were added during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with some minor changes and repolychroming done in the twentieth century. In 1972, a major modification was made by a Portuguese craftsman and
painter, who scraped off the former paint and gilding of the main altarpiece, to
repaint it according to his own taste. This repolychroming is currently conserved
as the altarpiece's decoration. The wood structure has seen several interventions
since its construction, with the use of new wood of various types and sizes.
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Intervention proposal
State of conservation
To determine the state of conservation of the main altarpiece, it was necessary
to open the altar tables and conduct internal examinations. The following preliminary activities were conducted:
graphic and photographic documentation of the state of conservation of the altarpiece and the church's sacred images, using a systematic inventory-card system
samples taken of the paint layers for stratigraphic studies and analysis of
materials
historical analysis, through researching the books of the parish and other
available references.
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We found that the supporting structure of the altarpiece was badly infected by
xylophagous (wood-eating) insects, principally along the back of the structure.
We also observed widespread stains from the activities of microorganisms on
both the front and back of the altarpiece. The altarpiece has been completely
repainted, although we found remains of the original polychromy and gilding
in some areas in the probes and samples taken from the paint layer. Another
problem we noted is that the indoor electrical lighting is inadequate.
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Proposed action
Based on these initial observations, we decided to clean the surface of the
altarpiece and apply disinfectants to the wood to fight the xylophagous insect
infestation, which was quite intense in the altarpiece's structure and supports.
In addition to the preliminary studies described above, the following work
was done:
mechanical cleaning of the altarpiece's interior
taking of probes to evaluate the quantity and quality of the areas with original painting underneath the repainted layers
disinfecting of the xylophagous-insect infested areas.
One of the main established criteria was to show maximum respect for the
original materials, and to try to perform the cleaning and conservation work
concurrently with the technical research.
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Considerations
This project has raised some important issues concerning the often-competing
interests of different groups involved in the conservation and restoration of
altarpieces. One of the main objectives of the conservators at the Instituto do
Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional was to determine whether or not the
original paint layer was still present on the altarpiece. If so, the immediate proposal would have been to study the viability of removing the overpainting and
restoring the original layer.
The preliminary studies indicated that only vestiges of the original polychromy remained, complicating the decision-making process. Should the
polychromy be restored to its original state, even though very little of the original material is actually left, or should some other measure be implemented, to
address the fact that the present gilding is of low quality, as well as completely tarnished?
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While the institutions involved in the project were considering this decision,
an issue began to arise within the community. The city of Laguna is composed
of a rather small community, mainly dedicated to traditional fishing and agriculture. The community likes and appreciates the work done by the Portuguese craftsman who upon completion of the repainting, moved to the city
where he remained until his death. His wife and children still live in the city.
While the project was in progress, the community questioned us as to whether
we were going to destroy the work done by The Portuguese Man.
Such issues are quite common in this region of Brazil, where we have many
poorly executed interventions on the artistic assets of churches, with the complete repolychroming of altarpieces and images. Also misinformation on what
conservation-restoration work consists of is widespread. Thus, the decision
about how to intervene on the altarpiece has become complex.
The new project proposed for restoring the main altarpiece, the sacred images
and other altarpieces of the Church of Santo Antonio de los ngeles began in
April 2005. First, a heritage educational campaign was organized and discussions on restoration criteria were held with the community that uses and
maintains the church. As a result of these discussions, it was decided to restore
the main altarpiece's present repainting and clean the tarnished gilding.
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Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the Instituto do Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional, and especially
architect Llian Mendona Simon, the project coordinator, for the opportunity to carry out this work
and hold technical discussions.
We thank parish priest Antnio Gernimo Herdt and other members of the Social and Cultural
Community Action Group at the Parish of Santo Antonio de los ngeles in Laguna, for the confidence
they placed in our work.
Participants
Technical orientation and supervision: 11th Regional Superintendency of the Instituto do Patrimnio
Histrico e Artstico Nacional.
Responsible parties: architect Dalmo Vieira Filho, IPHAN Superintendent; architect Llian Simon,
church restoration project coordinator.
IPHAN technical team: architect Cyro Corre Lyra; architect Jos La Pastina; architect Leonardo Barreto
de Oliveira; architect Mara Isabel Kanan.
Sponsorship: Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econmico e Social.
Administration of project implementation: Community Social and Cultural Action Group of the Parish
of Santo Antonio de los ngeles of Laguna. Executive Director - parish priest Antnio Gernimo
Herdt.
Technical team: Susana Cardoso Fernndez, specialist in the conservation and restoration of cultural
assets; Manuel Fernndez, technical manager, carpentry; Israel Oreano Rolim Borges, carpentry assistant; Jlio Cardoso Silva, carpentry assistant; architect Jos Francisco da Silva, architectural surveying.
Photographic credits
Susana Cardoso Fernndez
References
ARNS, Alice Bertoli: Laguna uma esquecida epopia de Franciscanos e Bandeirantes, e a histria de
uma velha igreja. Curitiba: Imprimax Ltda, 1975.
VILA, Affonso, MACHADO GONTIJO, Joo Marcos, and GUEDES MACHADO, Reinaldo: Barroco
Mineiro - Glossrio de Arquitetura e Ornamentao. 3rd edition. Belo Horizonte : Fundao Joo
Pinheiro, 1996.
DALL'ALBA, Joo Leonir: Laguna antes de 1880, documentrio. Florianpolis: Lunardelli/UDESC,
1979.
GMEZ GONZLEZ, Maria Luisa: Examen cientfico aplicado a la conservacin de obras de arte.
Madrid: Instituto de Conservacin y Restauracin de Bienes Culturales, Ministerio de Cultura, 1994.
SOUZA, Alcdio Mafra de: Guia dos bens tombados Santa Catarina. Florianpolis: Fundao
Catarinense de Cultura, 1992.
ULYSSA, Nail: Trs sculos da matriz Santo Antnio dos Anjos da Laguna. Typed document, without
date.
53
Antonio
Materials and techniques: The front pieces of the altarpiece are made of
cedar, to allow for trim and carvings, while the supporting structure is
Gerais, Brazil
built with a more resistant wood. Brauna can be found in the areas where
the wood is in contact with the masonry, and peroba is used for the sup-
the gilding was applied with gold leaf. The base preparation is made of
55
The restoration of the main altarpiece of the Cathedral of Santo Antonio has
proven invaluable in preserving a precious example of art produced in Minas
Gerais during the eighteenth century, and by contributing to the documentation and better understanding of a fundamental component of Brazil's historic
and artistic heritage. The undertaking made possible the rescue of a masterpiece that was rapidly deteriorating, and also produced a wealth of studies for
conservation and art history. These studies concentrated on establishing the
relationship between the altarpiece and other decorative elements that make
up the interior decoration of the church, by assessing the transformation of the
church and its ornamentation through time, which has proven essential in
defining the intervention approach.
The restoration of the main altarpiece is part of the Santo Antonio Cathedral
Restoration Project, which began in 1997, when the Associao dos Amigos de
Santa Brbara (Association of Friends of Santa Barbara, ASASB) took on the
responsibility of coordinating and administering this long-awaited and necessary undertaking. To conform to the laws of the Ministry of Culture and the
State Cultural Office of Minas Gerais pertaining to these types of projects, the
responsibilities of ASASB included two preliminary steps: the elaboration of a
comprehensive conservation project for all the church's artistic components,
and the survey and evaluation of private companies and individuals who
would implement the conservation proposal.
Project management
Over five years, the work was carried out as planned and in such a way that all
the artistic elements of the church included in the overall study have been completely restored. The work on the building itself, its roof and electrical installations
had already been carried out some years before by specialized technicians contracted by the Santa Barbara parish house.
The main altarpiece intervention was carried out by the company Grupo Oficina de Restauro, based in Belo Horizonte and specializing in the restoration of
artistic property since 1988. Their tasks were defined in the intervention proposal established by professionals of IPHAN, and conservators from
IEPHA/MG carried out the technical accompaniment at all stages.
All administrative and financial management was the sole and exclusive
responsibility of ASASB, and included the restoration of all the interior decoration of the church, which was anticipated to take five years with a final cost
of approximately $300,000 (US dollars). The completed work was turned over
to the Santa Barbara community on December 4, 2003.
Historical context
56
The Cathedral of Santo Antonio in Santa Barbara is representative of the transformation processes witnessed by this type of monument built in the first half
of the eighteenth century in Minas Gerais. At first, these constructions were
timidly elaborated, but over time they were enlarged until they reached their
current architectural forms. Likewise, interior decoration was progressively
transformed depending on the financial ease or difficulty of the church and its
parishioners. To date, some unfinished monuments in the Minas Gerais region
attest to these situations.
Following a similar pattern, the Cathedral of Santo Antonio and the ornamentation thet we see today were completed at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Consequently the church incorporates stages of construction and aesthetic
solutions from various times throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Francisco Xavier de Brito2 is considered to be the main sculptor in the decoration of the cathedral from the beginning of its construction, while a few decorative elements are attributed to other artists who were also active in the
province of Minas Gerais. However, a lack of specific documentation about the
history of the building and its decoration has prevented the confirmation of
hypotheses on the authorship or date of construction of the church's ornamentation or the main altarpiece. The first known records about the church,
found in the archives of the Curia of the Archdiocese of Mariana, are from
1744, when the altarpiece of the Chapel of the Most Holy Sacrament, another
of the church's numerous altarpieces, was finished by Francisco de Faria
Xavier. Stylistic and technical analyses of the church altarpieces indicate that
at least two others are older than this altarpiece, which lends support to the
idea that the original church had already been erected some years before 1744.
To understand and interpret the historical and stylistic values of the Santo
Antonio altarpiece, it is important to note that during the first decades of the
eighteenth century, the Portuguese national style predominated as the most
expressive artistic manifestation in most of the interior decorations of the religious monuments of the province of Minas Gerais. Carried out by superb but
anonymous carvers, the designs of that period were transplanted from Portugal, and were characterized by concentric arches, twisted or torso columns,
vegetal elements, such as clusters of grapes and grapevines, and the vivid
presence of zoomorphic elements, such as the phoenix and pelicans.
Following the national period and starting in the 1730s, there arose an
attempt to include canopies in altarpieces, which imitated noble court mantles
and included Salomonic columns and figures of angels or children in three
dimensions, based on the Italian treatises of Andrea Pozzo and Fellipe Nazzaro. This started out rather timidly but gradually revealed the daring of
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57
At the time of its transformation into the rococo style, the altarpiece was
enlarged, with the inclusion of a new intermediate shelf, or banquette3 above
the altar, and the crowning sculptural group was replaced by a round arch with
a central ornamental cartouche. However, the accessible niche with its tiered
throne4 was kept, as well as the corbels and fluted columns and some anthropomorphic figures. Although some original elements were maintained in its
composition, the altarpiece was significantly changed, acquiring characteristics
of the rococo style, mainly due to the refined pictorial treatment it received.
Guiding principles
The restoration of the main altarpiece was planned and conceptualized by
taking into consideration all of the remaining interior decoration of the
The intervention
church. The present intervention was based on research and historical surveys, which were essential to understanding the distinct periods of style
involved, interpreting the superimposed painted and carved decorations,
and identifying the changes that had significantly altered the appearance of
the altarpiece. With this research and comparative studies, combined with
on-site technical and material analyses, the restoration sought to recognize
the historical values of the altarpiece, respecting its contributing artists from
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, without losing sight of the balanced
aesthetics of the whole.
58
The proposed intervention on the main altarpiece was designed to respect and
maintain the 1780 transformation, which radically altered the original baroque
concept, by impressing upon it elements from the rococo period. The sculptural group of the Holy Trinity is presently on display at the Museu da Inconfidncia in Ouro Preto, Minas Gerais, yet at no time was the possibility of reintegrating it considered, which would have given the altarpiece its original
crowning. It was concluded that this prior intervention was a fundamental
and historic transformation that was part of the natural evolution of this artistic property, and an integrated part of the decorative whole, which had been
transformed over time according to new styles as well.
Other general considerations further influenced the intervention approach,
such as balancing the sense of completion displayed by the work of art, and
considering both historical and artistic values alongside functionality.
These criteria were the starting point of the debates that preceded the
restoration of the main altarpiece, always recognizing that the altarpiece was
an amply renovated work incorporating two distinct styles that needed to be
carefully preserved in this intervention. Another concern was how to integrate collaborative work among a variety of disciplines, from art historians
to craftsmen, following the needs of conservation. Still, above all, the implementation of the restoration project was intrinsically related to financial factors, which, as in other cases, determined how encompassing the project
would be.
It is important to note that some of the project's preliminary studies were not
completely carried out prior to intervention. In some instances it was not possible to conduct chemical analyses of the strata that make up the pictorial layers, or there were difficulties in accessing the structures or the elements that
make up the ornamentation. As a result, many analyses were undertaken during the intervention phase itself, depending on the needs of the project, and
many of the problems affecting the structural pieces were only fully known at
the time of the intervention.
In this context, it was necessary to take advantage of experience gained from
previous projects of a similar nature, in order to develop a proposal that would
address the complexity of all of the altarpiece's existent problems. In general,
we were able to anticipate that the altarpiece, like other wooden structures in
Brazil, probably had reached a critical state of conservation considering the
challenging environment of this hot and humid region.
THE
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59
and the absence of decorative carvings, were seen in practically all parts of the
altarpiece.
After fixing the polychromy and gilding, a search was made to locate the
places where repainting had occurred, in order to evaluate the state of the
underlying painting. With this information, the pictorial treatment was begun,
removing the repainting that had been applied over the original, historically
and aesthetically more valuable, polychromy.
60
For aesthetic purposes, a leveling was carried out in the areas where a loss of
the original paint was noted, and then a later chromatic reintegration was carried out with the application of watercolor paint by hatching (trateggio). This
treatment was applied mainly on the painting of the accessible niche, which
was quite stained because of previous inadequate oily protection against
wood-eating insects. This technique satisfactorily allowed us to integrate the
needed variety of hues. In the specific case of the stains, light hatching was
applied on the dark areas so as to neutralize the impact of the stains. Finally, a
glossy finish was added to the restored painting to protect it and keep the
opaque appearance of the original polychrome painting.
In certain areas where the gilding had been lost, gold leaf was used as a restoring element. Since these areas of loss were very small, the use of gold leaf did
not result in the favoring of new materials over the original.
Thus, the main objective of the project was to keep intervention to a minimum,
yet restore the physical integrity of the altarpiece and revive its appearance.
THE
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Brazil is a tropical country with a hot and humid climate, whose environment
challenges the conservation of wooden works of art. This is why complementary research on altarpiece materials, building techniques, and wood treatment
contributes to a better understanding of the material behavior of altarpieces,
and therefore contributes to defining appropriate interventions. The techniques, materials and equipment used by the artisans in Minas Gerais during
the eighteenth century were practically the same as those used throughout the
colony and in Portugal. During most of the eighteenth century and continuing
until the beginning of the nineteenth century, sacred art proliferated, involving an infinite number of artists and craftsmen. Professionals who worked
with wood were prominent and quite numerous in the province.
These professionals worked in teams, dividing up the specific tasks of each
phase of work into an interesting sequence of tasks. After the design of the
altarpiece was determined, work would begin with the tracing of the altarpiece in the designated area where it would be built. Throughout the long
process, from cutting trees to the final decoration of the altarpiece, very specific tasks have been identified. The woodcutters' duties consisted of the selection and felling of trees, while the carpenters took care of preparing and shaping the wood, as well as the internal and external structure of the altarpiece.
Other woodworkers prepared the pieces for joining, some of which were
glued and nailed together. Many times these systems for fitting pieces together were at complicated angles, especially in the baroque and rococo altarpieces, in which there is exceptionally profuse decoration. There were also
assemblers, who worked exclusively at assembling wood according to sophisticated joining systems, but there has been very little reference to them in
Minas Gerais. Finally, the carving work was under the responsibility of artisans who worked with a carver in charge of all such work.
It should be pointed out that through comparative studies it is possible to
notice the presence of two or more carvers in a single altarpiece. Many times
we can verify different anatomical features of the sculpted figures whether
angels, cherubim or children distributed throughout the different modules of
the altarpiece, and deduce which modules may have been done separately
and/or simultaneously by different teams.
The quality and type of wood varied according to use. In the structural parts of
the altarpiece, harder woods, such as brauna (Mealoxilon braunia), pepper tree
(Ventanea pnaiculata - Humiraceas), and pau d'arco (Tecoma longiflora - Bigoniaceas), predominated. For the carved and more delicate work, softer wood, such
as cedar (Cedrela sp. - Meliaceas), cinnamon (Nectandra mololis, Lauraceas), and
vinhtico (plathymenia reticulate, Legume, Mimos), among others, were used.
Oral and sometimes written sources have testified to specific processes followed for cutting trees. Although opinions about the best time of year for cutting trees are often contradictory, it is interesting to note that there is a consensus among the older carpenters who are still working in Minas Gerais that
wood should be cut during the waning moon. Some add that in order to avoid
insect attacks and structural changes, such as warping and longitudinal
cracks, cutting should also take place in months without the letter r, i.e. May,
June, July, and August in Portuguese. Seasons in Brazil are not as separable as
SANTO ANTONIO
IN
61
they are in Europe, as there are essentially just two distinct periods: the rainy
season and the dry season. The dry season encompasses those months mentioned above. It was not possible to find a scientific explanation for the preference for the waning moon, but it is interesting to note that this is also the phase
of the moon in which farmers plant crops in order to avoid problems with
insect attacks.
62
After the trees were cut, the tree trunks were hewn into large planks, slabs,
or boards, which were conditioned to dry using a process called wedging,
which consists of placing the pieces on top of each other, always in the shade,
with small slats between them to allow for ventilation. A more sophisticated
procedure involved submerging a tree trunk in water once its bark was
removed. This allows the sap to be dissolved and replaced by water, which
then evaporates when the wood is duly conditioned for drying. It is important to note that the wood for altarpieces was obtained from specific locations known to the workers, locations where the wood was also dried and
cut, as can be seen in the inventory document of Manoel Francisco de Araujo, which dates to 17995:
Wood cut for the altars of the Carmo (i.e. the Church of Our Lady of Carmo in Ouro
Preto), at the mill in the woods of Captain Bento Alves Viana in the district of Milagres:
13 large wooden planks having a length of 20 palms each
28 pieces of wood already selected for use in predetermined locations in the altars
1 piece of wood for the corbels of the same altars, measuring 20 palms in length
6 planks of 20 palms each
22 square cuts (which is a rough hewn log with four rectangular sides)
Logs sawed off a trunk
Payment for the bill for the roads and transportation to take them to where they are
at the mill
There was some variety in the tools used. Handsaws were used for cutting,
while mallets were used for percussion. Various types of chisel gouges and
burins were used for carving. Axes, adzes and planing tools were used to even
out the wood, and there were augers and drills for making holes. For finishing
the wood, there were rasps, files, pumice stones, and sandpaper. The sandpaper generally came from a kind of shark similar to the dogfish, whose skin
becomes very tough when dry. Sandpaper could also be made by gluing sand
onto paper, and imbauba leaves were used as fine sandpaper. Aside from the
tools themselves, the workers used some measuring and checking instruments
for tracings and markings, such as measuring tapes, rulers, T-squares and
marking gauges.
Certain equipment was important when assembling the altarpieces, such as
crowbars, cords made out of plant products, and pulleys made of wood or cast
iron, which made it much easier to transport large pieces such as columns or
THE
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even sculptures, to higher levels. In regard to the tools that were specifically
for carving, it is interesting to note that they were made by hand, and the
woodworker together with the blacksmith could adjust them to the specific
kind of carving that was desired.
Finally, a kind of molding machine existed for making sets of moldings, friezes
and ornamental cords, which are very repetitive elements present in almost all
styles of altarpieces. Manoel Francisco de Araujo's inventory6 lists some interesting equipment among his property, such as a "torno com roda e bigorna e
dez sepos de correr molduras com os seus ferros em cavados." We have
deduced that this item consisted of concave pieces of metal, shaped to produce
the traditional convex cuts typical of moldings, which must have been joined
with some type of machine that was run manually with wheels or foot pedals.
The sepos were planes of different widths.
63
As for the painting and gilding which complemented the carvings and sculptures, it is important to realize that the sculptors and carvers did not paint or
gild their own works. This was the responsibility of the specialized painters
and gilders of the images. Most of the altarpieces made in Minas Gerais in the
1700s, as well as the sculptures produced in that period, were painted some
years after they were made, as was the case with the Passos de Congonhas by
Aleijadinho. Innumerable documents attest to the space of time between when
the carving was done and when it was painted7. It is interesting to note the
item washing the clay (which covered all the carved wood) on the list of
services presented by the painter Ataide. This information leads us to the conclusion that as soon as the carvers finished many of these altarpieces, depending on the financial situation of the brotherhood, they were painted with white
clay or even gesso so as to protect them from the environment so that they
could be used for religious purposes before the final paint was applied.
In Santa Barbara, the presence of Ataide's work is proven through documentation only in regard to the painting of the border of the main chapel. However, comparative analyses indicate that it is likely he was involved in other decoration, suggested by the anatomy of the angels, the palette of colors and the
refined resolution of the design of the ornamentation in the painting of the
accessible niche, as seen in its curtains and lambrequins 8, 9.
Conclusion
64
Two great moments in the history of art created in Minas Gerais during the
eighteenth century are illustrated in the main altarpiece of the Cathedral of
Santo Antonio. The transformation of part of the original design of altarpiece
through the addition of new decorative elements evidences the transition from
the classical baroque to the rococo style, while reflecting the aesthetically
dynamic nature of art. Rococo was the great novelty that would become established in the most important monuments of the province at that time, which
were being built or rebuilt simultaneously in various regions of Minas Gerais
and which were called novos templos (new churches) by contemporary
writers. Thus, this altarpiece represents the expression of new artistic models
within a historical context of intense cultural change in the province of Minas
Gerais, and these characteristics of style are of unique importance in the study
of the evolution of baroque art in Brazil.
The work carried out in Santa Barbara has also provided an opportunity to collect and develop information to the benefit of both art history and conservation, as well as promoting a model for conceptualizing and defining conservation and intervention.
Acknowledgments
The photographs reproduced here were taken by Rosangela Reis Costa, of Grupo Oficina de Restauro,
whom, together with members of the ASASB and of the community of Santa Barbara in general, we
want to thank for their willingness to provide any information necessary for carrying out this study.
References
Anurio do Museu da Inconfidncia. ANO III. Ouro Preto: Ministrio da Educao e Sade, Diretoria
do Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional, 1954.
MARTINS, Judith: Dicionrio de Artistas e Artfices dos Sculos XVIII e XIX em Minas Gerais. Vols. I
and II. Rio de Janeiro: MEC, 1974.
RAMOS, Adriano Reis: Francisco Vieira Servas e o Ofcio da Escultura na Capitania das Minas do
Ouro. Belo Horizonte: Ed. Instituto Cultural Flvio Gutierrez, 2002
Photographic credits
Rosangela Reis Costa
THE
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IN
Notes
1. This work was developed together with restorer Vania Rosa Parreira, from the Superintendncia de
Conservao e Restaurao de Elementos Artsticos do Instituto Estadual do Patrimnio Histrico e
Artstico de Minas Gerais (Office of Conservation and Restoration of Artistic Elements of the State
Institute of the Historic and Artistic Heritage of Minas Gerais, IEPHA/MG).
2. Several Brazilian and international specialists attribute the maturity and richness of carving in
Minas Gerais to Francisco Xavier de Brito, who together with Manoel de Brito created the six-sided
altars of the Church of the Third Order of St. Francis of Penitence, in Rio de Janeiro. Another
renowned later work, dated from 1746, is the interior decoration of the main chapel of the Church of
Our Lady of the Pillar in Ouro Preto, where he introduced very prominent figures, following the new
trend that began in Lisbon, Portugal, in the third decade of the eighteenth century.
3. A banquette is the first step above the altar table, where the candlesticks with wax candles are
placed, with the cross in the center (from VILA, Affonso, MACHADO GONTIJO, Joo Marcos, and
GUEDES MACHADO, Reinaldo: Barroco Mineiro - Glossrio de Arquitetura e Ornamentao. 3rd
edition. Belo Horizonte: Fundao Joo Pinheiro, 1996; see also the introductory essay by Affonso
vila).
4. A throne is a kind of pedestal placed in the open space of the pulpit or accessible niche of an
altar, where images or crucifixes are exhibited. In the churches in Minas Gerais of the eighteenth century, the throne is often in the form of a jar or steps (from VILA, Affonso, MACHADO GONTIJO,
Joo Marcos, and GUEDES MACHADO, Reinaldo: Barroco Mineiro - Glossrio de Arquitetura e
Ornamentao. 3rd edition. Belo Horizonte: Fundao Joo Pinheiro, 1996; see also the introductory
essay by Affonso vila).
5. Copied from Ivo Porto de Menezes in the Revista del Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional,
issue no. 18.
6. Published by Ivo Porto de Menezes in the Revista del Patrimnio Histrico e Artstico Nacional,
issue no. 18.
7. For example, the interior ornamentation of the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in Mariana was
begun in 1770 and finished in 1775 by Servas, yet it was painted 48 years later, in 1823 by Manoel
da Costa Ataide, a painter from Mariana.
8. See RAMOS, Adriano Reis: Francisco Vieira Servas e o Oficio da Escultura na Capitania das Minas
do Ouro (Belo Horizonte: Ed. Instituto Cultural Flavio Gutierrez, 2002), especially the chapter referring to the techniques and materials used in making works of art.
9. Lambrequins are wood trim or metallic sheet trim for the edges of coverings or overhangs in
carved work with canopies, valences or altarpiece canopies. Sometimes they are also called 'sinhaninhas.' It is thought that they were first used in Minas Gerais during the second half of the nineteenth
century (from VILA, Affonso, MACHADO GONTIJO, Joo Marcos, and GUEDES MACHADO,
Reinaldo: Barroco Mineiro - Glossrio de Arquitetura e Ornamentao. 3rd edition. Belo Horizonte:
Fundao Joo Pinheiro, 1996; see also the introductory essay by Affonso vila).
65
Conception
2001
67
Over the past few decades, the Colombian government, under its respective
Ministry of Culture and with certain financial entities, has undertaken the task
of raising awareness of the country's heritage, so that Colombia's movable and
immovable cultural property will be respected and safeguarded. The private
institutions and religious orders that own these cultural legacies have followed this example in turn.
In recent years, the Order of the Capuchin Monks has embarked upon an effort
to restore and safeguard all of its heritage property.
This heritage restoration work concluded with an intervention on the main
altarpiece of the Church of the Conception. For this purpose, a series of guidelines were developed from the point of view of both material and methodological needs. The restoration's goal was to enhance the presentation of the
altarpiece, with the sole purpose of having it acknowledged and conserved by
the public in general and by future generations.
The project involved an interdisciplinary group of professionals, who undertook the task of analyzing, studying and defining the methodology and processes best suited to working on this cultural object. As a result of this effort, today
the main altarpiece, as well as the church and the other works of arts housed
there, are respected and acknowledged by churchgoers and other visitors.
The Order of the Conception of the Virgin Mary was founded by St Beatriz de
Silva (1424-1490). It belongs to the Franciscan branch, although during the
period in which it was organized it took on special characteristics. Founded in
the Spanish city of Toledo in 1484, it was a contemplative order with a special
devotion to the Most Holy Virgin Mary, dedicated to the Immaculate Conception. Pope Alexander VI granted it preliminary approval as a religious order
in April 1489, and Julius II granted its definitive approval in September 1511,
which placed the order under the jurisdiction of the Franciscans. Pope Julius
II also approved the special constitutions, which are based on those of the Clarisan nuns.
Historical context
The Order of the Conception of the Virgin Mary was very well received both
in Europe and in the Americas, to such an extent that, by the sixteenth century,
fifteen monasteries had been constructed, located in Mexico, Guatemala,
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. The first foundations of the Conception
of the Virgin Mary cloisters were entrusted to highly prominent members of
the local aristocracy.
For the city of Santa Fe de Bogot, this church was the first one for nuns. It was
built at the initiative of businessmen Luis Lpez Ortiz and Cristbal Rodrguez Cano. Their objective was to make it available for the daughters and
granddaughters of the conquistadors, dedicated to the adoration of the Conception of Our Lady, the Virgin Mary.
68
The construction of the church and convent was entrusted to two brothers,
Domingo and Jorge Moreno, and to a carpenter, Juan Snchez Garca. The
work began in 1583 and concluded on September 29, 1595, at which time convent life began for its first three nuns, named Catalina de Cspedes, rsula
and Isabel Villagmez. In order to teach them about their life at the convent,
the founder of the convent of the Clarisas in Tunja, Sister Juana de la Cruz,
arrived in November 1595, along with her Mother Superior's deputy, Sister
Ana de la Cruz. The first three novices took their vows on the eve of the festival of the Eleven Thousand Virgins in the following year, 1596, received by
Vicar General Don Francisco Guerrero. Sister Juana de la Cruz and her companion returned to their monastery in 1599, and the Reverend Mother Catalina de Jess was selected as the first abbess.
The single nave church has a semi-vaulted ceiling adorned with ornamentations in the plateresque style, originally imported from Seville to decorate the
Tocaima residence of Spaniard Juan Daz. That home was destroyed in 1581
by a flooding of the Bogot River, but part of the ornamentation was rescued
and later donated to the church.
In 1862, General Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera enacted the Law for the Seizure of Property in Dead Hands, which expelled and evicted all religious orders
MAIN ALTARPIECE
OF THE
CHURCH
OF THE
from the country and confiscated their property. All of that property was handed over to be administered by the Office of the Archbishop and to certain private parties.
In 1905 the Archbishop of Santa Fe de Bogot, Bernardo Restrepo, assigned the
custody of the Church of the Conception to the Capuchin monks, and on September 10, 1948, the nuns of the Conception of the Virgin Mary sold the church
to the Capuchin monks.
The main altarpiece of the Church of the Conception is formed by two horizontal and three vertical registers. The design components of these registers
will be detailed in this section.
Description and
significance of the main
altarpiece
The lower base of the altarpiece is built in lime and stone masonry. It employs
a colonial red paint and its shape is semi-cylindrical, similar to that observed
in the predella. The predella uses a variety of forms, such as concave, convex
and semi-cylindrical, and has appliqus of gilded and carved plant motifs.
The first horizontal register has two side vertical registers, flanked by smooth
shafted columns with Corinthian capitals and wooden appliqus in plant
motifs. The four columns have a special characteristic, since they are hollow
and assembled using wooden slats placed vertically. Between each set of
columns is a protruding canopy, each with a set of curtains. Garlands hang
from each canopy as well. All these features are carved from wood and decorated in tones of light yellow and red. These elements stand out against the
entablature, which is painted in yellow.
The niche on the right side of the altarpiece houses the sculpture of San Antonio de Padua. This sculpture is placed on a carved corbel shelf with rocaille
ornamentation in shades of yellowish-white against a blue background. In the
niche on the left side is the sculpture of San Pascual Bailn, which is placed on
a similar shelf. Two pilasters covered by appliqus with floral forms and
motifs flank the central or main niche. The frieze is bluish in hue, while the
cornice is partially gilded, and partially painted in white.
The second horizontal register has two pilasters whose characteristics are similar to those described above, which flank the central niche. The lateral niches
are flanked by carved appliqus in vegetal motifs, with gilded canopies located in their central area. The scallop shell is red and blue in hue, with sparkling
rays of light. The two niches are occupied by the sculptures of San Flix de
Cantalicio (with the Christ Child in his arms) and San Conrado de Parzam.
The altar is crowned with a broken pediment bearing the representation of
the Eternal Father, which has carved clouds with well-preserved silver leaf
decoration.
In front of the main altarpiece is the exhibitor (or expositorio). Father Joaqun
de Albocacer, who is now beatified, acquired this work in 1932. The exhibitor
was moved to its current location in 1933 and was entrusted to Valencian
69
MAIN ALTARPIECE
OF THE
CHURCH
OF THE
The first phase of the project, prior to the preliminary studies and the intervention on the main altarpiece, consisted of a meeting between the specialized
personnel in charge of the intervention and representatives of the Capuchin
Order, such as its Provincial, treasurer and historian. At the meeting, the fundamental objective put forth was the need to intervene on the main altarpiece,
bearing in mind its aesthetic and historic characteristics, its importance in the
community, the possible impact on the community (in the event of a significant change), the stability of its original constitutive materials, and the need to
recover those materials.
The intervention and methodology to be applied during the intervention on
the altarpiece was proposed following the directives, principles and guidelines used during previous interventions in the church, in order to achieve a
similar, homogeneous aesthetic appearance among the objects that form the
church's collection of art.
71
The second phase of the project consisted of analysis and direct observation of
the altarpiece, to determine its outstanding features, current state of conservation and indications of alterations.
As we began to face the issues of the intervention phase, we continued with an
exhaustive search for bibliographic materials, starting with the historic archives of the community. Interviews were conducted with historians (including
the Order's historian), churchgoers and other persons with some form of connection to the church, who have observed and are familiar with its transformation over the past decades.
At the same time, the Provincial of the Capuchin Order did whatever was needed to obtain funding. Most of the funds came from the Order itself, while the
rest were acquired through donations and churchgoers' charity contributions.
For this purpose, the parish priests carried out a campaign during the masses,
describing the urgent need to intervene upon the altarpiece, and explaining
that this work would take a long time to finish and would require fairly extensive funding to accomplish. The community was also informed in general
terms of the professional characteristics of the personnel who would be involved in the conservation work, the importance of the restoration and the significance of the altarpiece over time. The community was encouraged to respect
a work of art of such importance and was informed of potential visible changes that the altarpiece might undergo.
Development of the
proposal and preliminary
studies
Still the altarpiece and its context in general were respected, and harmony was
sought between prior interventions and this new one, so that the altarpiece
would be seen as heritage with a historical trajectory, and would be valued by
the population as a whole.
Before conducting any intervention work, the restoration was contemplated
from two well-defined and closely interrelated standpoints. The first corresponded to methodology and therefore required a critical approach. It basically
involved values, reflections, analyses and concepts that made it possible to
implement and carry out the proposals. The second was related to operational
efforts, in terms of how we would intervene from a material point of view.
72
Search for old illustrations and photographs of the altarpiece, convent and
church
The only document found corresponds to a photograph from the early twentieth century, which shows the state of the altarpiece before the addition of the
temple-shaped niche, exhibitor and sculpture of the Immaculate Conception.
MAIN ALTARPIECE
OF THE
CHURCH
OF THE
73
Paint sampling
Since the documentary, graphic and photographic research did not prove very
useful, we decided to focus our efforts on a scientific process applied directly
to the object of study. We took a series of samples mechanically and with the
aid of several solvents. We hoped that this study would give us a chronological overview of decorative changes, additions and mutilations to the altarpiece at a structural level.
The results obtained were quite satisfactory. Through them, it was possible to
determine changes in the polychromy, starting with the oldest layer, that is, the
original paint layer, up to the most recent layer of paint applied to the altarpiece. Once we had thoroughly studied the work and its prior interventions,
we decided to conduct further scientific analyses to determine the nature and
composition of each of the layers, and thereby select the methods and materials that would be most effective for removing those layers.
Our preliminary studies provided many important details about the main
altarpiece, its material composition and building system, as well as information on prior interventions. First of all, the original altarpiece is built of cedar
wood of excellent quality. Dovetail joints, reinforced with animal glue, attach
its smooth surfaces to one another. Over these pieces is a series of appliqus or
carvings, also made from cedar wood.
The joining of the entablatures and the columns is accomplished using a mortise-and-tenon system; all of the mortises and tenons are round. The characte-
ristics of the columns are important to highlight, since even though they
correspond to the era when the altarpiece was built, they use a construction
system that was uncommon at the time in New Granada. All are hollow and
employ a series of small splints glued and joined to form the excellent finished
surface for these columns.
74
The altarpiece has been altered since its original construction, in ways that
have affected its aesthetics and structure in general. The most extreme alterations can be observed at the sides of the work of art, where one can see a series
of cuts that interrupt the continuity of the friezes, moldings and entablature.
In these areas the cuts were made at 45 angles. The pieces fit together in a
defective manner and the parts do not match up. There are also some mutilated carved elements that do not correspond to the position in which they are
currently found. This shows that the altarpiece had been larger and probably
was created for another church. For some reason yet unknown, it was eventually transferred to the presbytery of the Church of the Conception. There are
unfortunately few or no documents regarding the altarpiece's origin, creation
or possible transfer.
As of the date of the intervention, the wooden structure of the altarpiece showed no signs of xylophagous insect infestation, despite the environmental
conditions to which it had been subjected over long periods of time. We only
noted an accumulation of dirt on the reverse of the altarpiece due to a lack of
maintenance, as well as bird droppings from the pigeons that sometimes nested there. There was also accumulation and residues of cement and bricks left
over from previous repairs to the church wall.
Certain sectors of the wood support did have minor infestations of xylophagous insects, although it was determined that the infected wood corresponded
to recent interventions, which used a poor quality, yellow-wood, that had not
been previously treated and disinfected.
The original design of the altarpiece has also undergone a series of radical interventions. We have noted, for instance, changes and additions made to the first
horizontal register, eliminating the altar table and the sanctuary, and closing the
opening that led to the accessible niche where the Virgin is housed. These modifications were made in 1933, when the exhibitor was added to the altarpiece.
Another intervention consisted of the mutilation of a large part of the structure located in the central vertical register, the sole purpose of which was to make
room for the sculpture of the Immaculate Conception. In this sector, the central
part of the entablature was eliminated, along with the carved arch that framed
the central niche of the lower register. In fact, the central niches on both the
lower and upper registers were modified. As a result of this intervention, several original carvings and appliqus were removed and have now disappeared.
Upon analyzing the paint layers, it was determined that the base preparation
layer was a mixture of calcium sulfate with a binding medium of animal glue,
whose function was to protect and coat the wood, as well as to achieve a completely smooth appearance on the original surface. The surface was polished
in order to give it a marbled look.
MAIN ALTARPIECE
OF THE
CHURCH
OF THE
The original paint layer was based on plant pigments and earth-mineral pigments typically found in the area surrounding the city of Bogot. Its hue is a
bone white used as the background or base of the decoration, over which one
finds various shades of blue and red, creating the marbled appearance. This
evidences the lack of resources with which the artists of the times had to work,
since they had to go out constantly to find and prepare their own materials.
The interventions or repainting on top of the original surface consist of a series
of layers of vinyl and oil paints. A light yellow hue covers a large percentage
of the altarpiece's surface; the columns are painted over with a light green oil
paint. The frieze panels are painted over with a blue vinyl paint, and finally
vinyl blues and reds were used for the lower base of the altarpiece along with
green enamel.
75
The gilding suffered losses and partial abrasions, exposing the support in
some sectors. On the rest of the surface, repainting of gilded paint or mosaic
gold covers a large part of the gold leaf. The aesthetic appearance of this layer
has degraded over time, leaving a surface that is now a dark greenish color,
devoid of any shine or brilliance.
The assembly that corresponds to the temple-shaped niche and its carvings is
made of pine. Its geometric design and decoration are based on sgraffitos and
estofado techniques, and there is a carving of the Last Supper and two shields.
The niche's state of conservation is acceptable, with the exception of slight
damage caused by moisture from flower vases constantly placed in this area.
The water that collects there has caused a separation of the base preparation
layer, the gold leaf and the paint layer.
We also found a serious problem with the electrical wiring. The wires were
exposed, with no type of protection such as PVC tubes or other strong covering. We found wires in poor condition deteriorated by the passage of time, at
a high risk of short-circuiting, which could cause a major fire.
Graphic and photographic documentation was made of the current condition of
the altarpiece, so as to leave a record of the interventions conducted over time.
Before removing the repainting, it was necessary to evaluate the results obtained by the personnel involved in the work thus far. First, through an analysis
and comparison with other churches of Bogot from the same era, we originally thought the altarpiece was gilded in its totality, yet it turned out to be
polychromed, with a marbled appearance. Based on the aesthetic characteristics of the altarpiece's polychromy and its acceptable state of conservation, it
was concluded that the change in the decoration was either due to the personal taste of a parish priest, or what was in style at the time, or perhaps the
novelty of the materials.
The altarpiece's anchoring system to the wall was in good condition. Furthermore, there were no structural faults, for which reason it was decided not to
disassemble the altarpiece, and to perform the work on site.
Proposed intervention
tasks
Analyzing the photography from the 1930s, one can see that the temple-shaped niche and exhibitor were added on and that a few years later the central
vertical register on both the first and second horizontal registers were mutilated so that the sculpture of the Immaculate Conception would fit. At the
request of representatives of the order and out of respect for the community's
views, as well as for the sake of convenience, it was decided not to eliminate
the interventions, since they now form an integral part of the work as evidence of the historic past of the altarpiece. Furthermore, any reconstruction of the
entablature would necessitate the removal of the sculpture of the church's
patron saint from its current site.
Comparative scientific analyses and examinations of the stratigraphic probes
revealed that the prior interventions consisted of the application of a thick
layer of oil paint in blue, red and cream tones, under which the original paint
layer could be found. For that reason, solvents were tested to determine the
optimal, most efficient means and mechanisms to remove that layer, without
causing any type of damage to the original paint surface.
76
Once the repainting was removed, it was decided to eliminate the structural
additions, since they were not only newly added, but were horrendous in quality, were in poor condition and infested with xylophagous insects, resulting in
a visual and structural deterioration.
The structural gaps resulting from the removal of these additions were small
in size in proportion to the altarpiece's total surface and were not carved. Therefore these smooth surfaces located at the sides were replaced with pre-treated cedar wood.
Implementation of the
proposed intervention
Likewise, bearing in mind the guidelines mentioned above and clear evidence
that polychromy had been located there, it was decided to replace both the
base preparation layer and the paint layer in those areas in such a way that it
would be possible to distinguish, from a prudent distance, between the original paint layer and the restorer's intervention.
During the implementation phase, an analysis was made of the best processes
to apply and the methodology for doing so. Based on previous analyses, which
evidenced that a high percentage of the original paint could be rescued and
intervened upon, the totality of the repainting was removed. During this phase, graphic and photographic documentation recorded the level of intervention on the base preparation and paint layers.
The next step consisted of the operational phases of conserving and restoring
the various layers of the original polychromy, in keeping with the basic guideline of ensuring a homogenous, harmonious aesthetic appearance for the
main altarpiece. A factor that predominated in decision-making for the cleaning process was the possible effect of the main altarpiece's new aesthetic
appearance in the eyes of the churchgoers. To counteract this impact, the
parish priests and specialized personnel called the churchgoers together to
explain the intervention processes and go over the guidelines for the work.
MAIN ALTARPIECE
Churchgoers who visit the Church of the Conception on a daily basis actively
participated during the implementation of the intervention works, and were
kept up to date on changes to the polychromy. Some of them took enough interest to ask questions and become familiar with the true value of conserving
and safeguarding Colombia's cultural heritage.
OF THE
CHURCH
OF THE
The methodological process had to be broken down into two phases, given the
type of tasks involved (the first phase covered the work prior to eliminating
the repainting and the second covered the work thereafter).
At the request of the monks of the Capuchin Order, a new carving of the shield
of the order was placed in the upper part of the altarpiece, based on a perspective of religiosity and that Order's identification within the Colombian
social and cultural context.
Acknowledgments
Financing: Order of the Capuchin Monks
Provincial: Brother Luis Eduardo Rubiano
Guardian: Brother Egidio Henao
Historian: Brother Ernesto Jaramillo
Photographic credits
Hctor Oswaldo Prieto Gordillo
77
78
flesh tones
Colombia
July 17, 2000, followed by the intervention from March 13 to June 22,
2001
restorers, one chemist, one biologist, one architect, one historian and one
photographer. Intervention: five movable object restorers, one architect,
Style: Baroque
one restorer, one carver, one carpenter, two gilders, one assistant and one
photographer
79
The altarpiece of San Jos, located in the northern Colombian town of Tubar,
is characterized by the use of estipite columns, typical of the baroque style in
that coastal region.
Tubar was an indigenous town with a current population of less than three
thousand inhabitants. The townspeople have been deeply involved in the conservation of the altarpiece, whether by initiating the conservation process or
participating in the intervention. By their efforts, the townspeople have evidenced their interest in cultural heritage and their sense of ownership of this
heritage, which has provided a model for the safeguarding of cultural heritage
in the region.
The process currently managed by the Ministry of Culture is structured in two
main phases, the studies and the intervention itself. This practice aims to
ensure a proper diagnosis and the preparation of accurate budgets, allowing
for better and more extensive use of funds invested in the country's heritage.
The conservation and restoration work conducted on the altarpiece of San Jos
de Tubar recovered design components and aesthetic aspects formerly hidden under repainting. As a result, the intervention has restored the altarpiece's
original values and authenticity.
parishes and five indigenous towns, among them Tubar. By 1540 Tubar was
one of the largest encomiendas2. Each encomendero was responsible for
entrusting his respective indigenous town to a monk, brother or priest who
would teach the doctrine of the Catholic faith and build a church, since
Catholic doctrine was the Crown's strategy for catechizing the indigenous
people. The impact of this institution is evidenced by the fact that even after
the encomienda system was abolished, the teaching of Catholic doctrine continued.
According to Jos Agustn Blanco, during the time between the founding of
Cartagena de Indias (1533) and the subjugation of the town of Tubar (1540) to
the encomienda system, there was great chaos in the administration of indigenous towns throughout the province of Cartagena. This was a period of domination and pillage on the part of the Spaniards, with resistance and sometimes
flight on the part of the indigenous people. It was for that reason that the Crown
sent a Royal Decree to Bishop Jernimo de Loaysa, through the governor of Santa Cruz, to place the indigenous people under the encomienda system3.
80
In the first quarter of the eighteenth century, the economic dysfunction of the
encomienda system reached a low point, and Felipe V decided to eliminate
that form of administering tribute. The encomiendas in what is now the
Department of Atlntico were legally abolished in 1721.
The Dominicans governed the parishes in Cartagena beginning with the
founding of the Convent of San Jos of Cartagena in 1539, whose first prior
was Father Jos de Robles. The convent was dedicated to San Jos, and the
name San Jos de Tubar probably comes from the Dominican convent. In fact,
the Dominican order had a pattern of naming parishes after their respective
convents. From 1539 to 1772 the Dominicans managed the church. Since then,
the diocese directly administered it. In 1886 the Trial Court Judge of Barranquilla declared that the lands of the reserve of Tubar were vacant, and its
lands were sold at a public auction.
The first indications of a doctrinal church in Tubar are associated with the
times when San Luis Beltrn was in charge of the Christianization effort from
1562 and 1569. It appears that the doctrinal priest of Cipacua and Luis Beltrn
decided to build a chapel approximately equidistant from the two towns to
facilitate the teaching of the doctrine. According to Blanco Barros, this church
is considered to be distinct from the churches of the two towns4.
Thus, three different churches have been noted in total. The first, shared by
Luis Beltrn and the priest of Cipacua, was called Ermita de San Luis Beltrn,
which some people have confused with the church of the cemetery of Tubar.
The second is the church of the town of Tubar, and the third is the church of
Venta de los Zambos de Nuestra Seora de Buenavista. According to Blanco
Barrios, Venta de los Zambos is not documented, and there are no extant
remains of that church.
The first detailed records of the church of Tubar date back to 1610. Two doc-
ALTARPIECE
OF
uments exist, but they seem ambiguous. Both clearly indicate the presence of
two churches, but it is not clear which is Tubar and which was built by the
two priests, and whether either is the one existing today. From 1611 to 1772,
there is a gap in documentation on the church. In 1898, Jos Mara Revollo,
parish priest of the church of Tubar, made reference to the construction of a
new building.
The current church of Tubar has features that are characteristic of minor
churches built in small towns in the late seventeenth century. It has a single
nave, with a transverse arch and a presbytery. There are two large access doors
on the sides of the building, and a main door at the far end of the church. The
church is located on a small hill overlooking much of the town of Tubar. Religious services take place at the church.
81
The altarpiece of San Jos consists of two horizontal and three vertical registers, made up by the lower base of the predella, the predella, the first horizontal register, and the second horizontal register, which crowns the altarpiece.
The most outstanding feature of the altarpiece's design is the estipite column,
of which six are present.
TOWER
NAVE
PRESBYTERY
SACRISTY
TOWER
The lower base of the predella, upon which the altarpiece rests, is a recent construction. It is made of brick and cement, is rectangular in form, and curves out
at the sides and at the front. In the center of the altar frontal, a bunch of flowers frame a chalice against a brown backdrop. The center of the predella has a
cartouche surrounded by plant motifs. On each side are two pedestals, separated by cartouches similar to the one in the center, each adorned with a
82
SACRISTY
DECORATIVE FLANK
PEDESTAL
CARTOUCHE
ALTARPIECE
OF
83
84
Construction techniques
The building system of the altarpiece is based on the layout of the various
components, where the single-piece horizontal elements the predella, enta
blatures and attic support and connect the vertical elements, such as columns,
panels and pinnacles. From a construction point of view, the altarpiece lacks an
anchoring system to ensure its stability. No evidence was seen of any such
system in the form of marks on the wall.
The altarpiece rests upon a brick base, which acts as an altar table and supports the predella, with no type of fastening system. This base also supports
the four columns, niche, panels and upper entablature of the first horizontal
register. That entablature, in turn, plays a role in supporting the elements of
the second horizontal register, which is formed by two columns, a niche and
an attic.
The joining of the horizontal and vertical pieces is mostly achieved through
tight-fitting mortise-and-tenon joints, sometimes supported or reinforced with
forged iron nails or wooden wedges made from coroso and chonta palm trees.
Exceptions to this pattern are found in the panels of the niche of the attic and
the main panels, which are assembled by a system of half lap joints. All of the
columns and pinnacles use cylindrical tenons, while the tenons of the panels
are rectangular in shape.
All the altarpiece's constructive and carved elements are made of cedar wood.
The marks left on the wood are evidence that the elements were made by cutting and carving the pieces of wood by hand, using an adze, gouges and chisels to shape the various elements of the altarpiece's structure. Outstanding
among the carving work are the columns, which are made in a single piece of
wood, as well as their various appliqus and decorative elements. The flanks
and the pinnacles are also made in one solid piece.
The altarpiece is decorated with moldings and carved relief, attached to the
supporting structure and finished with gilding and polychromy. On the support, a thin white base preparation layer was found, made of gypsum and calcium carbonate, with a smaller proportion of animal glue as a binding medi-
ALTARPIECE
OF
um. The polychromy includes reds, greens and blues, alternated with gold leaf
and the flesh tones of the cherub faces. The polychromy uses scarlet lacquer
for the red, and Prussian blue for the blue-green background of the columns.
The gilding employed gold leaf, applied with water gilding. In some of the
background areas of the altarpiece, such as the upper part of the niches and the
flanks, lines were drawn in the shape of rhombuses and decorated in the center, with the aim of giving these surfaces a different texture. This design was
made with incision cuts and pricks, using a punch point.
85
More than seven years ago, the community of Tubar took the initiative in
requesting the intervention of the Centro Nacional de Restauracin (National
Restoration Center), a Service of the Ministry of Culture, in the conservation of
San Jos altarpiece. This request was led by the Reconstruction Council of the
Church of San Jos de Tubar out of concern for the advanced state of deterioration of this important heritage object, which holds symbolic significance for
the community as its only altarpiece.
The Council worked with departmental entities (the provincial government)
and national authorities (the Ministry of Culture), along with the religious
community and town as a whole, to make the funding of the conservation possible through the Ministry of Culture. An investment of US$33,884 was contributed by the Ministry of Culture for the preliminary studies and intervention, who also provided the needed human resources for supervision of the
work activities. The collaboration and hospitality of the town and parish was
also fundamental for the project's success.
The intervention took into consideration all the values the altarpiece represents for the community at large, which range from its design characteristics
and extensive decoration, to its original values and the aesthetic and symbolic value of this stylistic trend seen all along the northern Colombian coast.
Project development
86
The project was developed in two different steps. The first phase included the
preliminary studies, the establishment of the diagnosis and the drafting of the
intervention proposal. The proposal outlined a work schedule considering
human, technical and economic resources. The second phase was the intervention phase, during which all technical processes of conservation and
restoration, aimed at recovering the original values of the artwork and its
structural stability, were carried out.
Initially, as a result of the preliminary studies, it was proposed that the altarpiece be sent to Bogot for the intervention phase. In considering this possibility, the community asked the townspeople for their opinions, which
revealed opposition to the altarpiece's disassembly and transportation. The
town requested that the provincial government ask the Ministry of Culture to
have the intervention take place in Tubar. As it turned out, that decision had
already been made by the Ministry of Culture, in consideration of the importance of community participation, and the fact that an on-site intervention
would increase the townspeople's involvement and appreciation of the conservation and recovery of the altarpiece's original state. An on-site intervention was also understood to reduce costs and risks of the work.
Preliminary studies
The first step of the preliminary studies was to create an inventory of the collection of cultural objects within the church of Tubar, coupled with historic,
aesthetic and iconographic studies. A detailed planimetric survey was taken of
each piece of the altarpiece to determine their state of conservation and investigate the causes of deterioration. An analysis was made of the techniques
used to construct and decorate the altarpiece, based on scientific analyses of
stratigraphic cuts, pigments, mediums, bindings and base preparation layers.
This sampling also made it possible to analyze previous interventions, as well
as identify the state of conservation of the original underlying polychromy.
This, in turn, allowed for the development of a pre-restoration diagnosis and
the definition of the level of intervention required.
Finally, the intervention proposal was made, establishing the intervention's
guidelines and methodology, and specifying the needed materials, equipment,
number of professionals, duration of the work and the intervention's actual cost.
State of conservation
The altarpiece had been repainted with a coat of dark brown paint. Applied on
top of the original paint and the later mosaic gold treatment, this layer covered
up all the gilded zones of the moldings, carvings and appliqus, markedly
altering the altarpiece's chromatic and volumetric composition.
ALTARPIECE
OF
87
Through the preliminary studies, it was found that the entire supporting structure had suffered an insect infestation. Although it was determined that the
infestation was inactive, this had caused a weakening and loss of some of the
altarpiece's structural and decorative components, especially in the columns
and the entablature of the first horizontal register. After removing the repainting, the real magnitude of the deterioration was seen. The insects had created
extensive damage and destroyed elements of the carvings, especially in the
columns of the first horizontal register. On the bases of the capitals, backs, and
sides of the outer columns, patches of plaster from previous repairs were
found to be completely degraded. The pieces forming the attic, as well as its
pilasters, were in an advanced state of deterioration. Cracks were found in
some areas of this upper register, especially in the right-hand column and the
pinnacles.
A significant alteration was found in the niche of the first horizontal register,
whose height had been extended to house a larger image. This changed the
niche's proportions, the unity of the altarpiece as a whole and the perception of
the altarpiece. The modification in question also notably affected the entablature
of the first horizontal register, since that area had been cut and eliminated.
Over time, other components had disappeared, had been displaced or
destroyed, among them the flanks of the second horizontal register, as well
as the pinnacles of the first horizontal register. The lower area of the right
flank of the predella was gone, along with the frond of the opposite flank.
Additional elements that did not belong on the altarpiece were found. A
sanctuary, made of gilded cement, was covering up the cartouche located in
the center of the predella.
The intervention proposal was then elaborated, based on the following fundamental guidelines:
respect for the originality and authenticity of the altarpiece
elimination of additions and modifications that alter or distort the altarpiece's aesthetic and historic interpretation
88
Intervention
To allow the intervention work to be carried out in Tubar, space and facilities
had to be created. The second floor of the rectory was converted into a workshop, which conveniently provided access to the townspeople so that they
could directly observe the restoration process.
The altarpiece had to be disassembled. Prior to doing this, the pieces were classified and marked, both on the plan of the altarpiece and directly on the pieces
themselves. The structural pieces were numbered, as were the decorative
carved elements and appliqus. Before proceeding with the disassembly, survey measures were taken of the various levels, to provide a reference for the
height of the predella, horizontal registers and attic.
The disassembly procedure consisted of pulling apart the altarpiece, piece by
piece, element by element, starting with the attic and working down, one horizontal register at a time, until reaching the predella, where the cement sanc-
ALTARPIECE
OF
tuary was removed. Some elements were removed in one piece, such as the
attic and the predella. The columns were disassembled from the entablatures.
Consolidation of the support was accomplished by applying Paraloid B-57,
prepared in concentrations of 10% and 20%. This solution was applied to the
back of the panels and non-polychromed elements with a brush, and was
injected into holes and gaps along the front side. The pieces were wrapped in
sealed bags to prevent rapid evaporation of the solvent and ensure the consolidant's penetration.
The supporting wood structure of all the altarpiece's elements was treated by
applying special Xilamon TR with a brush or syringe, following the same procedure used for the consolidation. The pieces were also wrapped in sealed
bags to ensure the product's success.
The following main actions were undertaken to remove previous disturbing
interventions: the central niche was reshaped, the cement sanctuary was withdrawn and the plaster renders in the columns were removed.
Various structural and design components were replaced to restore the altarpiece to its original composition and form. Reconstructed elements were
carved by persons from the region, based on information present in the altarpiece, taking into consideration the symmetrical composition of the altarpiece,
marks on the altarpiece where original elements had been cut off and fragments of original elements being reused in other areas of altarpiece.
Major intervention tasks included the restoration of the entablature of the first
horizontal register and the reshaping the niche, which had been mutilated.
Various pieces comprising the entablature, which had been cut and reused in
other areas, such as the upper ceiling of the niche, were set back in place. This
work also included the replacement of one section of the frontal panel. For the
niche, the arch was set back in place, along with the two pilasters, one of which
was found in the church's storage room.
89
Other replaced elements were: the lower part of the right flank of the predella, the frond on the opposite flank, the decorative elements crowning the vertical registers and sides of the altarpiece, some moldings of the entablature on
the first horizontal register, the large cornice of the predella where the sanctuary had been anchored, the ends of the cornice, the central panel of the entablature frieze on the first horizontal register and a carved piece located above
the archivolt.
Although mortises for connecting additional flanks to the second horizontal
register were visible, these flanks were not restored, since no records were
found upon which to base their reconstruction.
90
ALTARPIECE
OF
The restoration of the altarpiece and its aesthetic aspects was challenging,
since there was a need to approximate the altarpiece's original features while
respecting its authenticity. Fortunately, the restoration work succeeded at integrating the new elements with the altarpiece's original parts. Nonetheless, not
all the missing elements were replaced, especially in those cases for which
there were no references.
The replaced pieces were based on existing elements wherever the altarpiece's
symmetrical composition so allowed. The intervention work was developed to
a point where these pieces will be easily identifiable as the product of a current
intervention, in order to respect the altarpiece's authenticity and originality, so
that when the altarpiece is viewed it will not look as if it is a recent creation.
91
Community participation
Cultural significance
The altarpiece of San Jos, as the only existing example of its kind in the town,
is appreciated and recognized by the community as a part of its cultural legacy. It is present in the collective imagination of the town and is associated with
traditions. Its presence brings the town together around the celebrations of
religious holidays, which also bring in persons from the neighboring towns.
92
ALTARPIECE
OF
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the work team that performed the studies and intervention on the altarpiece of
San Jos de Tubar, as well as Aracely Morales Lpez, Minister of Culture, Katya Gonzlez Rosales,
architect and heritage director, the Restoration Council of the Church of San Jos de Tubar, its two
parish priests, and the town in general for its hospitality.
Work team
Preliminary studies:
Rodolfo Valln Magaa, director
Hctor Oswaldo Prieto Gordillo, restorer and photographer
Adriana Mara Vill Ortiz, restorer
Germn Franco Salamanca, architect
Luis Fernando Molina Londoo, historian
Claudia Montagut Meja, historian
Herbert Guerrero, biologist
Javier Uribe Surez, chemist
Intervention work:
Juan de Jess Guerrero Gmez, director
Ernesto Bocanegra Ramrez, restorer
Isabel Cristina Quintero, restorer
Margarita Acosta, restorer
Waleska Massi, restorer
Luz Delia Bohrquez, restorer
Mompox Workshop School, gilders
Photographic credits
Photographs were provided by the Direccin de Patrimonio del Ministerio de Cultura.
Notes
1. Tubar means meeting in the Mocan language. This name is given to the meeting place of
caciques and local representatives from Guaimaral, Cipacua, Palvato, Oca, Yaguaro and Cibarco, who
were met by Pedro de Heredia on his expedition in the north of Barlovento, shortly after the founding
of Cartagena, that is, in the latter half of 1533. See Pedro Mara Revollo, Nombres geogrficos indgenas en el Departamento del Atlntico, Barranquilla, published by Litografa de Barranquilla, 1932. pp.
22-23. In this book, Revollo cites the report of Juan Jos Nieto (1839) who in turn had cited Diego de
Peredo's report of 1772.
2. The encomienda is defined as a concession by the king, in favor of a Spanish subject, of tribute or
work that indigenous subjects had to pay to the Crown. The encomienda was granted to the
encomendero for life, and sometimes to one or two generations of his heirs. In exchange, the
encomendero was responsible for instructing and Christianizing the indigenous people.
3. Jos Agustn Blanco Barros, Tubar, La encomienda mayor de Tierradentro. 1st Edition, Bogot.
Publisher: Centro Editorial Javeriano, 1995. p. 89. All information regarding the encomienda of Tubar
cited throughout the article is taken from this book by Agustn Blanco Barros.
4. Jos Agustn Blanco Barros, Tubar, La encomienda mayor de Tierradentro. 1st Edition, Bogot.
Publisher: Centro Editorial Javeriano, 1995. pp. 134 and 142.
93
94
Studies: 1989-1990, for the general project; February 1996, studies after
the fire
Jesus Foundation
Style: Baroque
95
The restoration of the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier has been a unique conservation experience. It was a ten-year intervention project, which began in
1995 and was completed in 2004. Diverse sets of challenges were encountered
during this intriguing and noteworthy intervention. The project was a multidisciplinary, inter-institutional task, all of whose participants shared the objective of restoring the altarpiece's original imagery and symbolic content.
Following the earthquake of March 1987, which damaged the historic center of
Quito, a comprehensive restoration process was begun in the Church of the
Company. Given the nature and sheer volume of those activities, they have yet
to be concluded. The intervention on the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier
forms a part of this overall endeavor.
Before 1996, considerable damage was noted on the altarpiece due to varied
deterioration over time. Severe moisture absorption, owing to the microclimate of the church, had caused parts of its carved wood pieces to rot. More
recently, the effects of electrical installations had caused additional damage.
On January 31, 1996, a tragic fire caused the loss of at least half of the altarpiece
and markedly weakened its structure, demanding an intervention that was
both conceptual and practical in action. The problems were overcome through
years of continuous work.
The restorers' accomplishments have been many. Day by day, the original
appearance of the altarpiece was restored. The institutions whose representatives participated in the project have gained collaborative work experience.
Exhaustive documentation was prepared to support the intervention proposal. Traditional practices and techniques were preserved while new materials
were used innovatively, and a preventive conservation plan is now being
implemented. Appreciation of the altarpiece as a cultural object was enhanced,
and, above all, a collective effort contributed to ensuring the long-term survival of significant cultural property.
96
Project management
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
Technical coordination
Govermment financing
BANCO
CENTRAL
1989-1992
National
technical
approval
Local
technical
approval
CHURCH OF THE
COMPANY 1987
MUNICIPALITY
OF QUITO FONSAL
1994 to date
SAN FRANCISCO
JAVIER ALTARPIECE
1995 to date
Technical
coordination
Local (property
tax) and private
funding. Actual
implementation:
contractors
Private
contributions
JESUIT
COMMUNITY
FICJ
1993 to date
INPC
1978 to date
Technical
supervison.
Govermment and
international
funding.
Implementation:
contractors.
Institutional
supervision
Technical
participation.
Institutional funding
the city prior to the close of the sixteenth century. Six small chapels, three per
lateral nave, each house their own altarpiece. The two closest to the church
doors represent the Jesuit saints San Estanislao de Kostka and San Luis Gonzaga respectively. The sacristy holds a somewhat smaller altarpiece, no less
beautiful than the others, fashioned using similar techniques, and dedicated to
the founder of the Company of Jesus, San Ignacio de Loyola. The chapel of the
south was dedicated as an offering to the Ecuadorian saint, Mariana de Jesus.
It is presided over by a neoclassical altarpiece from the late nineteenth century, and includes a free-standing image.
Located on the epistle (or right) side of the church, across from the altarpiece
of San Ignacio, who was the founder of the Company of Jesus, the placement
of the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier is representative of the Jesuit community's appreciation of him, as well as the value they placed on him within
the church. San Francisco Javier and San Ignacio are the two most exalted
saints within the order, while San Francisco Javier is particularly exalted as
98
CALLE BENALCAZAR
RETABLO
SAN IGNACIO
DE LOYOLA
RETABLO
SANTA MARIANA
DE JESUS
PATIO
SACRISTIA
CAPILLA
RETABLO MAYOR
CAPILLA
PRESBITERIO
ANTE
CRUCERO
ANTIGUA
PORTERIA
SAN JOSE
VIRGEN DE LORETO
CALLE SUCRE
SAN IGNACIO
DE LOYOLA
SACRISTIA
NAVE
NORTE
EL CALVARIO
CENTRAL
SUR
SAN ESTANISLAO
DE KOSTKA
LA INMACULADA
NAVE
NAVE
ATRIO
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
the most prominent Jesuit missionary who crossed seas to conquer India,
Japan, and China, evangelizing and converting millions to Christianity.
Both these works unquestionably show clear evidence of influence from the
altarpieces of Rome's Church of San Ignacio, created by Jesuit Father Andrea
Posso and whose books, well known in Quito during that era, originated the
idea of building the stunning altarpieces of this baroque church in Quito.
The altarpiece of San Francisco Javier was built in the late seventeenth century and is attributed to the Jesuit brother Marcos Guerra, who also made
notable contributions to the architecture of the church and adjoining Jesuit
building. The altarpiece was gilded in the eighteenth century by an Italian
Jesuit named Jorge Vinterer and Quito's excellent artist Bernardo de Legarda
may have also participated in the work. It is known that the Congregacin
de la Buena Muerte (Congregation of the Good Death) commissioned the
altarpiece's gilding, and also contributed to the building of the altarpiece. No
information is available on any interventions that may have taken place on
the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier prior to this present project1.
The altarpiece's single horizontal register stands out against a backdrop of lateral panels and a circular upper frame with a window in the middle. As such,
the overall appearance is one of two horizontal and three vertical registers,
although from an academic standpoint, there is only one horizontal register,
with wooden carvings and relief. Like a great number of altarpieces, the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier was built of cedar, one of the high quality woods
found in eastern Ecuador. The structure was principally assembled using
wood-to-wood joints, though some pieces are glued. For decoration, the pieces
were gilded, with polychromy being used for the various sculpted elements
and panels. Several decorative appliqu elements are also present. The pictorial layer is predominantly gold leaf, but oil paint was used.
99
Iconography:
The central niche of the main horizontal reg-
Despite its size, the detailed work or each element of the altarpiece is flawless,
bearing witness to the painstaking care with which it was created. The altarpiece's profuse decoration and its rich depiction of the life of the saint was fundamental for evangelizing the people of Quito. The altarpiece's aesthetic
expression represents the finest of baroque art, while also incorporating a
unique architectonic element: the four Salomonic columns that flank the figure
of the saint. The altarpiece as a whole is a very beautiful architectural showcase.
The Church of the Company is a space of religious faith, for which Ecuadorians, and especially the people of Quito, have a great affection. The altarpiece
of San Francisco Javier has perhaps become the most emblematic of all the
altarpieces in the church, given its intriguing history. On the one hand, the artwork itself displays powerful symbolism. On the other, the devotion of the
participants in the restoration process to their work and the relationships
developed during the conservation project has added a social dimension to the
experience. The altarpiece of San Francisco Javier is a work of beauty, with religious significance, academic value and cultural content. Its history, the
demanding human effort entailed in its conservation both by individuals and
collectively, and the great sense of achievement, all contribute to an altarpiece
that represents the historic past and continuity in the art experience and artistic style known as the school of Quito.
Preliminary studies
From 1989 to 1990, the Banco Central del Ecuador, through the Directorate of
Museums, prepared a document entitled Proyecto de restauracin de la Iglesia de
la Compaa, Informe del estudio de bienes muebles - maderas (Restoration Project
for the Church of the Company, Report on the Study of Movable Objects Wood). This study forms a part of the volumes prepared as a basis for the
church's comprehensive restoration project and includes the altarpiece of San
Francisco Javier.
The specific document pertaining to the studies on the altarpiece, Estudio Tcnico del Retablo de San Francisco Javier (Technical Study of the Altarpiece of San
Francisco Javier), consisted of the following sections:
identification of the altarpiece, based on general information
100
The comprehensive study of the church and its contents conducted by the Banco
Central del Ecuador identified a number of significant problems affecting the
altarpiece of San Francisco Javier. As a frame of reference, it is important to
emphasize that profound alterations to the building were detected due to the
passage of time, which had been exacerbated by the 1987 earthquake. A critical finding was that cracks and structural damage to the church's vaults, cupolas and walls encompassed other problems and deteriorations that could be
traced back to the filtration of rain water. This was reflected in marked water
absorption by the wood of the altarpieces in the church and the murals on the
walls, also due to a significant alteration of the microclimate needed by these
objects for their ideal conservation over time. The moisture had caused the
wood of the altarpiece to rot, and some of the pieces which were fastened to
the wall were about to collapse.
The altarpiece had suffered from massive xylophagous insect infestation, and
large areas of it had been repainted. Some elements of the altarpiece were
incorrectly located on the altarpiece, resulting from previous interventions,
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
while several pieces were on the verge of falling down, due to the poor state
of their anchorage. Many of the electrical installations had also deteriorated.
After the 1996 fire, the damage to the altarpiece and to several nearby artistic
elements and artwork up to 40 meters away were much more severe. The
flames and high temperatures damaged 60% of the altarpiece, as well as the
nearby gallery decoration. In the main cupula, damage was incurred by the
wood decoration and murals. The only two canvas paintings were completely
consumed by the fire, and all of the gilded decoration of the Mudejar designs
that form a part of the vaults and cover the arms of the transept were damaged. The mural decoration of the lateral naves and even the metal pipes of the
organ, situated in the choir over the narthex of the church, whose silver and
gilded decoration now display blistering, were affected.
Additional damage was caused by the water and other fire-fighting substances sprayed over the altarpiece, resulting in extreme harm to the altarpiece.
Approximately 50% of the altarpiece's elements were disassembled at the time
of the fire, out of danger. The relief of the crown was safe, as was the sculpture
of Francisco Javier, and several other carved and gilded pieces. This resulted
in a heterogeneous situation, with three radically different states of conservation, posing new theoretical and technical problems involving management
and methodology issues.
In the document entitled Evaluacin de los deterioros producidos en las tallas
doradas y esculturas por efectos del incendio del retablo de San Francisco Javier (Evaluation of deteriorations to the gilded carvings and sculptures, due to the fire
that damaged the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier), which was drafted by a
private workshop, the following problems were identified. The high temperatures had provoked cracks of various sizes. The supports had become
detached, as well as deformed; there were detachments, separation and cracking of the preparation and paint layers. Blistering was seen in the paint layer.
Soot covered 90% of the surface, and melted polyethylene had adhered to the
gold leaf. The worst deterioration was to the flesh tones and polychromy of the
sculptures, given their delicate production techniques and their materials,
which were very sensitive to the high temperatures of the fire.
101
Based on the analysis conducted after the fire, the pieces of the altarpiece were
classified into three categories, prior to their disassembly. This was an urgent
task, given the risk of collapse of the altarpiece. The classification was grouped
as follows: charred pieces in a state of ruin, whose form and decorative techniques were undecipherable; pieces whose form was preserved, but that were
burnt at the support level over more than 50% of their surface; and pieces that
conserved their form and were decipherable in terms of volume, whose finish
may have been altered in whole or in part.
At the time of the fire, the Church of the Company had undergone intensive
interventions on its architecture, a renowned mural and its movable cultural
objects, so that the physical surroundings of the altarpiece were suitable.
Major architectural work had been carried out, although certain supplementary work remained unfinished, such as the laying of the transept's floor, and
the lighting, security and museography for the altarpiece. Dramatic additional interventions were than needed. Activities to control external agents of deterioration, principally heavy vehicular traffic that generates constant vibrations
and the presence of contaminant gases, are still pending and will be addressed
in the final phase of the church's restoration.
102
The general principles for the intervention on the church's cultural assets, and
on the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier in particular, are as follows:
The restoration must make no attempt to falsify the altarpiece's artistic and
or historic value.
Since this is an inventoried, catalogued object meriting absolute protection,
respect for its antique elements and authentic parts is a fundamental guideline.
The intervention must seek to conserve the aesthetic and historic values of
the altarpiece and surrounding context.
Modern techniques should be used if their effectiveness has been scientifically demonstrated and guaranteed by experience, when traditional forms
of intervention are inadequate.
The existing construction system must be respected, and new materials
must be correctly used and handled.
A work system must be implemented that ensures the full application of the
Occupational Health and Safety Standards in effect in the country.
The information produced should be organized and systematized through
publications that allow experiences to be shared with professional architects
and restorers, among many other specialists of the disciplines brought
together for this type of intervention.
The need for ongoing maintenance of cultural property should be institutionalized, in order to counteract sustained processes of deterioration.
Based on these guiding principles, the proposed action for the conservation of
the altarpiece prior to the fire included:
photographic survey
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
103
San Ignacio, as a reference. It was also decided to conserve the other carvings
of the architecture that had lost their gilding but maintained their form, since
their imagery was constituted by both the volumetric component and the gilding. In the decision to partially reconstruct the altarpiece, great weight was
given to the altarpiece's value as an element used in current religious practices.
Subsequently, the following actions were required:
identification of the status of the damage
general analysis of the altarpiece
quantification of losses from the fire
assembly of the altarpiece using the remaining saved and charred elements to determine the precise situation of whatever remained from the
original altarpiece after the fire
104
Methodology of the
implementation
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
105
In sum, aspects of the proposed conservation treatment process worth highlighting include:
development of a methodological proposal based on identifying the factors
of alteration
description or interpretation of alteration mechanisms and their indicators
research using documentary sources to provide information for any proposed decision.
It is also important to note that the decision-making process for this project has
been collaborative and on-going, always taking into consideration the guiding
principles outlined above. Throughout the project, the Technical Follow-up
Commission continued to meet weekly. The professionals involved at any given time from the various specialties met, along with representatives from the
participating institutions (the Fondo de Salvamento, the Instituto de Patrimonio Cultural, the Church of the Company Foundation) and the contracted technicians. Discussions were always intense, given the positions taken by the various parties. Topics ranged from historic conservation to an aestheticism sustained on religious values still in effect in the church.
Intervention work on the altarpiece of San Francisco Javier began in the second half of 1995 and should have been completed in January 1996. Tragically,
on the very day that the restoration work was being completed, an occupational accident started the damaging fire. As a result, a second intervention
was necessary, which began immediately, with a completely different
approach. The first interventions were based on updates of the original studies conducted by the Banco Central del Ecuador, while the diagnosis and proposed intervention were completely revised.
Before the fire, the intervention was faithful to the proposal and consisted of
the following:
cleaning of dust and dirt from the surface
removal of trash
Intervention
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
The gilding of the new pieces began in June 2003, together with the gilding of
the northern transept's vault. This task was entrusted to highly qualified
craftsmen with extensive experience. The gold leaf was acquired at the request
of the Instituto Nacional de Patrimonio Cultural from Florence, with a donation from UNESCO, and was delivered daily to the work site.
A new group of approximately 25 persons, among them carvers, stuccoers,
gilders and polishers, under the direction of restorers and assistants, carried
out this important work. They were backed by professionals from each of the
participating institutions.
This final intervention phase on the San Francisco Javier altarpiece completes
a unique case of cultural object conservation. Significant forms of intervention
came together in this work due to the multiple agents of deterioration that
affected the altarpiece. The intervention was intended to, and to a large extent
has succeeded in, faithfully restoring original appearances in an aesthetically
uniform manner, while fully respecting their values and content. Numerous
challenges in the life of the altarpiece have been overcome, in order to pass
down a legacy that is dignified and consistent with our era. As a part of this
overall intervention, the restoration of the San Francisco Javier altarpiece has
been characterized by its varied, rich, diverse aspects.
In practice, the coordination made it possible to ascertain technical information in the study phase and decide upon the specific intervention for the altarpiece, based on the initial proposal. Multidisciplinary, inter-institutional participation made it possible to exchange experiences and improve methodologies. Some of the results of these joint actions include:
the current state of restoration of the altarpiece
gaining new scientific knowledge
the use of new products demanded by the condition of the altarpiece after
the fire
the development of a preventive conservation plan
inter-institutional response capacity in technical and economic terms, as
well as a collective capacity, characterized by solidarity, in response to
the fire.
In overall terms, the work system implemented guarantees optimal intervention, although not without difficulties when it comes to finding common
ground for agreement.
Practice has shown that the only way to reach the desired results in terms
of successfully intervening on the architectural and artistic heritage of
monuments is for institutions to join forces and truly cooperate. This is precisely what has taken place in the effort to restore the altarpiece of San
Francisco Javier.
107
Acknowledgments
The restoration work involved several institutions who joined forces to accomplish the set objectives.
The following participant institutions were involved:
YEARS
WORK
PERFORMED
PROFESSIONAL
PROFILE
PARTICIPATING
INSTITUTIONS
FUNDING
SOURCE
19891990
108
19951996
Project:
Restoration of the
Church of the
Company. Report on
the Study of Movable
Objects - Wood
(Altarpiece of San
Francisco Javier).
In-house personnel:
Ecuadorian
architects - restorers
Ecuador
Government
Restoration of the
Conservators -
FONSAL
altarpiece
restorers
(Technical Supervision)
(Planning)
Property Tax
19971999
Conservation of the
altarpiece
Conservators restorers
Private
FONSAL
Property Tax
(Technical Supervision)
Special structure of
Conservators -
FONSAL
the altarpiece
restorers
(Technical Supervision)
Craftsmen
INPC
Ecuadorian
2000
(Technical Supervision)
Government
2003-
Restorers -
FONSAL
Property Tax
2004
craftsmen
(Technical Supervision)
1998
1998-
aged pieces
INPC
(Technical Supervision-
Property Tax
Ecuadorian
Government
Logistics)
(Donation of gold)
International
Entity
Private
UNESCO
Preventive
Architects -
Church of the
to date
Conservation
conservators
Company of Jesus
Foundation
Photographic credits
Lus Subia
References
BANCO CENTRAL DEL ECUADOR: Proyecto Restauracin Compaa de Jess en Quito, Informe de
la Investigacin Histrica-Esttica, Second phase (1636-1687), by Carrin E. Carmen. 1991.
Unpublished.
BANCO CENTRAL DEL ECUADOR: Proyecto de restauracin de la Iglesia de la Compaa, Informe
del estudio de Bienes Muebles-Maderas. 1990. Unpublished.
RESTORATION
OF THE ALTARPIECE OF
OF THE
COMPANY
OF JESUS OF
QUITO, ECUADOR
BANCO CENTRAL DEL ECUADOR/COMUNIDAD DE LA COMPAA DE JESS: Ficha de descripcin de piezas de arte de la Iglesia de la Compaa de Jess, ficha No. 23.1, by G. Naranjo, P.
Herrera, and P. Mic S.J. December 1995. Unpublished.
CARMONA MUELA, Juan: Iconografa cristiana: gua bsica para estudiantes. Madrid: Istmo, 1998.
FONSAL/TRATEGGIO: Evaluacin de los deterioros producidos en las tallas doradas y esculturas por
efectos del incendio del retablo de San Francisco Javier. 1996.
FONSAL/TRATEGGIO: Informe final de la conservacin de los retablos, paneles y tribuna del presbiterio y transepto norte de la iglesia de la Compaa de Jess. 1996.
GISBERT, Teresa: Iconografa y mitos indgenas en el arte. La Paz, Bolivia: Fundacin BHN, Gisbert y
Ca, 1994.
JOUANEN, Jos: La Iglesia de la Compaa de Jess de Quito, 1605-1862. Quito: La Prensa Catlica,
1949.
LEONARDINI, Nanda, and BORDA, Patricia: Diccionario iconogrfico religioso peruano. 1st edition.
Lima: Rubican Editores, 1996.
MALE, Emile: El Barroco. Madrid: Encuentro, 1985.
MUNICIPIO DEL DISTRITO METROPOLITANO DE QUITO, Fondo de Salvamento, project report:
Iglesia de la Compaa de Jess: Dorado, Reintegracin de tallas y policroma, Retablo de San
Francisco Javier y tribuna norte. Restitucin de Pintura Mural y Dorados Bvedas del Transepto-2003.
Unpublished.
NAVARRO, Jos Gabriel: La Iglesia de la Compaa en Quito. Madrid: Tipog. A. Marzo, 1930.
NAVARRO, Jos Gabriel: Contribuciones a la Historia del Arte en el Ecuador. Quito: Tipog.
Salesianas, 1925.
PONCE, Rivadeneira Luis S.J.: Santos y Beatos de la Compaa de Jess. Quito: Centro Ignaciano
Pedro Arrupe, 2000.
El RETABLO y la sarga de San Eutropio de El Espinar. 1st edition. Madrid: Instituto de Conservacin y
Restauracin de Bienes Culturales, Ministerio de Cultura, 1992.
SEBASTIN, Santiago: El Barroco Iberoamericano: mensaje iconogrfico. Madrid: Encuentro, 1990.
SELLNER, Albert Christian: Calendario perpetuo de los santos. 1st edition. Mexico: Hermes, 1995.
TESCAROLI, Cirilo: Vida de Francisco Javier. 2nd edition. Quito: Sin Fronteras.
TOMAN, Rolf (ed.): Romanesque: architecture, sculpture, painting. Kln: Knemann, 1997.
UNIVERSIDAD CENTRAL DEL ECUADOR, Facultad de Arquitectura y Urbanismo, graduate thesis:
Historia y Arquitectura de la Compaa de Jess Quito, by R. Canelos, O. Proao, and M.
Rivadeneira. 1988-1989. Unpublished.
Notes
1. Many of the documents providing historical data on the Church of the Company and the altarpiece
of San Francisco Javier are not readily available in Ecuador today, since the Archives of the Company of
Jesus, which are the principal source of information on the construction of the church, are located in
several different cities throughout the world, including Quito, Lima, Rome and several in Spain.
Furthermore, when the Jesuits were expelled from Ecuador in 1767 by the Spanish government, their
accounting books were confiscated and many were lost. Existing documentation suggests that the
Church of the Company was built in six phases, from the early seventeenth century to the eighteenth
century. Source: Introduction, in Proyecto de Restauracin de la Iglesia de la Compaa de Jess de
Quito, Informe de la investigacin histrica-esttica (Banco Central del Ecuador).
109
110
fastening elements
Chronology: 1566-1584
111
The decision to intervene on the altarpiece of Our Lady of Assumption at Colmenar Viejo was fundamentally motivated by the work's uniqueness. Many
other altarpieces have been restored, but none bring together the variety of factors found in this one. Both this altarpiece and the San Eutropio altarpiece of
El Espinar have contributed a wealth of technical information to conservation
science and art history, on aspects of construction and painting techniques.
This paper discusses the project's implementation, which used the services of
an interdisciplinary team, the auxiliary devices employed, the collaboration of
community members and specialists, findings, and unforeseen circumstances
that arose. The altarpiece of Colmenar Viejo continues to serve as a reference,
due to the information it provided on techniques of execution and the intervention methodology used.
Introduction
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Preliminary work
Before beginning the work, plans were made to prepare the scaffolding's
layout, the lighting, and water installations on one of the platforms. In order
to ensure that the scaffolding would meet the project's needs, a restorer was
involved in designing it, making sure that disassembled pieces of the altarpiece could be worked on on the platform itself, thus avoiding the risks entailed
in transportation. No vertical elements were placed in front of the six panel
paintings or the tabernacle, since they were intended to be disassembled. Calculations of the platforms' width and weight ratings were made to allow
sculptures, panels and other elements to be placed on them. The width of the
scaffolding also made photography possible, with a focal distance more suitable to the size of the pieces, which avoided distortions associated with the use
of wide-angle lenses.
For reasons of safety, the lighting wiring was placed at the back of the scaffolding. Each technician had enough light at the correct angles to eliminate shadows while work was in progress. Each platform was equipped with inde-
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pendently powered safety lights. Finally, the system had a control panel near
the scaffolding entry, facilitating the general control of lighting by the technicians as they entered or left the scaffolding platforms.
One of the safety measures taken, with approval from the parish authorities,
was storing solvents in a room at a distance from the altarpiece and from
public access. Only those quantities needed for the daily work were kept on
the scaffolding. This measure was taken at a time when better equipment and
safety measures were required for restoration. Although this made the projects
more expensive, it also enabled specialized studies, analyses and interventions
to be made that were more professional and performed under better working
conditions.
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The restoration work was also preceded by a rigorous study of the altarpiece's
building system and of the painting procedures used. This approach led to the
development of treatments better suited to the materials and techniques
employed in this work of art, and ensured that the altarpiece's historic and
artistic values would be maintained.
Actions aimed at stabilizing, halting or limiting the altarpiece's deterioration
were complemented with a study of the causes of past changes and potential
new ones. Along these lines, a new lighting system was considered, which
would better suit the objects contained in the church, as well as a new heating
system, already planned.
In order to reduce the installation time for the scaffolding, and the duration of
the work, in a parish where numerous celebrations and religious ceremonies
were scheduled to take place in the church, the studies were conducted at the
same time as the restoration work was being carried out. This reduced the
risks associated with successive assembling and disassembling of scaffolding
and equipment.
State of conservation
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panel paintings had come out of their original encasements, with breakage
in the frames due to having been disassembled and restored
the relief crowning the altarpiece was loose. Most of the sculptures from the
first and second horizontal registers had disappeared, replaced by images
from other altarpieces. The sculptures that were conserved had numerous
breakages in the hands, feet, folds of clothing, and part of the faces, due to
being thrown to the ground during the war
the traditional use of candles, combined with the altarpiece's varnish, led to
a thick layer of smoke accumulating on the surfaces, as well as wax and tarnished varnish
some of the deterioration was due to moisture that had damaged the building, but fortunately, the necessary repairs had been made some years earlier
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the wood used to construct the altarpiece, Pinus silvestris (common pine),
did not display damage or alterations from bio-deterioration. The altarpiece's points of support on the altar table and the connections between the
supporting structure and the church were in an optimal state. The spacing
between the back of the altarpiece and the wall aided its ventilation and
probably contributed to its good state of conservation. Nonetheless, we
noted that the nails that joined the altarpiece's architecture to its back structure had given way in some places, due to a detachment of the wall's plaster layers, which, over time, had wedged between the pieces and pushed
them apart. This caused some elements to shift and sag, which led to damage and breakage of adjacent pieces
the custom among the local young people, fortunately abandoned, of climbing to the top of the altarpiece, had caused the damage of, among other
things, the supporting crossbeam of the Assumption's encasement, on
account of which it was badly dislodged.
Studies
When the project began, the Institute's documentation specialists invited participation from historians specialized in altarpiece authorship. The photographic archives of the ICRBC and Casa de Cultura of Colmenar were also consulted, which provided photographs from 1910. The documentary sources were
not clear and were few in number. Nonetheless, in the case of the altarpiece of
El Espinar, the work on the gilding and the polychromy made it possible to
delve deeper into their study and analysis. This laid a basis for comparative
testing of the polychromy between the two works.
In collaboration with an architect, the functionality of the structural and construction system was studied. In addition, environmental conditions were studied to set maintenance guidelines. Finally, a lighting study was planned for
the church's entire interior.
The team of restorers was given the job of an exhaustive examination of the
altarpiece, encompassing two aspects:
compilation and analysis of data on the technical and construction characteristics of the structure, architecture, carvings, panels and sculptures of the
altarpiece and their corresponding processes for the ground, bonding, gilding, polychromy and painting layers
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compilation of data on the state of conservation of the structure, architecture, carvings, panels and sculptures of the altarpiece and their corresponding
layers of bonding, gilding, polychromy and painting.
In order to systematize the restorers' work, three different standardized forms
were designed for recording data collected on technical characteristics, state of
conservation, and treatments applied. We used the same format throughout
the four years of work on the project, which served as a summary when we
drafted the final report. During this project, a substantial collection was made
of direct tracings of motifs of estofados and sgraffitos, with a view towards
creating a database on these decorations. In fact, we had proposed such a measure when we were working on the altarpiece of El Espinar. For this purpose,
we designed a simple form, which was attached to the tracing, recording the
location of the motif, a brief description of its elaboration and a photograph of
the selected detail.
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Intervention
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ment. The left door leading to the back of the altarpiece was also replaced, as
well as part of the frieze from the entablature on the third horizontal register.
Some unevenness is still visible in the architecture of the altarpiece, and this
may be attributable to our objective of avoiding unnecessary risks by proposing the most respectful solutions. With respect to the free-standing images,
only those parts needed to ensure their stability were reconstructed, for example the bases of the images. All the reconstruction used the same type of wood
as that of the altarpiece.
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The firefighters sprayed water to put out the flames on the scaffolding, thinking that what had caught fire was the structure of the altarpiece. It was
announced that the altarpiece had been lost, but fortunately, it was found that
what had caught fire were only the canvas and the wooden platforms. As it
was, the fire damaged one of the panels and the sculpture of Santo Domingo
de Guzmn, which had been disassembled on the scaffolding.
When it was possible to get inside the church, the altarpiece seemed to be a
gray ghost, covered with ash and soot. The flames had only reached the lower
right-hand edge, which had caused some blistering in the polychromy. The
water sprayed by the firefighters had collected at that same point. Luckily, the
area damaged was one that had already had many losses, and as such the fire's
devastation was less severe than it could have been. The arsonist had intended
to burn the altarpiece. The scaffolding door had been opened and gasolinesoaked rags had been placed on the scaffolding's end panels, on a relief of the
predella, and on the altar frontal. The predella and altar frontal did not catch
fire, however. Shortly afterward, the culprit was arrested and expelled from
Colmenar Viejo.
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Upon completing the first phase of the intervention, we had applied a light
coating of varnish, and were expecting to soon finish the following phases.
The third horizontal register and the attic had been covered with paper to protect them from dust, but a few days earlier we had removed part of the paper
to take photographs. If the flames had come closer to the surface of the altarpiece, the paper might had contributed to spreading the fire, but since that did
not happen, it helped keep the covered parts from being damaged by the soot.
The fact that the solvents had been stored away from the scaffolding kept this
incident from having even more serious consequences.
The incident had another curious outcome. The panel paintings had been restored using watercolors, and, in certain limited areas, Maimeri pigments. The
fire's high temperature did not affect the paint surface, but did cause an intense oxidation of the restored Maimeri, making it very dark. The damaged areas
that had already been restored had to be re-treated.
Work conducted on the altarpiece led to the discovery of a hidden early sixteenth-century mural, and contributed to a better understanding of the altarpiece's construction and assembly, as well as the painting and polychromy techniques used in its decoration.
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ce was too narrow. After evaluating the challenges, it was decided that the
only way to gain access was to cut the lower tenon of one of the columns. The
panels had to be taken down to prevent a possible collapse at that spot. The
necessary materials were prepared, as well as a camera to record the find. A
small plasterwork ogee arch, full of dust, was found displaying a mural of the
Mass of St. Gregory. Its right side had been destroyed during the assembly of
the altarpiece.
After reviewing the state of the mural, which was free of blistering, dust, or
flaking, it was decided not to apply any treatment. The find was photographically documented, the components of the altarpiece were set back in place, and
the painting was hidden once again. We received some criticism for this course of action, but at the time it seemed too risky to allow it to remain exposed.
The study of this painting, conducted later by urea de la Morena, indicated
that the painting was from the early sixteenth century. Its style was that of the
final Gothic period, with a Flemish influence, but it also had a certain sense
and spirit of the Italian Renaissance, while adding a special value of its own.
... To date this is the only known, surviving example of mural painting of this
period in the Community of Madrid4.
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the Chapel of the Bishop in Madrid, but with a more developed style and
more classical approach5.
Regarding the panel paintings, Trinidad de Antonio notes that the altarpiece
of Colmenar Viejo is one of the rare examples conserved in the region from the
late sixteenth century6. She notes that it bears testimony to what painting was
like in that era: an Italianized flavor is coupled with the marked influence of
Trento, the Italian city that formed the juncture between the sixteenth-century
school of Toledo and artists in Madrid connected to court officials.
Through laboratory analyses, it was determined that the panel paintings were
mostly in oil paint. In contrast, the altarpiece of El Espinar was still employing
tempera and emulsions. It must be borne in mind that this was a transition
period between the mixed techniques of tempera and oil, and Venetian-style
oil painting, which started to take root at that time7. In the Colmenar panels,
the presence of several authors was also evidenced by differences in technique
from one panel to another. Styles varied from a greater archaism in the form of
tiny brushstrokes to depict certain details, on one end of the scale, to a much
looser technique on the other.
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Trinidad de Antonio's studies attribute the six panels to the following authors:
the Annunciation is the work of Diego de Urbina; the Birth and the Epiphany
could be the work of Snchez Coello; the Presentation in the Temple and Jesus
before the Doctors are the work of a single author, both of them attributable to
Hernando de vila given the similarity of the models and techniques and the
identical design of the figures on the first level; the Visitation, whose conceptual approach and execution are different from the rest, could correspond to
the style of Luis Velasco and is the work of the lowest quality in the entire
altarpiece. It may correspond to this painter's younger years.
urea de la Morena concludes that the paintings on the inside of the doors leading to the Sanctuary are the work of Hernando de vila, since they are similar to book illustrations, and he was an illustrator for the El Escorial library8.
These paintings, conceived as miniatures, are made over gold, using the combined technique of brushwork and sgraffitto, and include among the decorations the date of 1579.
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Each element or module of the altarpiece was built in the workshop of the
sculptor or assembler. The pieces were joined to one another there, and later
integrated into and positioned in the altar for which they were designed. At
that point, the altarpiece was assembled blank without bonding materials or
polychromy. The altarpiece normally remained in such a state for several years
until the contract was signed for the painting, gilding and estofados. This
interval of time also allowed the wood to stabilize before the bonding materials and paint were applied. Once the polychromy work was awarded, the
pieces would be taken down and transported to the painter's workshops, where imperfections were repaired and the preparation, gilding and painting was
performed. After those operations were concluded, the altarpiece would be
reassembled in its place of destination.
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The altarpiece of the Assumption has a trapezoidal floor plan, a center section
and two wings, to adapt to the church's stone apse. It is divided into eleven vertical registers and their separating divisions. Horizontally it consists of the lower
base of the altarpiece, a predella, three levels with classic orders (Doric, Ionic,
and Corinthian) and an attic crowning the piece. The center section of the altarpiece is separated from the wall by 80 cm, but as one approaches the sides, the
separation gradually reduces, until the altarpiece eventually touches the wall.
As was common in large altarpieces until the seventeenth century, the back of
the altarpiece has a supporting structure comprising a framework with eight
girders and four rows of crossbeams. The structure replicates the architectural
layout of the altarpiece. Vertically, two of the girders each line up with one of
the vertical registers whose niches have the greatest projection; horizontally,
the wood coincides with the cornice of each horizontal register. The structure
is seated upon the altar table and is secured by insertion of the ends of the
horizontal pieces into the wall.
Once the framework was set in place, the assembly of the altarpiece was commenced. The elements comprising its architecture were superimposed on the
structure from bottom to top. First, the central encasement of the first horizontal register was built, to which the other elements were attached on each
side. The same process was continued on the higher registers, until reaching
the attic. At the same time the modules were installed, which were secured to
the structure using forged iron nails. The seating of the altarpiece on the altar
table means that the lower base of the altarpiece functions exclusively as a
finishing touch. It barely supports any weight whatsoever, even though it
would appear to do so, given the great volume of its consoles.
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edges are beveled to fit into the groove of the frame. The reinforcement crossbeams are pegged through the front with wood tenons and their sides are
narrower to avoid excessive force on that weakest part of the panel.
The study of the altarpiece made it possible to record numbers, letters and markings on the components for their identification in the altarpiece as a whole,
which were written in ink directly on the wood or on paper glued to the wood.
Using this system, the free-standing sculptures are ordered from left to right
with capital letters; the panels, for example, using lower case letters, are ordered
from bottom to top on the left-hand side, and from top to bottom on the right.
The final operation was to mount the sculptures in their encasements and niches
hanging from iron eyebolts, with their bases nailed into the pedestals.
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The pedestals of the columns on the third horizontal register are constructed
using a grooved system. The three vertical panels fit into the grooves along the
base and the top. In addition, the inside of these encasements has a vertical
board assembled using a mortise-and-tenon joint as reinforcement.
In many cases, the painters not only worked on the painted panels, but also
took charge of the estofados and flesh tones of the altarpieces' carvings. They
were skilled at estofados, which they performed freehand, and they filled the
various spaces of an altarpiece using all types of techniques: simple colors, iridescent colors, gold leaf, lacquers, creating motifs with false estofado, sgraffiti
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Ten years have passed since this restoration work was completed. The experience has served to reaffirm certain guidelines and adjust others for purposes
of undertaking new activities.
The restorers' work, resources and mentality have changed. Now, technicians
are required to have better training, studies of the works of art are expected to
be more complete, resources are more sophisticated and safety measures are
stricter. But there are aspects where integral methodological programs are still
lacking. Indeed, the restoration of cultural objects, and particularly of altarpieces, must not be considered in an isolated fashion, but as a part of a building and its surrounding environment.
This approach to interventions on heritage objects is not new, even though it
has yet to take hold in society. During our four-year stay at Colmenar Viejo,
several lectures were given in an attempt to instill this new outlook. An open
house was also organized for the altarpiece, and a photographic exhibition
was held after the works were completed. We were convinced that by sharing
information on the project with churchgoers and the community, we would
raise their awareness of the conservation and restoration accomplished on
their altarpiece and build their interest in its subsequent care. Through this
effort, many residents of Colmenar Viejo provided us with oral information,
which enriched the data we had on certain interventions.
Our jurisdiction over the altarpiece ended once the restoration was complete. Nonetheless, since we are aware of the need to establish long-term conservation plans, our final report included a chapter devoted to guidelines for
the altarpiece's care and maintenance. Whether those guidelines will be put
into practice depends upon the persons in charge of the church. The advice
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Conclusions
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The Church, for its part, has guidelines regarding matters such as the transporting of works, and protection of the assets during future projects on a building.
The Church's guidelines also address how to get the most out of the knowledge that technicians accrue during an intervention in order to facilitate decisionmaking, since it is feasible to maintain a relationship with those technicians.
Such measures would help prevent activities that could be detrimental to the
conservation and maintenance of the works of art. For example, subsequent to
the intervention, it was suggested that the walls and vaults needed to be painted
to maintain the church and improve its appearance, but the need to protect the
altarpiece during the painting was not taken into account. A proper approach
would have prevented the altarpiece from being covered by a layer of gray dust.
A positive example is the time when the parish priest consulted the Instituto
del Patrimonio Histrico Espaol, a few years later, about a professional's
request to remove the hidden mural behind the altarpiece. It was surprising
how this professional failed to propose a rigorous analysis of the risk entailed
in an intervention such as this, which necessarily requires the altarpiece's
disassembly. This occasion was used to give practical classes, preventing
serious damage and allowing the work to be conserved in its integrity.
Acknowledgments
My special thanks go to Concepcin Cirujano Gutirrez and Teresa Gmez Espinosa, IPHE, for their
work on editing this article.
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Contracted team:
Restorers: Asuncin Bretones / Almudena Fernndez del Toro / Carmen Garca Surez / Charlotte
Hansson / Marta Garca Reino
Wood Treatment: Antonio Mayoral, specialty carpenter
Painting of the New Altar: Luis Prieto, painter-decorator
Photography: Jos F. Lorn, photographer
Scaffolding: YDE
Electrical Installations: City of Colmenar Viejo
Collaboration:
Trinidad de Antonio Sez
Margarita Estella Marcos
urea de la Morena Bartolom
Mara Rosa Garca Blzquez
Roberto Fernndez Surez
Faustino Garca Moreno and Antonio Garca Rubio, parish priests of the Parish Church of Colmenar
Viejo
Photographic credits
Photos provided by the Fototeca de obas restauradas del Instituto del Patrimonio Histrico Espaol,
N Registro; In situ 1101.
References
EL RETABLO y la sarga de San Eutropio de El Espinar. Madrid: Ministry of Culture, General
Directorate of Fine Arts and Archives, Instituto de Conservacin y Restauracin de Bienes Culturales,
1992.
RETABLOS, and Bienes Culturales, Revista del Instituto del Patrimonio Histrico Espaol, n 2,
Ministry of Education and Science, 2003.
Notes
1. Later the ICRBC had to bear the entire cost of the scaffolding, since the city council, in keeping
with its budget cuts policy, withdrew its co-operation. On the other hand, the people of Colmenar
provided us with information regarding the altarpiece, based on memory or direct experience, such as
when they saw the altarpiece cleaned with an onion or when, during the war, the altarpiece was protected up to the first horizontal register with bags of earth, etc.
2. Coroa Cooperative.
3. BRUQUETAS, R. and CARRASSN, A.: La restauracin de retablos monumentales, tres ejemplos,
Conservation of the Heritage of the Mediterranean World. 1st Conference, Intervention Criteria,
Representation of Castelln, 1996.
4. DE LA MORENA BARTOLOM, A.: Pinturas murales en el presbiterio: La Misa de San Gregorio,
Cuadernos de Estudios Research Journal, Year V, No. 6, August 1994.
5. ESTELLA MARCOS, M.: La escultura, Cuadernos de Estudios Research Journal, Year V, No. 6,
August 1994.
6. DE ANTONIO SEZ, T.: Las pinturas del retablo, Cuadernos de Estudios Research Journal, Year
V, No. 6, August 1994.
7. BRUQUETAS, R. and CARRASSN, A.: Retablo de Ntra. Sra. de la Asuncin de Colmenar Viejo,
Proceso de ejecucin. Madrid en el Contexto de lo Hispnico desde la poca de los
Descubrimientos. Department of Art History II, School of Geography and History, Universidad
Complutense de Madrid, 1994.
8. DE LA MORENA BARTOLOM, A.: Autora, cronologa, descripcin e iconografa del Retablo,
Cuadernos de Estudios Research Journal, Year V, No. 6, August 1994.
9. GMEZ GONZLEZ, M. L.: Evaluacin tcnica y variaciones de los materiales de dos retablos del
mismo autor: Colmenar Viejo y El Espinar. Madrid en el Contexto de lo Hispnico desde la poca de
los Descubrimientos. Department of Art History II, School of Geography and History, Universidad
Complutense de Madrid, 1994.
125
126
127
In 1988, the building was declared a ruin and incapable of housing the altarpiece again. Keeping in mind the impossibility of saving the building, the principal objective was centered on saving the work of art. Preliminary reports and
studies were conducted to investigate the possibility of housing the altarpiece
in a special place, reconstructed at full size. It was concluded that the altarpiece could be reassembled in one of the lateral naves of the Neo-Gothic cathedral of Mara Inmaculada de Vitoria.
Significance of the
altarpiece
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Intervention proposal
State of conservation
To understand the decay suffered by the altarpiece, it is important to note the
church's progressive deterioration. Located on top of a small hill in the town
center, the building started to deteriorate after a shift in the terrain. This caused
damage to the building's foundations and the opening of numerous large cracks
in the walls and vaults, impossible to repair and leading to the progressive collapse of a large part of the church's vault and even larger cracks in the walls.
The altarpiece's parts were scattered over the floor of the sacristy and were at risk
from the possible collapse of this part of the building as well as theft, due to the
lack of protection and easy access to the various altarpiece elements. The wooden supports of the reliefs and of the free-standing sculptures and other decorative
elements were extremely dusty, and infested with fungi and xylophagous (woodeating) insects, particularly termites (50%). The polychromy had also been damaged by insect burrowing and by fungus infestation affecting the paint's ground
layer. Nevertheless, no lifting or losses of great significance were seen.
Approach
When the Restoration Department began work in 1987 a study was conducted
of the general condition of the altarpiece and church in collaboration with the
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In order of priority, given the urgency of the case, the following treatments
were proposed:
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Proposed action
protection of each of the pieces of the altarpiece so they could be transported for their restoration
cleaning of the surface and protection of the polychromed elements
removal of insects and disinfecting of the supports
consolidation of the supports
repair and reconstruction of areas that had lost wood
fixing of the polychromy at specific points
elimination of retouching
stuccoing and reintegration of areas with losses
final protective layer
design of an anchoring system
assembly of the altarpiece in the cathedral
final inspection of the assembled work and review of the finishing on the
altarpiece.
The designated objectives were met satisfactorily. Now moved to the cathedral
of Mara Inmaculada de Vitoria, the altarpiece forms a part of the collection of
the Diocese Museum of Sacred Art of Vitoria, where it is protected by the
cathedral's security systems. Although environmental conditions are not the
most suitable for its conservation and periodic maintenance treatments are
required, the new setting allows the altarpiece to be visited by the faithful, by
tourists, and art historians and other researchers.
Intervention
Significance of the
altarpiece
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The restoration project for the altarpiece of Olano was prompted by a visit
from the principal author of the List of Monuments of the Diocese of Vitoria,
who called attention to its poor state of conservation and the great quality of
this work of art, hidden under innumerable layers of crude repainting that
considerably modified the original iconography of the altarpiece.
The altarpiece of Olano has a particular cultural significance, because it is the
only altarpiece of this era, principally consisting of panel paintings, conserved
in lava, and its composition is of very high quality. Dedicated to San Bartolom (the town's patron saint), it is the principal focus for the festivals of
Olano and the only existing religious object associated with this celebration.
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jected for 2003, yet due to the problems outlined below, treatment still
continues
Profile of the study/intervention team: Restorers, chemists, biologists and
historians
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In addition, the altarpiece has been legally declared a Monument of Cultural
Heritage, since it was built specifically for the parish church of Olano, constructed at the end of the fifteenth century, which is in a very good state of conservation. For all these reasons, the altarpiece is a unique work of art in this region,
worthy of being included on the Basque Country's cultural tourism routes.
Simple and very well conserved, the Gothic building that houses the altarpiece
has also been declared Cultural Heritage. Its interior displays clear indications
that painted murals can be found under the layers of lime on the walls.
Context
they are not in violation of applicable legal norms. Periodic meetings of the
Mixed Commission of the Office of the Archbishop - Council of the
Autonomous Community of lava are held to encourage communication and
joint decision-making between both institutions.
For the altarpiece of Olano, the Restoration Department set guidelines and also
bore all the expenses of the intervention until 1998, at all times abiding by the
agreement with the Commission and the terms of the Historic Heritage Act of
Spain and the Basque Cultural Heritage Act. Since 1998, the Office of the Bishop
of Vitoria has contributed money to the intervention, in addition to the annual
funds allocated by the Diputacin Foral de lava for general restoration plans
for movable heritage. Unfortunately, since 1998 disagreements have arisen over
whether the altarpiece will be returned to its original setting after intervention,
as required by Government Decree 273/2000, or if it will be exhibited in the
Museo Diocesano de Arte Sacro of Vitoria, as the office of the Bishop wants.
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Intervention proposal
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entrecalles (or divisions between the vertical registers) and some canopies of
the panels and reliefs, deformation of the architectural structure, causing concern over its stability, dislodgment of one of the small panels of the predella,
and moisture caused by the leaking roof.
As for the paint layers or polychromy, the panels were in the worst state of
conservation, with numerous enormous losses and lifting of paint layers. Blistering reached 1.5 cm in height. Although the oak support for the panels was
in very good condition, with almost no xylophagous infestation, during its
restoration we observed its enormous capacity for absorbing moisture. This
will unquestionably affect the future conservation of the work of art, as well as
maintenance efforts and the control of environmental conditions.
Approach
As with the altarpiece of Marqunez, a study of the condition of the altarpiece
and its environment was conducted by the Restoration Department, together
with the Architecture Department of the Diputacin Foral de lava. Climatic
conditions in the church were quite adverse, and it was concluded that the
church had to be immediately upgraded, before finalizing the restoration
work on the altarpiece. This has been satisfactorily accomplished.
Special emphasis was placed on studying environmental conditions, so that
the altarpiece's subsequent relocation to the church would not adversely affect
its state of conservation. This effort was initiated before the first restoration
activities and has continued. The study also focused intensively on the state of
conservation of the softest wood of the altarpiece (pine), especially in the
canopies, entrecalles, and some of the carvings. These elements were extremely fragile, due to infestation by fungi and xylophagous insects.
A main concern was the lifting of the paint layer on the panels and on some of
the polychromy of the sculptures. The problem on the sculptures was less
severe, but the panels' paint layers, almost totally separated from the support,
had the stability of a house of cards. To better understand the panels, the
National Research and Technology Institute of Agrarian and Food Sciences
(INIA) conducted studies to identify the panel wood (oak), and dated it to the
sixteenth century by dendrochronology.
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Finally, attention was focused on eliminating the eighteenth-century repainting. Since the repainting did not respond to the solvents that could conserve
the paint and polychromy from the sixteenth century, the composition of both
the original paint layers and the repainting was chemically analyzed. It was
concluded that the only way to eliminate the repainting was by hand with a
scalpel and binocular microscope (25x - 16x).
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To develop the intervention proposal, a multi-disciplinary commission of specialists was created, which informed the Office of the Bishop of Vitoria of the
results of the studies. In formulating the treatments described below, the poor
state of conservation of the altarpiece and the decision to eliminate the eighteenth-century intervention were the two most important factors considered,
as well as the fact that the altarpiece of Olano is the only sixteenth-century
altarpiece with a mixed supporting system and unique iconographic details
conserved in lava. Based on the particularity of the case, the criteria that
were considered most sensible were then adopted.
In order of priority, the following treatments were proposed:
protection of each of the pieces of the altarpiece for disassembly and subsequent restoration, with particular attention to the panel paintings, given
their poor state of conservation
disassembly of the altarpiece
on-site fixing of paint layers and consolidation of elements of the entrecalles
and canopies, since they were extremely fragile. Partial transporting was
proposed, so that only pieces that needed to be restored at the workshop
and treated at that particular time were transported
decontamination of insect life and consolidation of the supports
repair of the supports and reconstruction of areas that had lost wood, to
restore the unity of the piece as a whole
deep fixing, under a microscope, of the paint layers and polychromy
compositional analyses of the original paint layers and repainting
elimination of the eighteenth-century repainting (decision made after several meetings with the director of the Restoration Department and other
restorers, historians and the owner of the altarpiece)
stuccoing and reintegration of areas with losses
final protective layer
reassembly of the altarpiece
final review and retouching.
Intervention
The actions are being carried out as described above, although numerous
problems have arisen in fixing the paint, given the instability of the panels and
difficulties encountered in eliminating the repainting. Efforts to restore the
original iconography of the panels, which have unusual elements, have been
worthwhile, even though enormous losses in the original paint layer have
appeared below the eighteenth-century repainting. The reintegration phase
has been difficult on some of the panels due to a lack of information.
ALTARPIECE
OF
OF
From a technical point of view, the designated objectives were reached for both
altarpieces. But in terms of the permanent locations of the altarpieces, the two
situations are quite distinct from one another. For the altarpiece of Marqunez,
we had to give up on restoring the altarpiece to its original site. Even though
the work of art has lost its original setting and its classification as a monument
in relation to the building that used to house it, the altarpiece itself was saved,
and today can be enjoyed in one of the side chapels of the cathedral of Vitoria.
Considerations
135
The opposite situation is seen in Olano. The Office of the Bishop of Vitoria
wants the altarpiece to be permanently placed at the Museo Diocesano de Arte
Sacro, arguing that the town of Olano has few inhabitants to safeguard and/or
appreciate the altarpiece. The Restoration Department's responsibility, however, is to defend the interests of the work of art from the heritage point of view,
preventing the altarpiece from being permanently removed from its original
context. In fact, such removal would violate the Basque Cultural Heritage Act
- LPCV 7/1990 and the Basque Government Decree 273/2000 of December 19,
2000, which declared this work of art a Monument of Cultural Heritage, thereby granting the altarpiece maximum protection as cultural property.
The Restoration Department also has a responsibility to protect the cultural
interests of the town of Olano. Indeed, if the altarpiece is not returned to its
church, it will no longer be the reference point of the town's patron saint festivals and will thus lose an important component of its cultural and historic significance.
In addition to all of the above, the church of Olano is currently in a perfect
state of conservation with stable climatic conditions, to which the altarpiece's
various parts, now restored, have become accustomed. In fact, no significant
lifting of the paint layers has been observed. Also, due to the nature of the
altarpiece and its anchoring system to the wall, it would be difficult for the
altarpiece to be stolen, so the altarpiece is in fact very safe in the town of
Olano. This contradicts another of the arguments used by the Office of the
Bishop to defend its position.
These two case studies have demonstrated the significant impact that external
conditions can have on the future of a work of art, even when similar processes, criteria and requirements are followed. Conservation's methodological
approaches must be able to adapt to these conditions, whether environmental,
such as the degradation of the Parish Church of Marqunez, or social, as in the
disagreement between heritage and religious institutions in the Olano case, in
order to accomplish its objectives and respect applicable laws, especially when
they defend and protect heritage above special interests.
Photographic credits
Photographs by Rosaura Garca Ramos
Foto-Quintas DFA, pages 2 and 6
Photographs by Rosaura Garca Ramos
Rosaura Garca Ramos. Vitoria Gasteiz, Spain
136
Chapel Council
cal adviser on preventive conservation, one art historian, one photographer, two chemists, one biologist
Collaborating companies: Map Line S.A. (photogrammetric surveying
and restitution)
137
vention ( 43 873.89). Funding for the project was received from the Fundacin
Caja Madrid ( 330 556.65), the Council for the Royal Chapel of Granada ( 60
101.21), as well as the IAPH ( 108 182.17).
Cultural significance of
the work
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The Royal Chapel of Granada is one of the most exemplary architectural spaces in Spain, given the quality of its architecture and the importance of Andaluca as a historic and artistic center. The chapel's interior houses the collections of personal property that the Catholic Kings bequeathed to the city. These objects are of great historic, artistic and symbolic value for the city of Granada and for all of Spain. Among these objects is the main altarpiece, one of
the most distinguished examples of altarpiece art in Spain. This work served
as a fundamental reference in the evolution of this art form, and its simplicity
and austerity exemplify the era's manner of understanding religiosity. The
altarpiece work site also brought together leading masters of the time. As such,
the altarpiece conveys a new style of aesthetic expression.
There are three characteristics of form that make this altarpiece an exceptional
work of art. For the first time, Roman elements are present in an altarpiece that
was created in Andaluca, sculptural iconography is used throughout the
altarpiece and finally, its proportions are systematized within an ordering
reminiscent of the Gothic tradition. With respect to its techniques, this altarpiece is one of the few examples known in Andaluca that combines the traditional polychrome techniques of the era common to the Mediterranean geographic area (gilding, estofado techniques, sgraffitos and punchwork) with
Nordic polychrome techniques imported from the Netherlands, such as
applied brocades3. Magnificent examples of this Nordic technique are seen in
the garments of the sculptures and sculptural groups. All these factors, without question, are powerful reasons for this altarpiece to have become an
indispensable model for artists of subsequent generations.
Description of the
altarpiece
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In the field of conservation, altarpieces are cultural objects with unique characteristics, due to their very conception as architectural, symbolic and decorative elements. Thus, altarpieces have three basic features: the integration of
the altarpiece into the building for which it was conceived, the specific context
provided by the setting and, finally, its technical complexity, as well as the
diversity of building systems, materials, and elements involved in its construction (supporting structure, architectural case, paintings, sculptures, decorative elements, etc).
All these intrinsic characteristics are crucial for studying or intervening on
altarpieces, or for any proposed action, due to the interrelation between the
work of art, its surrounding environment and the setting. As such, the state of
conservation of these objects is known to be influenced by complex factors
such as the following:
factors related to the altarpiece itself (the evolution of the altarpiece's materials, the physical response of the altarpiece's components to its surrounding
environment, the role that the altarpiece plays, etc)
factors directly and indirectly resulting from the state of the building in
which the altarpiece is housed (infiltration of water, deficient security, inadequate lighting systems, lack of maintenance, etc)
factors related to the condition of those areas of the altarpiece in direct contact with the building, i.e. the wall against which it rests and the floor upon
which it sits (infiltration of moisture, ineffectiveness of anchor points, sagging and collapsing due to faults in the foundation, etc).
These factors call for an a priori awareness of the fact that studies and interventions on altarpieces must be conceived of with a comprehensive vision that
contemplates both the setting where the altarpiece is housed, and the condition of the altarpiece itself, so that the actions and treatments demanded by the
work of art and its context may be identified and proposed during the research
phase, as well as executed during the intervention phase.
Conscious of the particularities inherent to altarpieces, the IAPH is developing
a specific methodology for these cultural objects, starting with the main altarpiece of the Royal Chapel of Granada4. While staying within the framework of
the general methodology employed by the IAPH for other cultural objects, this
methodology is adapted to the unique factors entailed by altarpieces. This
methodology is based on the following premise: any study or intervention
carried out on cultural objects in general, and on altarpieces in particular, cannot be approached from a merely operational viewpoint. Rather, it must be
preceded by a rigorous research phase applied to the concrete case being stu-
died, so that the intervention can be defined in a manner consistent with the
cultural object's characteristics and needs; in other words, one must understand an object in order to intervene appropriately.
Application of this principle calls for a work methodology divided into two
phases, which may be complementary or sequential, depending upon the circumstances. The first phase is cognitive and includes the studies and activities
needed to identify deterioration factors, risks, pathologies, compositional
materials, constitutive techniques, etc. The second phase is operational, in
which the actions defined during the cognitive phase are carried out.
The learning process, from this perspective, is aimed at providing the necessary tools to develop a prioritized schedule of actions demanded by the cultural object, based on its particularities. This calls for a detailed evaluation and
consideration of all the risk factors. In this way, correct conclusions are arrived
at by making an in-depth study of the dichotomy between the proposed objectives and the inherent constraints of the work of art itself.
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In synthesis, the methodology for understanding the object's physical condition, along with preliminary analytical studies, constitute a filter, to screen and
prevent interventions that are destructive or that could alter the object. In this
way, respectful, minimal interventions are guaranteed, using state-of-the-art
techniques and treatment processes. This is the principal objective sought by
the IAPH through application of this methodology, so as to ensure that all
works of art upon which it acts will be conserved and transmitted to future
generations in the best condition possible. As we know, actions will only be
100% effective if the causes of alterations are known beforehand and eliminated. Furthermore, the necessary technical, human and economic tools and
means must be available, for direct intervention on the cultural object and for
indirect actions needed by the surrounding environment to ensure their conservation and facilitate the viewing and maintenance of the work of art.
INTERVENTION
Understanding
Action
INTERVENTION: PROCESSES
Preliminary examination
Preliminary studies/
Actions
Preventive conservation:
Action on the causes
Diagnosis
Restorative conservation:
Action on the effects
Maintenance
Follow-up
Previous studies
Previous actions
Interdisciplinary
work team
Dissemination of the
project activities
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Tools
Interventions on cultural property by public institutions, such as the IAPH, if
they are to be conducted and managed in an effective and expeditious manner,
call for the prior development of a series of technical and scientific data collection and processing tools that make it possible not only to meet the objectives
set for the item being studied or treated, but also to optimize available human,
technical, and economic resources, as well as transfer the results to society,
which in our case is the community of Andaluca. For altarpieces, which are
complex in terms of the techniques and structures involved, and which contain a number of elements or works of art, a series of particularly useful tools
can be adapted. They make it possible to do the following:
standardize the contents, information and documentation generated in connection with the study or intervention process
control the quality of information, documentation, intervention, etc
provide an overview of the progress of activities on the altarpiece, systematizing the intervention operationally and chronologically
facilitate the documentary treatment of the information gathered, with a
view towards archiving, providing consultations with and/or disseminating that information.
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142
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Introduction
II
Objectives
III
IV
Preliminary studies
IV.1
Photogrammetric survey
VI
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V.3.
V.4.
V.5.
Proposed intervention
VI.1. Work methodology
VI.2. General and specific criteria for intervention and maintenance
VI.3. Proposed intervention on the altarpiece: description of treatments,
products, and methodology for action on each of the elements comprising the altarpiece
VI.4. Proposed intervention on the walls and heraldry: description of the
treatments, products, and methodology for action on each of their
elements
VI.5. Proposed intervention on the altar frontals: description of the treatments, products, and methodology for action on each of its elements
VII
Currently, all institutions dedicated to understanding, researching and conserving cultural property recognize the value of a multidisciplinary approach.
The approach should be joint, conducting those multidisciplinary studies
whose results contribute solutions to the unknowns posed, with a persistent
objective of determining the intervention most consistent with needs. In the
case of the main altarpiece of the Royal Chapel of Granada, preliminary studies were formulated and performed during the Project (or cognitive) phase, either on site or at the headquarters of the IAPH. These studies defined the
scope of the actions developed during the intervention phase, in terms of conservation and in economic terms.
The preliminary studies carried out on the altarpiece were as follows.
Cognitive phase:
preliminary studies
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role and furthermore directly receive the weight of the sculptural groups. On
the other hand, there is a mutual interaction based on the construction system
itself, which employs weak joints or connections for the elements comprising the shell as compared to a more rigid supporting structure situated in an
intermediate plane. The niches face inward, practically touching the wall, while the thin columns and cornices jut outward along the most external plane.
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146
The main altarpiece also underwent four carpentry repairs during the eighteenth century and one other during the nineteenth century. The documents do
not state which areas or pieces were repaired; they only note the materials and
time it took to perform the work. During the eighteenth century, two interventions were carried out to clean the altarpiece and make repairs to the reliefs
and sculptures. One of these interventions was carried out by sculptor Juan
Gonzlez. In addition, three interventions were performed during the eighteenth and twentieth centuries, principally to make changes and extensions to
the altarpiece.
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2
Identification of constitutive materials.
Stratigraphic study of samples.
1: Applied brocade on the dress of the
Santa Mujer
4
2: Blue outer layer, sgraffito of a star with
a golden underlayer
3: Blue of the Virgin's cloak
4: Flesh tone of the neck of Queen Isabel
la Catlica.
Documentation
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Graphic documentation: Graphic documentation has been prepared regarding the architecture as a whole and each of the decorative sculptural elements. For the architecture, photogrammetry was used as the base document.
For the sculptural elements, illustrations were drawn to scale. In both cases,
thematic maps were developed, on which data was recorded according to
IAPH standards.
f
Biological study and study of
biodeteriorating agents.
a. Excrement of Cerambycid beetles
b. Excrement of Anobiid beetles
c. Passageway for Cerambycid beetles
d. Cherry wood (Prunus Avium L.)
e. Pine wood (Pinus Silvestris L.)
f. Walnut wood (Juglans Regia L.)
X-ray examination is the only study commented upon here that was not conducted during the cognitive phase of the project. The reason for this was
simply that sufficiently safe scaffolding was not available for mounting the Xray equipment, and it was not considered advisable to disassemble and transport the sculpted figures to another location. Rather, the X-ray study was conducted on site during the intervention phase using the scaffolding set up for
intervention activities. Sculptures or sculptural groups were X-rayed when it
was deemed necessary and advisable to do so in order to attain greater knowledge of their internal structure, given their technical or constructive characteristics, or the pathologies they displayed.
Likewise, a general examination using infrared reflectography was performed
on the sculptures during the diagnostic phase. That study, however, did not
contribute significant data.
Environmental context
In order to ascertain the microclimatic conditions of the Royal Chapel, and
hence of the main altarpiece, a series of measurements were taken using a digi-
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3
Technical documentation:
1. Photogrammetry
2. Orthophotogrammetry
3. Natural light photography.
The altarpiece's artificial lighting system shines symmetrically from two electrified rails that run vertically along the sides of the cross. There are three types
of lamps present: metal halyde (6 units), low-voltage halogen with an aluminum parabola (4 units) and halogen filament lamps (4 units). A luxometer,
ultraviolet meter and radiometer were used to measure specific parameters,
and it was found that the levels of illumination are 350 lux, 300 K and 0 UV
Thus, we can state that the lighting does not negatively impact the altarpiece's
conservation or chromatic appearance, since there is no distortion of color or
harmful radiation.
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Diagnosis
Infrastructure
The study of a work of art as monumental and complex as the one in question
demands that a suitable infrastructure be available, so that the study and intervention phases of a project can take place in a manner consistent with the
needs of the altarpiece. In this case, the infrastructure also had to be adapted
to the layout and installations of the Royal Chapel itself, since the proposed
work was based on the premise of on-site intervention.
State of conservation
The altarpiece's state of conservation was determined through a visual inspection using normal light, grazing or tangential light, UV radiation, and in
some cases, under 20x and 40x magnifying glasses. The following parameters
were studied:
3
1. Radiography of pieces in situ.
2. Restoration workshop in the choir.
3. Scaffolding and exhibition.
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the characteristics of the altarpiece's decorative techniques and construction, as well as the state of conservation of each of its elements. The reports
have been structured as follows:
structure-architecture
sculptural groups
free-standing sculptures
panels.
Each of the respective reports includes the following aspects:
technical summary sheet
historical studies
technical data and state of conservation of the support
technical data and state of conservation of the polychromy, gilding and
protective layers.
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Pathologies
The following is a very brief summary of the principal pathologies detected in
the altarpiece, organized according to their location in the work.
Supporting structure: The part of the supporting structure that was examined
is in good condition. There are no major structural problems. The nodes of the
grid do not appear to have pathologies in their interlacings. Some problems
are present, however, in the fastening of the attic, which is not unusual in altarpieces, given that the attic juts out over the plane of the top of the principal
structure. This altarpiece, as is customary, uses bracings attached directly to
the wall. The only breakage of the supporting structure noted is of some thin
exterior columns, while warping has been seen in certain other ones, all of
which has little effect on the stability of the structure. A medium-intensity
attack of xylophagous (wood-eating) insects was seen, though they are
currently inactive.
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depending upon the particular sculpture. There are also alterations resulting
from the original construction techniques employed. As such, some of the original metallic elements employed for fastening the pieces are now visible.
Separations between constitutive pieces, cracks and, to a lesser extent, losses
in the wood, which are generally seen in the most fragile, most accessible areas, have also been observed. This fact is reflected by statistics on the breakage
of the fingers and toes of the sculptures in-the-round ( 25%) and the losses of
folds of cloaks, or iconographic attributes ( 2%).
Important alterations of the sculptures are seen mainly in the lifting of preparation and color layers. Though this problem is not very significant in overall
terms (it is calculated that 5% show a risk of flaking), it is nonetheless the
worst pathology given the risk of loss that it entails. There are also localized
losses, principally in the brocades that decorate the sculptures' garments
(approximately 10%) and in the gilding and polychromy (approximately 10%).
Without question, the prior repolychroming was the most significant and
selective intervention, as it covers almost the entirety of the sculptures' flesh
tones. In contrast, the decoration involving metals that adorn the garments,
with a few exceptions, have remained intact. Finally, it should be noted that
there has been a heavy accumulation of surface deposits on 80% of the total
surface area of the sculptures, and an alteration and darkening of previous
varnishing and protective coatings that cover and mask the totality of the
sculptures' polychromy.
STATE OF CONSERVATION:
R.C.R. 26
Graphic no. 3
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TREATMENT DEPARTMENT
Key
Symbol
Natural flaking
Premature flaking
Cracks
Surface deposits
Lifting
(indicate type)
Sagging
Blistering
Dust formations
Biological alteration
(indicate type)
Microbiological alteration
(indicate type)
Pigment alteration
Chemical alterations
Abrasions (burns)
Worn area
Stains
(indicate type)
Losses
(indicate type)
Lifting
Losses
Worn areas
Marks
Scratches
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3
Proposed action
In defining the proposed action on this altarpiece, various factors have been
taken into consideration. The first set of factors are legal and ethical in nature,
since the work of a public institution on protected property must abide by prevailing legislation10 and international recommendations.11 Secondly, the conservation needs of the altarpiece were evaluated based on the diagnosis made,
as well as the results of all of the research and studies conducted. The following framework was used to establish the general criteria for the activities to
take place during the intervention phase.
Supports
Concerning the replacement of lost parts, only architectural elements whose loss disrupts the general harmony of the altarpiece, given their size,
importance or location, will be replaced.
Interventions on the wooden support will be kept to the indispensable minimum, so as not to disrupt the equilibrium of the already stabilized wooden
support.
In cases where the wooden support is in good condition but there are fissures, unfastening of pieces or missing pieces, the correction will be made
using wood with the same level of moisture as the original, following methodologies that have already been refined in practice.
Small ornamental elements or sculptures will not be reconstructed when
there is no reliable data upon which to do so.
Actual pieces and fragments that have broken off will be re-mounted in
their respective original locations.
Pieces or groups that were displaced will be returned to their original locations.
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None of the partial or total repolychromy covering the elements and sculptures of the altarpiece will be removed. Indeed, in most cases, it has been
ascertained through historical documents that such polychromy uses the
same materials as the original work, and furthermore, the original underlying layer is in a deficient state.
Reintegration will be based on a critical interpretation of the loss. It will be
restricted to the indispensable minimum so that the altarpiece's overall
appearance and chromatic and aesthetic perception will be as harmonious
and balanced as possible.
The final protective layer will use a material compatible with the nature of
the polychromy, sufficiently resistant, yet easily reversible over time, using
non-aggressive means for the pictorial film. The matte or shine of the altarpiece's original zones will also be respected.
The principal actions and treatments that have been performed on the altarpiece's various elements, as well as on the areas adjacent to the altarpiece,
during the intervention phase are briefly outlined below.
Treatment of the stone material (walls, epigraphy and heraldry) located in
the apse of the chapel: General cleaning and consolidation; elimination of
non-original elements of the walls and epigraphs; sealing of cracks and
small cavities in the walls; fixing of gilding and polychromy in the epigraphic frieze; and chromatic reintegration.
Preliminary conservation treatment for the main altarpiece as a whole:
Fixing of polychromy and gilding on the architectural ornamentation and
the sculptures with the greatest risk of flaking; elimination of dust deposits;
and treatment to disinfect for xylophagous insects.
Dismounting of the small sculptures (niches) and their transfer to the restoration-conservation area.
Conservation-restoration treatment of the altarpiece's architecture and
ornamentation: Cleaning of dust deposits; removal of non-original metallic
elements; correction of support; replacing and gluing of original fragments
Intervention or execution11
and pieces found during the study phase; setting of original cloth on the
support; elimination of pieces of wood that do not belong to the altarpiece;
construction and placing of certain lost architectural elements; cleaning and
consolidating of areas with burns; fixing of gilding and polychromy to the
support; cleaning of gilding and polychromy; chromatic reintegration; and
application of protective layer.
Conservation-restoration treatment of sculptures and sculptural groups:
Treatment to disinfect areas affected by attacks from xylophagous insects;
setting of original cloth on the support; rearranging of displaced pieces; placement and gluing of original pieces that were found; elimination of nonoriginal metallic pieces; filling of cavities created by metallic components or
attacks from xylophagous insects; filling of small cracks; cleaning and consolidation of areas with burns; consolidation and fixing of polychromy and
gilding; conservation treatment for applied brocades; elimination of localized repainting over the repolychromy; cleaning of dirt and altered varnishes; chromatic reintegration; and application of protective layer.
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Final assembly: Moving and assembling the sculptural groups to their proper placement in the altarpiece.
Writing of the final report.
Intervention process on the La Piedad
sculptural group.
Management systems
Management of the work conducted was also divided into the two phases
referred to above: the Project phase and intervention phase. During the
Project phase the following process was followed, sequentially:
writing of the Project in keeping with the minimum contents indicated in
the Law on the Historical Heritage of Andaluca and the methodology of the
IAPH
approval of the Project by the Cathedral Council of Granada, which owns
the cultural property
approval of the Project by the Provincial Heritage Commission of Granada13.
During the intervention phase, and following approval of the action defined
in the Project, a Technical Commission was formed, consisting of represen-
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The intervention on the main altarpiece of the Royal Chapel of Granada has
called upon the IAPH to adapt a methodology for conserving this type of cultural property, so that it can endure and be enjoyed by future generations. This
model of action is based on the idea that we must understand an object in
order to intervene upon it. The importance of interdisciplinarity, and teamwork among all the specialists directly or indirectly involved in studying, researching and intervening upon the cultural object is also emphasized. This
model has been validated through other studies and projects conducted by the
IAPH to date.
Application of these principles means that the proposed action must be founded upon a scientific methodology that justifies it. In order to be feasible, this
approach needs to be implemented in two phases: the Project (or cognitive)
phase and the intervention (or operational) phase. This dual approach contemplates certain considerations regarding technical aspects, infrastructure,
and personnel that, as we have seen throughout this article, must be borne in
mind a priori. The high cost of this approach is often criticized, since in addition to the cost of the intervention itself, one must add the cost of research and
writing the proposal. In response to this criticism, we would argue that this
two-phase approach is not only consistent with the needs of the cultural
object, but also avoids unforeseen problems in the execution phase. If the economic assessment is made without applying scientific methods, relying only
on a cursory prior inspection (usually from pavement level), or exclusively on
professional experience without the necessary infrastructure, costs are often
increased substantially when unforeseen problems arise, reducing the funds
available for the previously defined work. These problems are more likely to
occur when the diagnosis and resulting economic evaluation are made concurrently with the intervention activities.
In conclusion, the results of the methodology and action taken here have been
very positive for us, not only in terms of the results obtained to date, but also
because the door has been opened to understanding this work of art within a
cultural context previously researched but with little technical or formal rigor.
From our point of view, this has now been accomplished.
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Acknowledgments
I would like to extend my thanks to the board of directors of the IAPH for making this project a reality, and to the entire team of technicians whose hard work, dedication and efforts have made this
article possible. Special thanks go to Pedro Salmern Escobar for his study of the rear of the altarpiece, to Nieves Jimnez Daz for his historical contributions, and to Jos Mara Rodrguez Acosta for his
collaboration on writing the section regarding the intervention conducted.
Technical Commission:
President: Enrique Moratalla Molina, Provincial Representative in Granada of the Cultural Council of
the Regional Government of Andaluca
Vice-president: Manuel Reyes Ruiz, Royal Chaplain of the Council on the Royal Chapel of Granada
Members:
Romn Fernndez-Baca Casares, Director of the Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico
Miguel ngel Martn Cspedes, Head of the Historical Heritage Conservation Department. Cultura de
la Junta de Andaluca delegation
Jos Manuel Pita Andrade, University Professor Emeritus of Art History, representing the Fundacin
Caja de Madrid
Domingo Snchez-Mesa Martn, Professor Emeritus of Art History, University of Granada, representing
the Fundacin Caja de Madrid
Francisco Palanco Olmedo, representing the Office of the Archbishop of Granada
Santiago Hoces Prez, Royal Chaplin of the Council on the Royal Chapel of Granada
Gabriel Morate Martn, subdirector of the Spanish Historic Heritage Conservation Program of the
Fundacin Caja Madrid
Secretary: Lorenzo Prez del Campo, Head of the Historical Heritage Intervention Center of the IAPH
Work Team:
Project phase:
Coordinator, technical and design director of the Project: Mara Jos Gonzlez Lpez, conservatorrestorer
Photogrammetric survey and restitution: Map Line S.A.
Study of the architectural structure on the rear of the altarpiece:
Coordination: Pedro Salmern Escobar, architect
Members of the work team: Elisa Entrena Nez, Mara Felisa Ramrez Martn, Manuel Robles
Iglesias, Susana Castro Rodrguez
Art history studies on the altar frontals: Gabriel Ferreras Romero
Art history research on the altarpiece: Nieves Jimnez Daz.,
Photographic documentation: Eugenio Fernndez Ruiz
Analytical research: Lourdes Martn Garca, Francisco Gutirrez Montero
Biological research: Marta Sameo Puerto
State of conservation and intervention proposal for the altar frontals: Araceli Montero Moreno
Measurements of the microclimatic and illumination parameters and design proposal for exposition of
the altar frontals: Raniero Baglioni
159
Restoration team:
Team head: Jos Mara Rodrguez Acosta Mrquez
Team: Francisco Oliver Ruiz, Amelia Cruz Guzmn, Mara Jos Ortega Glvez, Ins Alejandra Osuna
Cerd, Ana Mrquez Montoro
Intervention phase:
Restoration team:
Head of team and technical director for the intervention: Jos Mara Rodrguez Acosta Mrquez
Team: Francisco Oliver Ruiz, Amelia Cruz Guzmn, Mara Jos Ortega Glvez, Ins Alejandra Osuna
Cerd, Ana Mrquez Montoro, Carmen Pientza Durn, Alejandro Surez Roncao
Art history research on the altarpiece: Nieves Jimnez Daz
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Photographic credits
Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico. Consejera de Cultura de la Junta de Andaluca
References
BAGLIONI, R., and GONZLEZ LPEZ, M J.: Criteria and Methodology in the study and treatment
of the altarpieces of the Chapel Royale in Granada and of San Luis de los Franceses in Sevilla.
In Symposium Polychrome Skulptur in Europa. Technologie. Konservierung. Restaurierung. Dresden,
Germany: Tagunsbeitrage, 1999, pp 77-83.
FANCELLI, P.: Il progetto di conservazione. Editore Guido Guidotti, 1988.
FEIFFER, C.: Il progetto di conservazione. Editore Franco Angeli, 1990.
GONZLEZ LPEZ, Mara J.: Metodologa de estudio para la definicin del proyecto de intervencin en el Altarpiece Mayor de la Capilla Real de Granada. In Boletn PH of the Instituto Andaluz
del Patrimonio Histrico, Year VI, December 1998, No. 25, pp. 89-96.
GONZLEZ LPEZ, Mara J.: El conservador-restaurador de bienes culturales muebles: algunas consideraciones sobre su formacin y futuro laboral en nuestro pas. In Monografas de Arte, 2000-01.
Seville: Office of the Assistant Rector of Institutional Relations and Cultural Outreach, University of
Seville (publication in CD format), June 2001.
MARAMOTTI, A.L.: La materia del restauro. Editore Franco Angeli, 1989.
MARINO, L.: Il progetto di restauro. Alinea Editrice, 1981.
SANPAOLESI, P.: Discorso generale sulla metodologia generale del restauro dei monumenti. Editrice
Edam, 1990.
RUIZ, L., and RAMREZ DE ARELLANO AGUDO, A.: Clasificacin Sistemtica para la Conservacin
y Restauracin de Bienes Muebles. Regional Government of Andaluca, Cultural Council, 1993.
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Notes:
1. Section co-authored by Jos Mara Rodrguez Acosta.
2. Hereafter IAPH.
3. See GONZLEZ LPEZ, Mara J.: Metodologa de estudio para la definicin del proyecto de
intervencin en el Altarpiece Mayor de la Capilla Real de Granada. In Boletn PH of the Instituto
Andaluz del Patrimonio Histrico, Year VI, December 1998, No. 25, pp 89-96.
4. This methodology is being used at the Special Project Sector of the IAPH Intervention Center's
Treatment Department, and has served as a basis for the other projects conducted to date by the IAPH
on altarpieces.
5. The laws in effect in Andaluca require the writing of an intervention project signed by a competent
technician when the object upon which the conservation or restoration action will be taken is property registered in the General Catalogue of Historical Heritage of Andaluca (Article 21 of Law
1/1991 of July 3 on the Historical Heritage of Andaluca). Furthermore, said law requires that the contents of the proposal shall be consistent with the regulations set. The law also specifies the minimum
content that must be included in the project (Article 22).
6. Point 1, Subsection 1 of Law 16/1985 of June 25 on the Historical Heritage of Spain.
7. For all interventions on cultural property, the Cultural Council reserves the right to pre-approve the
Conservation projects and to conduct inspections at any time on the progress of the intervention
(Articles 23 and 24 of Law 1/1991 of July 3 on the Historical Heritage of Andaluca). In the case of
this particular altarpiece, the project was approved by the Provincial Commission on the Heritage of
Granada (Article 107 of Law 1/1991 of July 3 on the Historical Heritage of Andaluca).
8. CACACE, C.: Problemtica del control medioambiental en realacin al bien cultural. In Un proyecto para la Capilla Real de Granada. Cuadernos Series, No. 1 of the IAPH, 1992, pp. 71-80.
CACACE, C.: Problemtica del control medioambiental en relacin al bien cultural. In Un proyecto
para la Capilla Real de Granada. Cuadernos Series, No. 1, of the IAPH, 1992, pp. 71-80.
CACACE, C., and GONZLEZ LPEZ, M. J.: Monitoraggio ambientale della Capella Reale in
Granada. Attuazione di un intervento programmato nei beni culturali Spagnol. In Proceedings of the
3rd. International Conference on non-Destructive Testing, Microanalytical Methods and
Environmental Evaluation for Study and Conservation of Works of Art. Viterbo, Volume 2, 1992, pp.
917-933.
9. For the project carried out by the IAPH from 1990 to 1992, this space was already adapted to serve
as a restoration workshop. As such, the existing infrastructure and installations were available for the
study and intervention phases of the new project.
10. See Title III, Articles 21, 22, 23 and 25 of Law 16/1985 of June 25 on the Historical Heritage of
Spain.
11. In developing the general criteria, we have principally been guided by the Restoration Charter of
1972 and the Charter of 1987 on the Conservation and Restoration of Artwork and Cultural Objects.
12. Section co-authored by Jos Mara Rodrguez Acosta.
13. See Article 107 of Law 1/1991 of July 3 on the Historical Heritage of Andaluca.
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Name of the work of art: Main altarpiece of Santa Maria del Giglio
Materials and techniques: Linden wood for carvings, spruce and poplar
Style: Renaissance
photographer, one architect, one graphic artist, one chemist, one art histo-
rian, one archivist, three photographers, one publicist, one mason, one
security and alarm technician
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164
Sculptures of the Virgin Mary, the Angel of the Annunciation, and God the
Father at central positions, plus eleven other saints sculptures on different levels, are included within the elaborate structure, all of them linked to life events
of the Virgin Mary, whose statue rests in the middle of the structure.
The altarpiece was built specifically for the presbytery of the Sanctuary, perfectly suited to its size and volume. The Sanctuary was located at the center of
the village of Aprato, and has always represented the religious, physical, civil
and social meeting point for the area. It has been a pilgrimage site since 1500.
Both the Sanctuary and altarpiece were objects of deep devotion and are still
used by local people for celebrating marriages.
Both the Sanctuary and altarpiece have undergone several maintenance campaigns in the past. While performing this project, three important interventions were identified: the first dating to approximately 1700, the second to
18781, and the third and final intervention to 1904, when the whole architectural frame and sculptures were completely regilded and repolychromed.
On May 6, 1976, a dreadful earthquake hit Friuli, killing one thousand people
and completely destroying towns and villages. In the village of Aprato, hous-
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es and the Sanctuary of Santa Maria del Giglio collapsed. Broken pieces of the
completely crushed main altarpiece and other masterpieces were retrieved a
few days later and taken to an emergency storage area at the church of St Francis in Udine. Once placed in various boxes, they were transferred over the following years from one place to another. The earthquake deeply marked elements of the altarpiece and the values it represented. It caused deep wounds
and historical changes, and even jeopardized the future of the altarpiece within its own community.
In 1988, the priest of the parish asked for an assessment of the altarpiece's condition. The results were disappointing: the architectural frame was in bits, the
majority of pieces no larger than a few centimeters long. Moreover, the
destruction of the building, being exposed to the elements for several days
(including rain), the passing of bulldozers over the fragments and successive
transfers had rendered these pieces unrecognizable. Conversely, the sculptures, although evidently damaged, had remained almost intact. Absolute lack
of fragment identification and persistent negligence due to the recovery conditions of the altarpiece caused further damage. In fact, some even considered
the eventual possibility of throwing the pieces away.
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There was no doubt that the presbytery would need an altarpiece, indispensable because of its liturgical significance. Another important aspect was that the
sculptures, once restored, would need to be placed in a proper setting. Therefore, several proposals were presented. Possibilities included reproducing the
original architectural frame exactly, constructing a new altarpiece with a different shape and dimensions, and creating a new structure inspired by the old
one. However, neither of these solutions was philosophically or philologically
acceptable. Moreover, any rebuilding would have been an historic and aesthetic counterfeit. Copies can serve didactic and memorial purposes, but can
never replace the original. For these reasons, we chose to restore the original
altarpiece.
2. How and where could the sculptures recovered in fairly good condition
be placed after restoration?
The sculptures and the architecture that houses them form a whole and not a
sum. They are not the mere composition of parts and would be senseless without the formal links imposed on them by the artist. It would be like reading
the words of a poem in a dictionary, where, deprived of the unifying power of
the verse, they are just groups of semantic sounds and nothing more.
3. What would happen to the fragments of the altarpiece, if they were not used
in a restoration project?
Having accepted the idea that the work of art is a whole, and that, even when
physically broken, still continues to be a potential whole in each of its fragments, the following principle can be stated: any intervention aimed at recovering the original unity of a work of art from its fragments must take into
account only the underlying hints found in those fragments or in the authentic evidence of its original condition. The recovered fragments must survive,
as they are implicitly unique testimonies to the original structure.
4. What theory could justify the destruction of the fragments?
The essential aim when restoring works of art is the re-creation of its potential
unity. To be legitimate, restoration must clearly show not only the historic
present but also the inherent past. Restoration must neither reverse time nor
suppress history. Consequently, in order to maintain the complex historicity of
a work of art, restoration must not be conducted in secret, or as a dateless
event, but as a historic event that is a sign of human intervention, and part of
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the process for the transmission of the work of art to the future. If works of art
are, above all, products of human action, their appreciation should not depend
on changing tastes and fashions. Fragments of a work of art an altarpiece in
this case always bear evidence of their belonging to a historical past, and
their value cannot be assessed only by the taste of our times. Artistic and historic issues suggest that in no way should restoration of the potential unity of
a work of art destroy its authenticity, creating a new historic reality.
Had the possibility of reconstruction been ruled out, it would have meant the
destruction of two historic values: on one hand, the potential unity of the work
of art and, on the other, the memory of the historical event, i.e. the earthquake
that so deeply marked its existence2.
A theoretical scheme was then established to develop a methodology for the
technical-executive stage of the project.
First, key principles were sought for building the theoretical foundations of
our work:
1. historic-artistic value
2. liturgical function
3. importance of its role
4. emotional and devotional value
5. historic testimonial value
6. aesthetic equilibrium, and spatial and functional identity of the fragments.
1. Historic-artistic value: the altarpiece is one of the most important examples
of wooden art from Friuli dating to the Renaissance-Baroque transitional period. Therefore, signs of history and the passage of time must be preserved in
order to enhance its position as a work of art.
2. Liturgical function: every piece recovered from the rubble is part of a potential rebuilt whole, whose purpose remains the same as that of the original
altarpiece. Once restored, the altarpiece will again function as a liturgical
object in a church, rather than being placed in a museum as a mere archaeological piece. Restoration work must keep this main purpose in mind.
3. Importance of its role: the altarpiece originally occupied an important role
as the main altarpiece of a sanctuary containing two other altars and other
wooden sculptures. This role must be preserved, whether the altarpiece is in
fragments or is a reconstructed whole. Thus, this significant hierarchy has to
be reflected in both conservation works and aesthetic presentation.
4. Emotional and devotional value: the Sanctuary has been a pilgrimage site
since 1500, and the altarpiece has been an object of devotion, often chosen for
weddings3. Restoration should therefore recover this traditional role once
work is completed, with particular attention paid to the statues and the general appearance of the altarpiece.
5. Historic testimonial value: the earthquake of 1976 left an indelible historical
and emotional mark. Thus, as a reminder of both the emotional experience and
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the victims, we have decided not to mask the effects of that historic event but
to leave signs of the church's collapse visible on the altarpiece.
6. Aesthetic equilibrium, and spatial and functional identity of the fragments:
any intervention that hopes to restore the potential unity of a work of art physically broken into pieces must strive to recover the potential unity of the
whole. To do so, every original fragment must maintain its identity both within the architectural frame the altarpiece and its architectural context, the
church itself. Restoration of an integrated whole whose successive historical
marks are clearly recognizable must maintain a unifying aesthetic.
In order to comply with these six parameters, we chose an anastylosis
approach4.
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At this point, based on a carefully documented anastylosis, all the methodological, theoretical and technical parameters were available to start the implementation phase, which encompassed the restoration of each piece, subsequent fragment rebuilding and the repair of structural and surface losses. All
rescued and repositioned pieces would then become jewels embedded in new
wood, displaying a balanced relationship of volume, surface and polychromy.
Intervention
Our decision not to mask any traumatic evidence of the earthquake on the
restored altarpiece was taken out of respect for history, emotional feelings and
the victims, and was based on an optimistic outlook of human and moral
rebirth in the face of the destructive power of nature. The main altarpiece of
Tarcento symbolizes this approach, and the entire restoration process has been
carried out following these principles.
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Because of the considerable damage, we decided first to work on the architectural frame, then the sculptures, with the following operations:
restoration of each piece
rebuilding of contiguous fragments based on graphs
plastic finishing of missing parts and re-creation of each module based on
graphs and scaled measurements
aesthetic phase
new support structure
rebuilding of the complete architecture
re-placing of restored sculptures.
Architecture of the
altarpiece
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The high availability and quite good condition of the original material determined the approach for rebuilding missing parts5. Most of the original structure was made of spruce, so the same kind of wood was chosen to fill in areas
missing in the structure. Implementation was based on the original building
typology, i.e. working from the inside outward, as subsequent elements were
layered on a supporting base, ending with the cornices and decorative features. Original wood preservation was maximized even in the less visible
components of the altarpiece, with each new insert tailored to follow existing
fracture lines, in order to avoid changes to the original parts. Thus, no clean
or straight joints were made but individual solutions were crafted for every
fragment.
For the plastic finishing of new surfaces, both volumetric characteristics and
carving morphology were considered. For the original surfaces, the reconstruction of lost volume and carvings was limited, favoring the historical
sequence of events and a balanced readability instead. Also, carvings were not
rebuilt from an abstract conception but were made to harmonize the continuity between old and new6.
At this point, we had a unitary shape on which a homogeneous aesthetic
surface had to be built. Fracture lines were very evident due to the alternate
succession of new and old wood, the latter exhibiting signs of mutilations
inflicted by historic events and woodworm7. To develop a smooth interface
between old and new, a texture had to be applied to the new wood.
We regarded the wood not merely as a support for the paint layers (generally
considered to be the main aesthetic element of an altarpiece), but as playing a
role just as important as those layers. In fact, an altarpiece can be seen as a living object composed of skin, muscles, viscera and skeleton. Intervention must
take into account every constituent element, because all are equally important.
All pieces and the pertinent balance among them must be preserved to retrieve
a social-cultural equilibrium, which is the positive final outcome sought in
every restoration work.
To this end, all uneven gradients in the wood were proportionally reduced,
and fracture lines were filled with a paste made of wood dust. All treated surfaces were finished through careful carving. A similar texture to that of the surrounding original pieces was applied both to the new wood and the pastefilled fracture lines, with a fading-out in intensity from old to new elements.
Even though new components were still recognizable, they were now blended
with the original fragments within a dynamic balance. In this way, the rebuilding of the wood losses and the blending of old and new led to a new equilibrium of the whole, instead of yielding a kind of materials' kaleidoscope.
Texturing was followed by aesthetic-material tasks, a fundamental step for
subsequent pictorial integration. After all fissures were filled and small missing ornamental pieces rebuilt, the surfaces that would remain as natural wood
and those that would be chromatically altered were chosen. Micro-milling or
carving tools were used on already coated areas to imitate wood texture, while
the surfaces to be polychromed were prepared.
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The preservation of the gilding and polychromy in their 1976 state was the
starting point for retrieving the aesthetic layout of the altarpiece's skin in full
harmony with the underlying substance, or wood. Again, our approach was
also to keep a balance, since following any one dogma with its strict and
absolute rules would have hindered us from achieving a harmonious
restoration. In fact, the very material suggested dynamic but coherent results.
The purpose of integrating the gilded and polychromed areas was to:
retrieve the luminosity and preciousness of the gold
fix disruptions on colored surfaces
mask problem areas due to interface lines between new wood and original
gilded or painted pieces.
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The method chosen was to integrate small- and medium-sized areas of loss
within original fragments by using the same hue, breaking up sharp lines
between original and new parts by applying short and fading gilding or polychromy touches on new areas, in order to maintain a natural aspect. All
polychrome integrations were performed a rigatino, using watercolors.
As for losses in the gilding, gold leaf was applied by the two techniques
already present in the altarpiece oil and water gilding on a polished
ground layer a tratteggio to avoid final varnishes that could debase the
special brilliance of gold8.
Intervention work on the architectonic structure of the altarpiece ended with
the restoration of six small canvas paintings. Of the six paintings, four presented an acceptable state of conservation, notwithstanding their need for
cleaning and some aesthetic problems to consider. The other two paintings,
originally located on the right side of the altarpiece and more damaged by the
earthquake, were separated from their supports, rolled up and incomplete
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(missing at least half of the original paint), so their restoration was more laborintensive9.
A supporting structure was then designed to hold all the modules together.
Since no useful information was available, neither archival records nor photographs, we were forced to build a completely independent elastic composite
structure in order to accommodate all 30 modules in their full height10. The use
of this kind of structure accommodates natural wood movements and holds
the altarpiece together.
There were twelve sculptures within the architecture of the altarpiece, including the central statue of the Madonna del Giglio. Before the earthquake, woodworm had already damaged the structures of the sculptures, causing them to
offer almost no mechanical resilience during that event. Many parts were
crushed, and some became irretrievable, such as the rear side of the head of the
Virgin of Sorrows (from the upper right part of the altarpiece), the shoulder of
St John and some parts of the Prophets' statues. The time spent under the rubble, although short when compared with that undergone by the architecture,
had damaged their gilding and polychromy. Sand and dust had penetrated the
humidity-softened ground layers. An outstanding example was St John's
head, which became almost unrecognizable and resembled a lump of soil.
Like the architecture, the sculptures had undergone significant changes during
the 1904 maintenance tasks. Stratigraphic and visual analyses of areas where
flaking revealed the original polychromy found that the underlying surface of
gilding and polychromy was more refined and of higher quality than that
applied later, yet its condition was deeply degraded. Even though the restoration of this surface would have led to a correct reading of the plastic and chromatic values of each sculpture, it would have affected its balance within the
housing architecture. Since we have approached these tasks considering the
altarpiece as a whole, although composed of diverse parts, we chose in the end
to keep the 1976 skin.
Sculpture restoration included surface cleaning, wood-fiber consolidation,
identification and cataloging of loose fragments, their assembly and structural and aesthetic integration of missing parts11. Once cleaned and consolidated,
contiguous fragments were re-joined to retrieve the original volume and shape
of every statue.
The subsequent phase of aesthetic presentation, both volumetric and pictorial,
was fundamental for the sculptures. While theoretical support was clear for
the architectural restoration, through a variety of irrefutable graphic evidence
and many plastic reference points, sculpture restoration was more risky
because we could have developed new volumes and shapes, affecting the historical value of the sculptures. Additionally, since the group of statues pertained to a single architecture, it was nearly impossible to keep a balance
between the elements that were mostly undamaged and those that were
severely mutilated. The approach was, again, to maximize the original material, proposing a balance of volumes and surfaces, and restoring some particu-
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larly disturbed areas. The architectural frame restoration tasks, already completed, were of great help in doing this.
Depending on the size and condition of the area concerned, different media
were used. For instance, mono-component wood paste was used for small
gaps, while the choice for deeper and wider spaces was a fill with Polyfilla
and a final overlay of paste, as described earlier. The use of special putties and
bi-component resins retained original carving properties and allowed for in
situ filling without previous work on surfaces, thus avoiding loss of the original wood.
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In the case of the Angel Gabriel's wing very damaged and with many missing fragments it was even possible to achieve the carving of feather details.
Had another media than these resins been used, it would have led to the loss
of original wood.
The sculpture of the Prophet Isaiah completely fragmented and featuring a
hole across the chest was first rebuilt and then integrated with polyurethane
foam with an inner wooden frame12. Between the foam and the original pieces,
a layer of Japanese paper was used to isolate the wood. The surface of the foam
was then covered with a non-woven textile with bi-component resin, over
which a resin film of wood dust was applied. Other missing parts on the same
sculpture were maintained because they didn't interfere with the aesthetic
equilibrium. A similar process was used for the skull volume of the Madonna
of Sorrows, of which only the facemask survived. An internal balsa wood
frame filled with polyurethane foam was used, followed by the finishing steps
described above.
The St John's statue restoration was more complex. There were large areas of
missing material especially noticeable in the face and thus the statue had
become a very disturbing element within the whole. Only in this specific case
did we choose to deliberately rebuild the chin and shoulders to get enough
image readability, leaving the damage, however, still visible.
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For all the sculptures, we identified the areas where damage should remain
visible or where the original appearance should be restored, as well as the surfaces to be left untreated with the wood visible or those to be prepared for later chromatic integration. After preparing the wood, we began the gilding and
polychromy integration phase. For the polychromy, a rigatino watercolor
approach was selected, while the method of chromatic selection was chosen
for the gilding. A different gilding integration approach was performed for the
sculptures to that for the altarpiece itself. Since the sculptures originally
played a main role in the altarpiece, they were treated with more accurate
details. It was intended that the eye of the visitor should pass from the architecture to the sculptures, and not vice versa.
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Up to this point, the intervention had achieved aesthetic equilibrium among
the individual fragments and the altarpiece as a whole, each statue and the
statues as a group, as well as the altarpiece and the statues. Yet, the essential
element of the altarpiece and of the entire church was still missing: the statue
of the Madonna del Giglio. This piece, situated inside the main niche until
1976, was recovered in a poor and fragmented condition due to the nature of
its body. In fact, before 1976 the Madonna was a composite structure, made
from wood (torso, arms, head, the Child) and gesso (the rest). After a thorough analysis it was concluded that the Madonna was the result of a detailed
rebuilding of a wooden statue almost a century older, and probably attributable to Giovanni Martini, from which some parts had been cut.
Due to the scarcity and poor quality of the surviving material, already altered
in structure and appearance several times, it was impossible to use the same
methodology that had been applied to the architecture and other sculptures.
It was necessary then to formulate a number of working hypotheses in order
to develop a viable proposal for the eventual return of the sculpture to the
altarpiece.
The first hypothesis considered a gesso or plaster reconstruction built around
the recuperated fragments in such a way as to re-establish the pre-1976 appearance based on photographic archives. This solution, although satisfying the liturgical functionality of the statue, would have compromised its historic-artistic and
devotional aspects. Respect for the historic and artistic significance embedded in
each fragment of Martini's work of art would have also been lost due to the camouflage of stucco, necessary for any restoration with a minimal aesthetic finishing. This approach would also compromise the degree of equilibrium achieved
so far in the sculptures and architecture of the altarpiece, which was accomplished by adhering to uniform concepts throughout their restoration.
A second option would have been archaeological restoration, i.e. the display of
original fragments without any formal linking. This would have irremediably
lost any liturgical functionality for the Madonna, together with every trace of
aesthetic equilibrium.
One alternative was not to use these fragments at all and concentrate on a
number of ex novo solutions. A contemporary sculpture was a viable option,
but would have posed the thorny question of choosing style, material and
artist. These issues implied arbitrary decisions and could not be reconciled
with the axioms coherently implemented so far.
Another option was to create a copy of the statue as it was in 1976. Yet it was
difficult to establish which model to copy: the Martini fragments as retrieved
from the rubble (following the sketchy three-dimensional hints from photographic records), or the same fragments restored and displayed as they would
have appeared in their original state?
The last option, which was accepted by both public and religious bodies, was
to create a statue at a scale proportional to the altarpiece, copying a contemporaneous statue of the same sculptor. This decision satisfied the principles of:
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historic value: the fragments of the statue saved from the rubble would be
restored and located inside the church in a site appropiate for the significance of this historic heritage, over one hundred years old
liturgical and devotional value: the statue would be a real figure, not a fake
mannequin
aesthetic equilibrium: the new sculpture would be a perfect replica both in
shape and technique. This guaranteed its harmonious insertion into the
whole
symbol of the earthquake: this would be maximized due to the highly symbolic significance of the original fragments that survived the event. The
copy-statue epitomizes the significance of time as witness of the alternate
course of events between destruction and rebirth. This rebirth was made not
to re-establish but to exalt the deep significance of history.
Management system
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In 1988, both the parish and RCA restorers agreed to a self-financing and selfpromoting tool. After each main restoration step was accomplished, scientific
articles were published, the media contacted and fundraising sought. Therefore, people were aware of the project through the media, and investors continued to support the program. Meanwhile, the RCA team had to fund all
expenses related to archival research, scientific analysis, photographic and
video documentation, additional research and publication activities.
The Sanctuary was rebuilt in the same place and with the same dimensions it
had before the earthquake13. The, placement of the main altarpiece was also the
same, respecting the principle that a work of art holds a unique relationship
with its specific social, cultural and geographical location.
Context
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it a new life or new social significance inside the community it belongs to (no
matter how small), then conservation work becomes a mere mechanical operation, a historical operation on a silent object. Conservation work must also
incorporate the context in which an altarpiece lives, including architecture,
urban, social and cultural relationships, and the equilibrium between them.
The involvement of the general public in project issues and decisions encourages dissemination and acceptance of the intervention, and promotes genuine
and appropriate cultural operations. This type of micro-didactic approach can
be useful when training new conservators or educating new local operators,
who then feel the need to take care of their own heritage.
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Photographic credits
Franco Del Zotto
References
BONSANTI, G.: Aperto per restauri: 14 anni per riassemblare 382 frammenti. In Il Giornale
dell'Arte, n 192. Milano, 2000, p. 45.
BRANDI, C. (edited by Giuseppe Basile): Theory of restoration. Florence: Nardini, 2005.
DEL ZOTTO, F., and TONINI, F.: The anastylosis and the conservation of the main altarpiece of
Madonna del Giglio in Tarcento (1604). In Polychrome Skulptur in Europa Technologie
Konservierung Restaurierung, Tagungsbeitaege, November 11-13, 1999. Dresden, Germany:
Hochschule fur Bildende Kunste, 1999, p. 90-97.
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DEL ZOTTO, F., and TONINI, F.: Il recupero di un altare ligneo del XVII secolo: metodologia e
restauro. In Arte Cristiana - Revista internacional de historia del arte y de artes litrgicos, n 761.
Milano: Scuola Beato Angelico y el Istituto di Storia dell'Arte dell'Universit Cattolica, 1994, p. 147158.
DEL ZOTTO, F., and TONINI, F.: "The rescue of a seventeenth-century retable: methodology and conservation". In ICOM-CC Preprints, Washington D.C. 1993. London: James & James, 1993, p. 205-210.
MARCHETTI, G., and NICOLETTI, G.: La scultura lignea in Friuli. Milan: Silvana, 1956.
SPIAZZI, A.M. (ed.): Scultura lignea barocca nel Veneto. Milano: Cariverona, 1997.
Notes
1. During the intervention, we found the date 1878 inscribed on the reverse of a piece of the architectural frame, documenting the restoration of the altarpiece.
2. The theoretical and methodological ideas applied are also based on two other principles elaborated
by Cesare Brandi. The work of art, seen as a product of human activity, imparts a double valorisation:
on the one hand, it is an act that represents a certain time and place (the moment of its material creation), and on the other hand, it reveals the consciousness of that determined time and place. This
constitutes the historic principle. At the same time, however, the work of art assumes an artistic value
in itself. This constitutes the aesthetic principle.
3. Many of the private images (weddings, etc.) reviewed while developing restoration plans depicted
the altarpiece playing a main role.
4. The recovery of the potential unity of a work of art (following Brandi's approach), through the
recovery of the potential unity of its fragments, and the search for a method to determine a new equilibrium, verified and adjusted to the specific situation, are other important conditions for legitimising
a restoration.
5. All operating choices have followed an orthodox methodological approach, although in some cases
it was necessary to adopt certain flexibility. The results of these choices may not be replicable, but
they are theoretically justified and recognizable.
6. After following the outlines from drawings and original references exactly, all the elements were
carved in linden wood, including cornices, decorative leaves, ovules and dentils, column flutings,
parts of niches and moldings.
7. We chose to use all recovered fragments, even those that were very damaged (whose elimination
would have simplified restoration tasks).
8. The architecture of an altarpiece is the frame inside which statues are appreciated. In this case the
use of gold leaf to mend losses on the architecture was neither an arbitrary choice nor a falsification,
but a fundamental action to enhance its characteristics. In practice we used two techniques that had
already been used on the work of art: oil and water gilding, applied onto yellow or red ground layers,
respectively. The quality of the gold leaf was in accordance with the colour of the original gold, mainly 23 carats. Small losses and abrasions were integrated a tratteggio with powder gold. For better
definition, some surfaces of new gold were completed with a subtle ruling.
MAIN ALTARPIECE
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9. The surviving fragments were cleaned, and the fibers were consolidated in torn areas. Each canvas
was reinforced with two layers of silk paper and then placed inside its medallion on a classical
ground layer, limited to areas of the surface in contact with paint. Lost parts remained as bare wood,
while the surviving areas were integrated a rigatino.
10. Six beams in laminated timber, embedded in the masonry foundation, support all modules by
clasping them with a series of brass braces, tightened by spring-interfaced cylindrical elements in hard
wood. The predella, isolated from the masonry base by a wood and polyurethane interface, supports
the vertical modules of the columns and niches, followed by the entablatures and cornices and finally
the crown of the altarpiece, with the God the Father and the two lunettes housing the Annunciation.
11. First came the cleaning and fixing of the lifted paint areas on the supporting wood. It was a very
difficult operation due to the varying granular debris embedded in the ground layer. Paraloid B72 in
gradually increasing concentrations, plus a Permetrina-based disinfectant, were used for consolidating the wood, following brushing and phleboclysis techniques to avoid an unnatural synthetic
appearance.
12. In this case the reconstructed volume had precise three-dimensional references, so that no arbitrary rebuilding was done.
13. On October 11, 1998 the main altarpiece was placed again inside the rebuilt church during a
solemn celebration with all people from the village present. The church was re-consecrated and the
altarpiece blessed.
14. The following citations are included for reference:
(a) Venice Charter 1964, Art. 7 - A monument is inseparable from the history to which it bears witness and from the setting in which it occurs. Art. 8 - Items of sculpture, painting or decoration
which form an integral part of a monument may only be removed from it if this is the sole means of
ensuring their preservation; (b) Carta del restauro 1972, art. 6 - ... sono proibite indistintamente per
tutte le opere d'arte: ... 2) remozioni o demolizioni che cancellino il passaggio dell'opera attraverso il
tempo, a meno che non si tratti di limitate alterazioni deturpanti o incongrue rispetto ai valori storici
dell'opera o di completamenti in stile che falsifichino l'opera; 3) remozione, ricostruzione o ricollocamento in luoghi diversi da quelli originari, a meno che ci non sia determinato da superiori ragioni di
conservazione; 4) alterazione delle condizioni accessorie o ambientali nelle quali arrivata sino al
nostro tempo l'opera d'arte, il complesso monumentale, il complesso d'arredamento, il giardino, il
parco, ecc...; (c) Cesare Brandi, Teoria del restauro, Torino 1977, p.51: ... E' per questo che il primo
intervento che noi dovremo considerare, non sar quello diretto sulla materia stessa dell'opera, ma
quello volto ad assicurare le condizioni necessarie a che la spazialit dell'opera non sia ostacolata al
suo affermarsi entro lo spazio fisico dell'esistenza. Da questa proposizione discende che anche l'atto
con cui un dipinto viene attaccato a un muro, non indizia gi una fase dell'arredamento, ma in primo
luogo costituisce la enucleazione della spazialit dell'opera, il suo riconoscimento, e quindi gli
accorgimenti presi perch sia tutelato dallo spazio fisico...
15. We would like to remember all the volunteers who worked within the ruins of the church for several days, just after the earthquake, to recover fragments from all works of art: without their contribution, this important testimony of art and culture would have been lost forever.
181
182
Typology: Main altarpiece consists of seven vertical registers and five hori-
Location: Apse of the church of Santo Domingo, which forms a part of the
ture, standing independent of the apse wall and reinforced at the back by
a system of beams and wooden posts
Council and the Public Trustee; along with the Instituto Nacional de
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For both entities, intervention on the altarpiece fits into their respective programs and provides an opportunity to continue working towards their own
objectives and developing their lines of research.
For the CNRPC (INAH), intervention on the altarpiece forms part of a comprehensive conservation program that aims to support the social, economic
and cultural development of Yanhuitln through recovering all forms and
expressions of its heritage, in a sustainable manner, taking the community
itself into consideration. This comprehensive project was conceived in Yanhuitln as a pilot project and includes the restoration of the monastery, conservation of the church and its chattel assets, and the revitalization of agricultural practices and local traditions.
184
Meeting of work group, including
participation of the community.
Members of the work team speaking with
local students about the conservation of the
altarpiece.
For its part, the GCI, as an international institution dedicated to research and
the implementation of heritage conservation projects, is interested in participating in Yanhuitln as part of its work in developing a methodology applicable to other cases in similar contexts, that is, in remote seismic zones with limited funding.
At all times, the community who initiated the project have played an active
role, through the church's Pro-Restoration Committee. They have participated
in meetings and have been involved through ongoing monitoring of the activities carried out.
The shared objectives are structured in such a way that, starting with its first
steps, the project has incorporated training and educational components for
students of conservation, as well as for members of the community, who, in
the end, will be responsible for the long-term maintenance and protection of
the site.
The altarpiece is self-supporting and stands free from the semicircular apse, with its
multi-angular footprint partially following the apse's shape. The altarpiece was conceived as a series of horizontal planes joined to one another by means of entablatures and cornices, within which elements such as large-sized panel paintings (251
x 125 x 7 cm), form a significant structural element.
The altarpiece is shallow in depth, with a maximum thickness of 10 cm. in the area
of the panel paintings, 25 cm in depth at the entablatures, and 40 cm in depth
along the columns.
The altarpiece is reinforced at the back with a support structure formed by three
vertical wooden posts, attached at the top to other horizontally placed posts. These
elements, assembled using leather cords, are in turn joined to the altarpiece by
means of wooden crossbeams. Only the ends of the horizontal wooden posts are
anchored to the wall with metal fittings.
The altarpiece has undergone a number of interventions to counteract the deformations occasioned over the years by earthquakes. The first intervention was the
installation of a series of turnbuckles, connecting the altarpiece to the apse wall.
The second was the installation of a framework of metal L-profiles assembled and
welded on-site, forming five columns with a triangular footprint, embedded into the
ground. These three-dimensional structures are also independent from the apse
walls. The metallic structure follows the lines of the deformations in the altarpiece,
to which it is anchored at specific points, either directly or using metallic fittings
placed between the altarpiece and the supporting structure.
During the project's preparatory phases, research took place on issues related
to the conservation of altarpieces. This work involved inspecting the altarpiece
in detail in order to comprehend its conditions and evaluate the need for an
emergency intervention. Based on discussions among professionals from both
institutions as well as guest consultants, measures were also taken to identify
the main fields of study, and, simultaneously, through a work team consisting
of by members of both institutions, evaluate the building's conditions, develop a proposal on adaptations needed to carry out the work, establish a work
plan and structure the community involvement process. One of the first activities was to determine the cultural significance of the work, which forms the
justification and foundation for the project's objectives. Taking into account all
of the entities and individuals involved, that is, those responsible for the heritage, as well as the community, and the public in general, and, based on the
perspective of the various disciplines involved, work was embarked on to analyze the altarpiece's artistic, cultural, economic and social value.
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The church of Santo Domingo, together with its main altarpiece, its twelve lateral altarpieces, and other sculptures and religious objects belonging to the
temple, are of extreme significance for and are regularly used by the community of Yanhuitln in the celebration of their religious festivals. While most of
the adjacent monastery is in a state of abandonment, the church continues to
provide a reference point and meeting place for the community of Yanhuitln
Cultural significance of
this work of art
185
who, despite having emigrated in large numbers, constantly return to participate in all the significant celebrations taking place around the church.
From a historic point of view, Yanhuitln symbolizes the coming together of
the Old World and the New, as is noted in the Codex of Yanhuitln, a historical manuscript written in the sixteenth century, which documents the events
of that era and the tribute system among the inhabitants.
The architectural complex, whose construction dates back to 1555-1575, bears
witness to the historical changes unleashed when the Mixteca culture came in
contact with that of the conquerors, and the religious orders were established.
The structures have characteristics in common with the other monastic complexes of the region, that is, monumental structures made of stone, consisting of
a monastery and a church, with an open chapel designed to receive the indigenous peoples prior to their conversion. Today, many of these churches still house
a rich variety of decorative elements, such as altarpieces, ceiling adornments,
murals or organs, which evidence the presence and wealth of the orders who
established themselves there, turning the area into a potential tourist attraction.
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Project development
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The first phase addressed two preliminary needs. On the one hand, this period was set aside for conditioning the work areas and residential facilities to be
used by the project team. It was also set aside for the initial development of a
methodology to document and evaluate the state of the altarpiece and of its
components.
The second phase focused on implementing the conservation strategy, restoring the altarpiece's structural stability, and applying the necessary conservation treatments.
The third phase's objective was to restore the stature of the altarpiece as a focal
point in the church, and establish a long-term maintenance program, while
disseminating the methodology, the results of the research and the stabilization and conservation processes employed.
Building upon the rich perspective of two different entities with different areas
of competence, it was sought to develop a rigorous, well-structured methodological approach, aimed at achieving coordination and consistency in all the
necessary technical actions, without compromising the sustainability of the
intervention. All the techniques and artisanship used in the altarpiece were
taken into account. The various disciplines needed for the studies and the
intervention were identified. Finally, the project considered the needs entailed
in training community members, as well as the community's expectations for
recovering a lasting element of devotion.
Simultaneously, in order to make sure that the intervention would not take
place in an isolated manner, the general state of the church's conservation was
evaluated. Yanhuitln is located in a zone of intense seismic activity, which
time and again has affected the material integrity of the church and that of the
assets it houses. Moreover, the architectural complex has undergone periods of
abandonment or times of crisis, such as the various occasions when it was
used as a military garrison. Though not abandoned at present, the church did
not offer optimal conditions to ensure the conservation of the works it houses.
In addition to the effects of seismic activity on the altarpiece, a series of problems was detected resulting from inadequate enclosures and the filtration of
water from leaks in the roof. Also, since the altarpiece is located in a sparsely
populated region lacking in economic resources, the town did not have the
necessary infrastructure to react in situations of risk, such as fires or major
earthquakes, or to control acts of vandalism.
Intervention on the altarpiece required major preliminary logistic activities,
such as the installation of a large scaffolding system and modifications to the
work areas, as well as the preparation of housing for the team of conservators. These activities, as well as anticipated intervention on the altarpiece,
required the extensive use of electrical equipment, exceeding the capacity of
the existing installations. In order to prevent accidents that could injure
humans or damage the artwork, it was necessary to reassess the state of the
electrical installations and redesign the building's installations, while the
national electricity company was asked to intervene in order to increase the
power supply.
187
During the first months of work, the INAH delegation in Oaxaca in charge of
the building's conservation, was asked to repair the roof. At the same time, a
local team took charge of inspecting the windows, closing off access to birds,
and keeping other animals out of the church. A risk prevention specialist was
sent from the GCI to detect points of weakness, and a safety protocol was
developed for the work and for the conservators who would be working on
the church and the artwork.
As part of these preventive actions, a group of community members was
trained in basic emergency response procedures.
All these activities, beyond intervention on the main altarpiece, have been overseen by regional entities of INAH-Oaxaca and local persons in charge, as part
of a long-term vision, which encompasses the revitalization of the conventchurch complex and the conservation of the 12 lateral altarpieces, along with
other valuable artwork housed in the church and in the small adjoining museum.
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Study phase
Forming of the work team and preliminary studies: One of the major objectives was to obtain exhaustive documentation on the altarpiece as a tool for
deciding upon the proper intervention.
Based on the results of the first field visits, two major issues of concern came
to light.
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189
In the first place, it was noted that the altarpiece's structural stability had been
weakened on account of seismic movements, even though several reinforcement systems were observed, added during previous interventions aimed at
consolidating the altarpiece. On several occasions during the life of the altarpiece, with the aim of controlling and to some extent counteracting the slumping, deformations and the out-of-plane behavior of some of the altarpiece's
components, actions had been applied to specific points. This included the
placement of braces to anchor the altarpiece to the wall, as well as the installation, during the 1970s, of an auxiliary metallic structure.
In the second place, after a preliminary visual examination, losses of decorative elements were noted, along with the disappearance of major components
of the altarpiece. Deterioration to some of the paintings was also noted, caused
by water infiltration, xylophagous insect infestation or the poor behavior of
materials used in previous restoration interventions.
From the very start, it was considered indispensable to include an art historian who could provide the work team with all available information on the
190
At the same time, an on-site analysis was begun to identify the altarpiece's
components, materials and construction systems, grouping interventions
into chronological stages, and logging the altarpiece's state of conservation.
Parallelly, a visual analysis was completed, a first set of samples was taken
and scientifically analyzed, and a preliminary study was commenced with
the aim of obtaining certain reference parameters on the site's environmental
conditions.
Given the specific structural stability issues, it was decided to request structural engineering firms to interpret the situation. Two work meetings brought
specialists from each of the following disciplines together: conservators of
panel paintings, conservators of decorative art, and engineers, to discuss the
advantages and disadvantages of each possible intervention, taking into
account the value of the work and the effect on the altarpiece of each act of
intervention.
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liminary work was performed to create guidelines for gathering data from the
front and back of the altarpiece, decide upon the degree of detail, define the
concepts involved (glossary), and decide upon its graphic representation (legends). During the collection of the data, revisions were made to the log sheets
as well as to the use of the terms and their representations, so as to maintain a
degree of consistency throughout the work.
In order to organize the teamwork and manage the quantity of visual and
written information generated, the altarpiece was divided into modular units,
based on the intersection of horizontal and vertical registers, taking both the
altarpiece front and back into account. Each module was assigned a folder
with preprinted forms and illustrations for compiling information on materials, the construction system and manufacturing techniques, the state of conservation and previous interventions.
In order to accomplish such a large, complex task, a methodology was developed combining traditional methods for logging information with computerized information processing methods, which turned the graphics from the
photogrammetric front views of the altarpiece into CAD files. The transfer of
the information into digital format was performed simultaneously with the
collection of data, on a computer set up at the site. This method made it possible to analyze the state of each component's details (structure, painting,
architectural elements) and of the altarpiece as a whole.
191
At the same time, the processing of computerized data made it possible for
both institutions to have a readily accessible instrument for the exchange of
information, while the corpus of the documentation gathered in the original
hard-copy files now forms a part of the project's documentary archives,
housed at the CNRPC-INAH.
Photographs
From the very start, a strategy was developed to document the altarpiece photographically, and certain representative zones were chosen to document the
current state of the altarpiece and its interventions.
192
As part of the project, and to support dissemination of information on the project in the future, documentation was also videotaped, covering the restoration
processes and the project activities, including documentation on community
meetings or activities related to the altarpiece.
Scientific analysis
Using the samples taken on site, various analyses were conducted at the laboratories of the Getty Conservation Institute to determine the composition of
the altarpiece's materials, especially the materials of the preparation layers and
of the paint and gilding layers.
Tools used included the electronic microscope, X-ray fluorescence spectrometry and the chemical staining of the samples' stratigraphic cuts.
Evaluation of preliminary
research results
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194
The first information gathered made it possible to determine the current state
of the altarpiece and its vulnerability, and to detect the principal causes and
mechanisms of its deterioration. At the same time, this information provided
a foundation for developing a conservation treatment strategy. Nonetheless,
the research is yet to be concluded on the history of the art, iconography and
archive documents; the scientific analysis needs to be deepened; and a determination is still pending regarding the true possibility of an on-site treatment
of works of such great volume.
In terms of the project's logistics, a strategy still needs to be developed that will
allow scientific analyses to generally be conducted in the field, without having
to wait for results from the laboratories of either of the two institutions
involved. It was also necessary to find a way to prepare a high-quality photographic log using existing human resources and materials.
Had the project continued, one of the next phases would have consisted of
comparing the results on each item in order to develop a coherent intervention
schedule and strategy. In this way, a more detailed study on the iconography,
once compared to the results of the archive research, would have probably
resolved questions regarding the unknown origin of the altarpiece and of its
construction. Furthermore, after determining the degree of intervention
required by the altarpiece, it would have been necessary to coordinate the onsite treatment of the paintings with the restoration and stabilization of the
altarpiece's structural system. Measures would have been taken to intervene
upon and exhibit the altarpiece based on an ever-increasing awareness of the
cultural significance of this work of art.
Earthquake of
September 1999
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Monuments and the Director of the INAH Center in Oaxaca, initiated the Project for the Emergency Restructuring of the Main Altarpiece of Santo Domingo Yanhuitln, as part of the Emergency Program for the Restoration of Historic Buildings Damaged by Seismic Activities.
The preliminary studies yielded information facilitating a more appropriate
intervention, with the aim of ensuring the permanence of the altarpiece,
enhancing all its values, taking into consideration its significance and its presence in the daily life of the inhabitants.
The situation of urgency, the presence of know-how and a tradition of work in
the field of intervention, the cultural context and the altarpiece's psychological
impact, all influenced the mode of action, with priority being placed on the
altarpiece's dominant aesthetic, functional, social and cultural values.
195
The intervention carried out was aimed at recovering the altarpiece's original
support system, and it was decided to eliminate the metallic structure along
the back, which had been installed as a provisional, emergency solution, yet
was still in place, aggravating the forces of stress and contributing to deterioration, due to the differential behavior of the materials.
The option of disassembling and reconstructing the altarpiece also made it
possible to overcome the deformations, misalignments, slumping and out-ofplane behavior detected during the logging of conditions, given that it allowed
for a more efficient intervention on the various components of the altarpiece,
which could be worked on one-at-a-time, in a more comfortable fashion.
This approach aimed to reinforce the elements that had lost their load capacity,
so as to recover the structural system of the altarpiece and have all its components, or at least the majority of them, once again fulfill their original function.
At the same time, the disassembly/reconstruction option made it possible,
without problems, to construct a new, more appropriate support structure,
similar to the original one.
The risk of foreseeable damage during the disassembly process was considered minor.
The information set forth above, gathered during the course of the project,
clearly demonstrates the inherent complexity of managing a project that
involves several entities, each of which has its own responsibilities.
This comprehensive view of the situation, resulting from a methodological
approach, makes us aware that when taking on a project of such import, it is
indispensable to plan the management of the elements involved, in this case,
the chattel assets and the church, on several different levels, and in turn, to be
aware of the need to involve third parties.
On the other hand, it is clear that the project dynamics, whether from the point
of view of project management, or that of the strategies and dynamics of the
An understanding of the surroundings, as well as the identification and recognition of the values attributed to the cultural asset, are key factors in decisionmaking. The acceptance and recognition of the asset's values constitute an
essential foundation, accepted by all parties, for justifying the intervention
without compromising conservation principles. A process of this type makes
it possible to bring together all parties involved in decision-making and to
implement a conservation project based on an intervention philosophy that
respects all the values of the asset.
Finally, upon assessing the situations we have faced, it is seen that in all projects, in order for the action to be coherent from start to finish, it is indispensable at all times to have good coordination and a fair positioning of the results.
Parallel to the needs of the project in and of itself, in this case the conservation
of the altarpiece, one must be conscious of the difficulties sometimes posed
when having to harmonize those needs with the objectives and goals set by the
various institutions involved.
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Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge and wish to thank all the specialists consulted for their participation. This
includes the specialists from the Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia - Mexico and the Getty
Conservation Institute, as well as colleagues from the Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia Oaxaca, and from the laboratory of the J. Paul Getty Museum. We also wish to thank everyone who
has devoted their time and competency in carrying out this project, and all those who made the writing of this article possible.
We particularly wish to thank the members of the Yanhuitln community who have placed their confidence in us and have provided us with this opportunity.
Photographic credits
Guillermo Aldana, Irene Sen, Javier Salazar, Andrea Rothe, Ubaldo Manrique, INAH.
197
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198
depth)
July 2002 six visits were made to the altarpiece, each of which lasted for
Authored by/attributed to: Andrs Manuel de la Riva (from 1775 until his
one week. Research and theoretical work was performed in Mexico City,
(from 1777 until his death in 1781). It is not known with certainty who
199
The following is a brief description of the interdisciplinary research and teaching project involving the altarpiece of San Cayetano, La Valenciana of Guanajuato, Mexico. The project was carried out from 1997 to 2002 by professors from
the Escuela Nacional de Conservacin, Restauracin y Museografa (National
School of Conservation, Restoration and Museography, ENCR&M). This project has brought out the significance of altarpieces from a testimonial, functional, material and technological point of view. The research focused on analyzing
and defining a methodology to study the building system of wooden altarpieces. A nomenclature has been proposed for altarpiece building systems, and
the need for digitalized information records has been highlighted.
Introduction
The general objective of this research project was to make an exhaustive study
of the building system of the San Cayetano altarpiece of La Valenciana, Guanajuato, covering historic and construction aspects, as well as the materials
employed. This research, in the long term, also aims to develop a work
methodology for studying the building systems and their state of conservation
of other altarpieces in the hispanic New World.
Beginning in 1997, the project was carried out on two parallel planes: research
and teaching. The research focused on establishing and applying an information-gathering methodology to the altarpiece's building system. The teaching
aspect focused on applying this knowledge to educational work with students
at the Seminar Workshop on Polychromed Sculpture Restoration, which forms
a part of the ENCR&M's Professional License degree program in restoration.
The altarpiece of San Cayetano has been strategic for this research. Its general
stability, the access to its rear side and the arrangements made by the persons
in charge of the altarpiece, allowed it to become both an object of study for the
researchers and a teaching example for the students.
200
Prior experience gained while diagnosing the state of conservation of the Virgen del Rosario [the Virgin of the Rosary] altarpiece in Azcapotzalco, Mexico
City, demonstrated the need for gathering specific information through several fields of study and for elaborating a methodology through ongoing discussions. Thus, the interdisciplinary Altarpiece Research Seminar was formed,
focused on the study of altarpieces with a goal that was shared by each of the
participating disciplines.
The funds needed for this task were obtained from the ENCR&M-INAH,
which, as a teaching and research institution, decided to support the project.
Annual funding was allocated to the project, sufficient to pay for expenses and
the transportation of professors and students to the city of Guanajuato for
periods of up to one week, as well as the salaries of the professors giving classes and participating in the research.
Of all the churches of the city of Guanajuato, La Valenciana is the only one that
fully conserves its three original altarpieces. As far as has been documented,
these were the last baroque altarpieces built in Guanajuato.
To date, it is known for certain that two artists, Andrs Manuel de la Riva and
Manuel Antonio de Crdenas, participated in the construction of this altarpiece. Both of them died prior to the conclusion of the work on the church, its
furnishings and the attached cloister. A third master named Jos Simn Tovar
has been identified as probably finishing the altarpiece, as is concluded by
cross-referencing first-hand information associated with other artisans who
built altarpieces contemporary to that of San Cayetano.
Traditionally, the sponsorship and initiative for the construction of the church
of La Valenciana and its altarpieces is attributed to the first Count of La Valenciana, Antonio de Obregn y Alcocer. Iconographic interpretations of the altarpiece suggest that when selecting the religious themes for the altarpiece,
BUILDING
Obregn attempted to reflect his own personality in keeping with the image
he wished to make for himself in the eyes of Guanajuato's society at the time,
as a selfless, generous benefactor of the city.
The economic participation of the local community of mine workers in the
creation of this cultural heritage, through what was called the fondo de
piedra3 [stone fund], has also come to light. On a weekly basis, each mine
operator would contribute a piece of mineral to the church project, depositing
it separately from the rest of what was processed. Naturally, in order for the
workers to have made such contributions, some persuasion techniques must
have been involved on the part of the owners of the mine, a practice which
was not unusual. In the case of the cathedral of Zacatecas, Frdrique Langue
reminds us that even though the large mine owners, plantation owners, and
businessmen took complete charge of its construction and made significant
contributions, in addition the laborers employed in the mines were authorized for said purpose to turn in one 'mineral rock' each day4.
201
Intervention history
The building and the altarpieces were intervened upon in the 1970s by the Secretaria de Asentamientos Humanos y Obras Publicas (Department of Human
Settlements and Public Works), the federal authority responsible for its care at
the time. The attic of the altarpiece of San Cayetano had slumped forward, and
it was considered necessary to reinforce that assembly with a metallic structure. This structure is a steel grid, which is attached to the wall by embedded
metallic sections and placed parallel and immediately adjacent to the altarpiece. The structure is attached to the altarpiece by four different means: metal brackets anchored to the primary structure of the altarpiece; diagonal steel
sections screwed into the planking; wood crossbeams that structure the zones
where sections of the original altarpiece had been cut; and metal straps that
clasp onto some elements such as the niches and the attic.
In order to achieve the ambitious, long-term, general interdisciplinary objective of developing a study and restoration methodology for the building system of altarpieces in the hispanic New World, and integrate that work into
teaching activities, the following particular objectives were identified:
to describe the building process of the altarpiece of San Cayetano
to develop a methodology for diagnosing the material state of an altarpiece's building system
to define the academic curriculum for educating specialists in the restoration of altarpieces.
Research program
202
BUILDING
Even in the case of carpentry tools, finishing tools, like brushes, could erase
marks left by preliminary woodworking tools, such as saws.
A large quantity of tools are repeated in the inventory, which comes as no surprise if we take into consideration the size of the altarpiece, which would have
needed the participation of a large team of workers.
The joints
An analysis of the joints8 in the altarpiece first required the development of a
methodology by which to log and classify them. Next, the function of each
type of joint in the structure as a whole had to be determined, and finally a
vector study was needed to determine the direction of stress on the respective joints. Among other conclusions, it was noted that the altarpiece has nine
different types of joints, of which the most important and numerous are 2,500
mortise-and-tenon joints and 400 dovetail joints. The mortise-and-tenon
joints were used to connect the pieces, while the dovetail joints were used to
give rigidity to and/or elongate some sections.
203
consecutive number was assigned to the area between each pair of longitudinal axes for each level.
This coordinate system led to the design of a recording sheet for each level, on
which the structural data was recorded. Based on the information gathered in
the records for each level, the altarpiece was drawn with a computer-aided
drafting program, AutoCAD, with which it is possible to observe and manipulate the image in three dimensions. This system also provides graphic support for recording data from other areas of study.
204
Nomenclature10
Parallel to the documentation process, it was necessary to define a nomenclature11 for each different part of the building system. This refers to the set of
wooden elements that, once joined and assembled in a calculated order, support and give shape to an altarpiece. Included are the following parts or elements: primary structure, planking, auxiliary elements, constructive joints,
and decoration (including ornamentation and iconographic elements)12.
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205
The church's environmental conditions, with average high and low temperatures between 12 and 18 C, and relative humidity between 31% and 47%, are
optimal. They keep the altarpiece stable throughout the year, since these values do not promote bio-deterioration or significant dimensional changes in the
wood27. There was a short period when the building's environmental conditions were altered as the result of cracks in the vaults, which provoked an
increase in relative humidity. This situation allowed for the development of an
infestation of coleopterus and of xylophagous fungi in the tissue of six Pinus
ayacahuite samples, taken from the center of the altarpiece. In both cases the
infestation was local and superficial, and is currently inactive.
To support the structural analysis of the altarpiece, the density of the pinewood was also calculated, as most of the altarpiece is made out of pine28. The
density of Pinus ayacahuite and Pinus michoacana samples were calculated in
the laboratory (0.426 to 0.556 g/cm3) and compared to values reflected in the
literature (0.479 g/cm3, semi-heavy)29,30. The similar results indicated that the
wood of these two species has adequate physical and mechanical resistance to
the stress it undergoes.
The altarpieces are illuminated by natural light in the morning and part of the
afternoon. On special occasions it is illuminated with eight halogen lamps
located in the lower part of the church's triumphal arch at a distance of
approximately eight meters. These lamps are only lit on occasion, and therefore do not create a potential for deterioration.
The drawing of each level made it possible to record the deterioration of the
altarpiece, after which the information was recorded in a digitalized database
file. This database seeks to break with the pattern of amassing information in
a disorganized fashion, which can make the evaluation of data by statistical
methods nearly impossible. Through the system employed, all information
can be easily classified and analyzed, since it is sorted according to the following classifications and keys:
type of deterioration, whether physical/mechanical, biological or caused by
human intervention
the effect of the deterioration, that is to say, the results of the most common
deterioration mechanisms in an altarpiece
particular element of the building system that has deteriorated, using the
standardized nomenclature
location in the established coordinate system
intensity and extent of the deterioration, in three degrees: 1. effect of deterioration that has stabilized, which is recorded for purposes of follow-up; 2.
effect of deterioration to the surrounding area, which has apparently stabilized and should be monitored; and 3. active deterioration that must be
immediately attended to.
The current state of the altarpiece is stable. No major sagging has been detected, although there is a deformation or break measuring 3 centimeters in the
central studs at a height of 9.45 meters. An analysis of shifts and deformations
in the altarpiece's structure is being completed. The wood of the building system, planking and decorative elements is in good condition, and the areas with
insect infestations are being monitored.
206
Teaching
No deterioration to the altarpiece has been noted as the result of the metallic
elements screwed into it, beyond the cuts in the wood required for the placement of those elements. Furthermore, no major settling31 of the building has
been observed. The sagging of the attic and certain deformations in the primary structure, which constitute the principal deterioration detected, are
probably due to fatigue of the wood in relation to the duration of the load.
The interaction between the research project and teaching on restoration work
have made it possible to create an introductory course on the study of altarpieces for restorers in their seventh semester32 of the Professional License
degree program in the Restoration of Movable Objects. The theme of the
course covers a broad spectrum, ranging from aspects of form to technologies,
materials and altarpieces' testimonial and functional elements.
Eighteen hours of the course are dedicated to theory, while thirty hours are
devoted to practical work at La Valenciana. Specific topics covered include an
introduction to the study of altarpieces, sources of documentary study, the
construction of altarpieces in wood, causes and effects of deterioration and
methodology for recording information. Each of these topics is developed
through classes given by specialists in the field and through exercises on the
altarpiece itself.
Conclusions
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207
Work team
Fernando Gonzlez Dvila, historian
Daniel Guzmn Vargas, luthier
Jos Antonio Jurado Luna, architect
Sal Mendo Muoz, engineer architect
Mercedes Murga Meca, conservator
Pablo Olvera Mercado, architect
Gerardo Ramos Olvera, industrial desginer
Arturo de la Serna Estrada, conservator
Teresa Tzompantzi Reyes, profesor in technology of materials
208
Photographs by
Gerardo Ramos Olvera, Pablo Olvera Mercado
References
CAMACHO URIBE, Daniel: La madera, estudio anatmico y catlogo de especies mexicanas.
Mexico: INAH, Col. Cientfica, 1988.
CEVALLOS FRES, Sergio, and CARMONA VALDOVINOS, Toms: Banco de informacin de estudios
tecnolgicos de maderas que vegetan en Mxico. Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones
Forestales, Boletn Tcnico catlogo 2, 1981.
GARCA SALINERO, Fernando: Lxico de alarifes de los siglos de oro. Madrid: Real Academia
Espaola, 1968.
GUEVARA SAIGNES, Mara: Historia y arte del templo de la Valenciana. Mexico: Thesis, Licenciatura
en Historia, UNAM, 1984.
LANGUE, Frdrique: Los seores de Zacatecas. Una aristocracia minera del siglo XVIII novohispano.
Mexico: FCE, 1999.
Real Academia Espaola: Diccionario de la Lengua Espaola. 21st edition. Madrid: Espasa Calpe,
1992.
SCHMITT, Heinrich, and HEENE, Andreas: Tratado de construccin. Mexico: G. Gili, 1998.
TOAJAS, Mara ngeles: Lxico tcnico. In Diego Lpez de Arenas, Breve compendio de la carpintera de lo blanco y tratado de alarifes. Madrid: Visor Libros, 1997.
WARE, Dora, and BEATTY, Betty: Diccionario manual ilustrado de arquitectura. Mexico: G. Gili,
1994.
ZABEL, R., and MORRELL, J.: Wood microbiology; Decay and its Prevention. New York: Academic
Press, Inc., 1992.
Notes
1. Students from the classes of: 94-99, 95-00, 96-01, 97-02, 98-03, and 99-04.
2. Coordinado por Mtro en Historia Fernando Gonzlez Dvila
3. GUEVARA SAIGNES, Mara: Historia y arte del templo de la Valenciana. Mexico: Thesis,
Licenciatura en Historia, UNAM, 1984.
4. LANGUE, Frdrique: Los seores de Zacatecas. Una aristocracia minera del siglo XVIII novohispano. Mexico: FCE, 1999, p. 351.
BUILDING
209
210
Subsequently, the project was submitted, together with the properly docu-
The intervention was scheduled to last for six months, employing a techni-
cal team of four conservators (one of whom was the project director) and
211
This work of art is significant as a historic and aesthetic legacy of immeasurable intrinsic value, and has been recognized as Cultural Heritage of the
Nation. The altarpiece is a significant part of the historic center of the city of
Lima, possessing both political and social values, while also serving liturgical
functions. Public access to the altarpiece is limited, given its location inside the
Government Palace, which is a maximum-security area that offers an adequate
environment for the conservation of the altarpiece.
Previous interventions on the altarpiece had removed it from its original context and altered the work of art. The altarpiece is currently housed in the
chapel of the government palace. Originally, it was the main altarpiece of the
former Church of Nuestra Seora de los Desamparados (Our Lady of the
Unprotected), located behind the government palace. When that church was
demolished in the middle of the twentieth century, the altarpiece was moved
to a small chapel inside the palace. The altarpiece was then altered to fit the
dimensions of the chapel. The columns separating the lateral and central vertical registers of the altarpiece were removed, as well as the probable removal
of a horizontal register. A carved wooden predella and a crown were added.
These changes were probably made in 1938, suggested by an inscription with
that date and the name Salgado on the back of the crown.
The altarpiece was repainted on four occasions. The most recent repainting
took place a few months before the current intervention.
State of conservation
212
The lack of ongoing maintenance was obvious, since a large quantity of accumulated debris was found behind the altarpiece, and very old electrical installations inside the altarpiece are a fire hazard. The wires also impeded the free
movement of the tabernacle door.
Proposed action
An exhaustive study was conducted to evaluate the conditions of the altarpiece. Through detailed technical analysis of the building system and its components, it was possible to determine the percentage of loss and deterioration
the work of art had undergone over time. A plan of action was established
along with the criteria that would support the intervention proposal. Based on
the principles of minimum intervention, respect for the original context and
compatibility of materials, the following actions were recommended:
photographic documentation before, during and after the conservationrestoration process
selection of samples for scientific analysis in laboratories
disassembly of small sculptures, canvas paintings and detached and/or
intrusive elements
treatment against insect contamination
overall superficial cleaning
consolidation of paint layers
cleaning of the gilding and paint layer
reintegration of lost supports
reintegration of the paint's ground layer
reintegration of the gold leaf and paint layer
re-installation of small sculptures and canvas paintings
final varnishing.
MAIN ALTARPIECE
The preliminary studies, the elaboration of the proposal and the intervention
were carried out under the leadership of a team of conservators who framed
the project with respect to the philosophy and theory of the conservation. Particular attention was given to following the most accurate technical processes
and to using the most compatible materials and treatments, while considering
the limited financial resources.
Intervention
The fourteen small sculptures and two free-standing paintings of the altarpiece were removed and transported to the laboratories of the Instituto
Nacional de Cultura for treatment at the Direccin de Restauracin del Patrimonio Cultural Mueble (Department of Movable Cultural Heritage Restoration). Some were fully restored while others were partially restored with the
intention of completing their restoration on their return to the site.
213
The project was formalized through an inter-institutional cooperation agreement with the Instituto Nacional de Cultura and the Casa Militar.
The Casa Militar del Presidente de la Repblica, by assuming the costs of
materials and fees, provided economic support while the Instituto Nacional de
Cultura through the Direccin de Restauracin del Patrimonio Cultural Mueble provided the technical support.
It should be understood that the Peruvian government is gradually shifting
responsibility for cultural support and development towards civil institutions, such as local governments, religious groups, local churches and other
owners of the heritage. These bodies are currently taking responsibility for
the economic aspects of heritage management, financing its restoration and
responding to unforeseen circumstances, in direct coordination with the
LIMA PERU
Considerations
214
MAIN ALTARPIECE
LIMA PERU
and illegal trafficking, Peruvian cultural heritage brings benefit only to a few
individuals, and brings nothing to its country.
It is time to end this imbalance of responsibilities, perhaps with new systems
that are more collaborative, responsible, imaginative and, above all, consistent
with our reality in order to save this heritage.
No one can love... and cherish... that which they do not yet know... in this
case, the wealth of our heritage.
Photographic credits
Instituto Nacional de Cultura, Per.
215
Agns Le Gac
216
Portugal
Owner/responsible party: Church property of the Parish of Our Lady of
Lapa, a monument classified after 1945, under the protection of the
Materials and techniques: The supports for the cabinets (which provide
storage for the chasubles), predellas, frames and bas-reliefs are made of
chestnut. The ex-votos are oil paintings. The palette of colors was intentionally reduced to the primary colors of red and green, with yellow and
brown to complete the warm range of tones. The painting of the cornice
on the ex-votos; reuse of two Jesuit iconography paintings from the seven-
in the sculptural group were not identified, although they did include
teenth century
Style: Baroque
217
The intervention on the sacristy altarpiece of the Our Lady of Lapa Sanctuary
originated with the proposal to temporarily exhibit to the public only a part of
its artistic elements: the two solid, monumental predellas that support three
ex-votos each. The partial dismantling of the altarpiece and the cosmetic cleaning planned for the ex-votos led those involved to reflect and form positions
on how to approach this polyptych as a whole.
After a local carpenter disassembled the predellas and their moldings, a surprising state of degradation was found on the back of their supports. They
were severely contaminated with biological agents and required extensive
conservation treatment. As a result, a study was conducted to assess risk factors for the entire altarpiece, which had never before been disassembled in its
almost 300 years of existence, and an evaluation was made concerning the
limitations of short-term restoration.
llas (2 months)
Simultaneous environmental study of the
surrounding sanctuary and sacristy (1 month)
Historic and artistic study of the sanctuary,
sacristy and altarpieces (1 month)
Conservation treatment of the predellas with
ex-votos (3 months)
Scientific analysis of samples from and analy-
The Our Lady of Lapa sanctuary is the oldest Marian sanctuary on the Iberian
Peninsula. It dates from 1498, when a sculpted image of the Virgin appeared
before a deaf-mute girl in the cave (lapa). With the Spanish sanctuary of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, the Our Lady of Lapa sanctuary was the Iberian Peninsula's most important sanctuary during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in terms of devotion and pilgrimages. Devotion to Our Lady of
Lapa expanded to other parts of Portugal and abroad, as far as India and Brazil, through the propagation of the faith by the Company of Jesus.
There is a profound architectural, spatial and artistic unity within the sanctuary, the sacristy and the Jesuit school attached to them, as the result of remodeling begun in the late seventeenth century.
AGNS LE GAC
218
The altarpiece dedicated to Our Lady of Lapa has a living social and religious
function that continues today. This element of devotion provides a substantial
annual income for the sanctuary.
Due to its popular origin, the altarpiece is a focus of identification and social
cohesion for many believers and pilgrims. It is an inexhaustible source of
information and interpretations from an ethnographic point of view.
Detail of ex-voto on the far right of the right
predella: Progressive removal of the shellac
varnish.
Intervention history
Since 1710, the altarpiece has remained in its original location. In 1844, the two
canvas paintings were restored. This intervention coincided with the on-site
repair of the predellas and the application of shellac over all the altarpiece's
painted elements, which profoundly changed the shine on the surfaces. Between 1850 and 1950 two partial re-polychromings were performed on the frames and the sculptural group: a light blue tone was used, altering the original
chromatic palette. Such re-polychroming has been found on other altarpieces
in the sanctuary, and indicates an intentional renovation campaign applied
to the liturgical furnishings, in accordance with local fashion or the taste of the
parish priest in charge.
ALTARPIECE
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219
In 1973 the roof of the sacristy was repaired and the original painted ceiling
was replaced with a chestnut ceiling, under the supervision of the Direco
Geral dos Edifcios e Monumentos Nacionais (General Directorate on National
Buildings and Monuments, DGEMN).
In 1994 a complete renovation, using chestnut, was performed on the structure of the furnishings, which had been destroyed by cubic rot fungi.
The sanctuary is located in the Serra da Lapa (altitude 960 m). This is an arid,
windy region, whose climate is subject to sudden and extreme changes. The
sanctuary is built of granite stone, with walls 1.2 meters thick, and is located
on a steep, rocky slope, without any foundation.
The water table beneath the sanctuary and the underground flow of several
water sources result in extreme variations in capillary humidity and water
condensation on the walls, both of which increase the risk of soluble salt efflorescence during the summer.
The sacristy occupies an area of 25.8 m2 and a volume of 108.3 m2. In addition
to its functions as a sacristy per se, it also acts as the juncture between the
church and the cave that houses the image of Our Lady of Lapa. As such, it is
busy zone of passage during pilgrimages. Nonetheless, it enjoys a certain thermal inertia.
The altarpiece is located on the east wall of the sacristy, and receives direct
sunlight during the afternoons through the large window situated on the west
wall, since the shutters are never closed. An original ventilation opening, 8 cm
in diameter, is located under the window.
Gas space heaters are used in the winter during mass. Other amenities include artificial incandescent low-voltage lighting and carpeting on the floor
(which retains humidity). Sculptures are present, along with liturgical furnis-
Context
AGNS LE GAC
hings and bouquets of fresh flowers on the furnishings. Security measures are
in place to prevent theft.
Establishment of the
intervention proposal
220
Preliminary studies
State of conservation
There is very extensive and active contamination of cubic rot fungal colonies
on the back of the predellas (which was not suspected until their disassembly),
as well as a pronounced alteration in the protective layer of shellac on the exvotos, which had become opaque due to the high humidity content of the air
and the effects of the accumulation of dirt.
With the exception of the furnishings, the remaining elements of the altarpiece appear healthy, but are also very dirty, with a dense yellowing of the shellac
covering.
The altarpiece has nonetheless maintained a state of physical equilibrium for
almost 300 years. It is in a very satisfactory state given its adverse environmental conditions.
Intervention proposal
There should be centralized coordination during the project's implementation, in order to ensure consistency in the options considered and decisions
made.
All interventions on the predellas should be recorded photographically.
The predellas with ex-votos need to be physically, chemically and biologically stabilized. A decision was made to conduct a minimal intervention,
disinfecting and consolidating the supports and partially cleaning the shellac varnish, to ensure a subsequent consistency of conservation and resto-
ALTARPIECE
OUR LADY
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Intervention
fungicide treatment
re-adhering flakes in the paint layers of the ex-votos
221
customized treatment of the shellac layer, to compensate for the high degree
of heterogeneity over time from one predella to the other
more in-depth study of the predellas' materials, through micro-chemical
analyses after treatment
preventive conservation measures in terms of the environment and packaging for transportation and installation of the predellas at laboratories and
exhibition sites.
Moldings
development of a methodology to identify the dispersed and mixed elements of the moldings belonging to the two predellas
reconstitution of each of the predellas' moldings
visual analysis of the layers of paint comprising the moldings' polychromy
(limited from a material and technological point of view, without laboratory
analysis)
minimal treatment of the moldings, consisting of consolidation, re-adhesion
of flakes of paint and cleaning of dust (materials identical to the ones used
in the predellas)
raising parish awareness of the need for disinfection treatment of the entire
altarpiece. This operation entails a high degree of risk, since it requires the
altarpiece's complete disassembly.
The Instituto Portugus de Museos (IPM) and the Associao para o Desenvolvimento da Conservao e Restauro (ADCR) were in charge of managing
the altarpiece's predellas and the various financial costs associated with the
project.
The Instituto Jos de Figueiredo, through its association with the IPM, took
charge of the scientific analysis for the predellas' condition assessment, and
their transportation to various national museums during a touring exhibition of the ex-votos. The ADCR took charge of the predellas' restoration phase. The Escola Superior de Conservao e Restauro (ESCR) of Lisbon contri-
Management systems
AGNS LE GAC
buted through its infrastructures and teaching resources. The studies and
diagnoses provided by this institution's students also made it possible to
reduce financial costs.
222
The artistic and ethnographic component of the altarpiece of the Our Lady
of Lapa sanctuary appears to have particular relevance, since study and intervention methodologies for polychromed wooden altarpieces are currently
being defined. Do we approach all altarpieces with the same ethics and
morals, whether they are high-quality creations, or modest and unsophisticated? How can we succeed in ensuring respect and appreciation for the multiple messages embodied by these works of art?
The studies and partial interventions conducted in this case were intended to
illustrate the various aspects inherent in partial decisions. As demonstrated in
this case, temporary interruption of certain projects may in fact benefit the project. When the interruption's purpose is to make an overall assessment of the
pathologies of an altarpiece and gain a deeper understanding of its tangible and
intangible characteristics, such a decision is clearly a wise and positive measure.
At the same time, the diversity of typologies present in many altarpieces, and
the resulting data that need to be collected to provide a true understanding of
the work of art, pose two interrelated questions. Will the importance of preliminary studies be duly recognized, in terms of their technical and scientific
contribution, and the time and money they require from various parties, including the owners? How can we win legitimacy and visibility for these indispensable contributions?
The altarpiece in question is relatively small. Are its dimensions a valid parameter for justifying certain expectations with respect to study and intervention
time management? What concrete criteria should be used to define appropriate timeframes?
When a division is present at the institutional management level between
movable heritage, built heritage and/or integrated heritage (in which aspects
of both movable and built heritage are present), how can we define priorities
and jointly plan studies and interventions in a coherent fashion? Furthermore,
who should manage the coordination of projects that safeguard integrated
altarpieces, given the indispensable participation of an architect, a preventive
conservation specialist and a conservator-restorer in this case study?
The degree of professionalism and appropriate training required are clearly
fundamental parameters. Which areas should be managed by individuals and
which by companies, in the study and intervention phases, respectively? How
can one achieve high levels of scientific and academic endeavor, while perpetuating traditional local craftsmanship or polytechnic trades, since all of these
are essential requirements for preservation work?
The uneven state of conservation of the predellas was undoubtedly compromising the altarpiece's future material and visual unity. This made it necessary
ALTARPIECE
OUR LADY
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Photographic credits
Agns Le Gac, IPCR, ADCR, DEM-IPCR
223
224
The Taller de Retablos of Seville is considering a decidedly innovative approach
for the restoration of wooden altarpieces which are unique objects in the
field of world cultural heritage.
The meeting was designed to exchange and discuss the issues most closely
related to the conservation and restoration of wooden altarpieces and to favor
a wider approach taking into account the many complex aspects surrounding
altarpieces. In many ways, an altarpiece is not merely a singular historical and
material artifact, but a central piece that both identifies and represents a community.
In support of these approaches, professionals from Europe and Latin America
contributed their own cultural input of practical and theoretical experience.
Seeking to benefit from reciprocity, they offered a variety of useful documentation, including, among others, La Carta del Restauro, Brandi's Restoration
Theory, documents regarding the profession of conservators-restorers, and
policies and standards governing restoration work in different countries.
These were analyzed and discussed, illustrating for every case both the different aspects of physical intervention on an altarpiece and the mechanisms for
securing the political, financial and administrative support required for every
restoration operation.
At its core, the Taller de Retablos was organized into three days of study, over
the course of which three working groups, each coordinated by a leader with
proven professional experience, approached and developed the subjects that
were subsequently summarized in the Documento de Retablos. The Consulting
Committee1, made up of three professionals who represented all the participants, collected, synthesized and re-proposed the most important issues to
emerge from the work sessions. The selected contributions represent the attitudes and sensitivities of these different professionals, as well as the different
approaches identified in the conservation of wooden altarpieces.
Conceptual background
225
feelings of belonging, identity and continuity, and in which such a community recognizes itself.
From this it follows that the function of an altarpiece is intimately linked to
its historical character and aesthetic features, regardless of whether it might
still be in use or whether, given historical changes which may have modified
religious practice, it may be identified more as a museum piece.
In consideration of this, any and all interventions affecting the altarpiece
should take into account these important characteristics, which need to be
integrated by acknowledging that the altarpiece is and always will be a living
work, inasmuch as, both in the present and in the past, it belongs to and lives
in its community. Its uniqueness resides precisely in the fact that it represents
for the community the tangible expression of the possibility of dialogue
between that community and God, in a dialectic rapport of prayer and answer.
An altarpiece is therefore the witness of centuries-old traditions, of the shared
heritage that each community must be able to preserve.
The theoretical and methodological approach to the conservation-restoration
of an altarpiece must take into account the need to preserve not only the physical matter, but also the spirit informing it. In this challenging setting, a solitary material intervention is far from sufficient: restoration cannot limit itself
to a merely mechanical action, since that would mean the death of the object
by canceling it and its meaning within the community and within history.
History, represented by the tangible testimonials of centuries-old traditions, is the
collective heritage of all mankind. Humanity, acknowledging its responsibility to
preserve this heritage, will only be able to transmit the values of this heritage to
future generations provided internationally common principles are formulated.
These concepts form the background against which the study and discussion
sessions among participants were developed. The fact that every country is
characterized by its own culture and its own traditions, and the fact that this
implies a different approach to applying shared common principles was considered an enriching element in the discussions. In the future, the results of
this will be both a better technical knowledge and a deeper ethical awareness
in approaching the restoration of works, defined by the materials they are
made of and the complexity of the meanings that reside in them.
Emerging considerations
226
individual projects and the methodology needed for a correct approach to carrying out interventions on altarpieces.
Such a process must necessarily contemplate the multiple and complex preservation issues to be considered when dealing with polychrome wooden altarpieces. In large part motivated by it, different approaches emerged in the
course of the seminar for the purpose of dealing with the diversity of cultural
contexts, of political and financial policies for the management of cultural heritage, in the way professionals acquire their training and of obstacles that exist
in the exchange of shared information. There are, indeed, countries where
there are no institutions to provide formal training of restoration professionals, as well as countries in which restorers are scarce vis--vis the amount of
artwork requiring their services, or where government financial resources cannot provide sustained funding for the cultural sector. The scarcity of financial
instruments often determines, individual good will notwithstanding, the
paucity of cultural and training updates and exchanges, which directly reflect
upon the restoration product.
Nevertheless, it became evident that, in dealing with the cultural diversity that
exists in every national territory, heritage conservators should be better suited
to understand the need for a cultural heritage, precisely because they constitute the theoretical and practical link that bridges the community in which the
cultural heritage exists and the political and financial organizations that
should preserve such heritage. From this awareness stems a list of needs that
would allow conservation professionals from several countries to use and
share project tools of a highly professional caliber2 and provide for a specific
common language or vocabulary, to allow for the collection, selection and use
of terms that expressly deal with polychrome wooden altarpieces.
An altarpiece is an indivisible, self-contained object, made up of a structural
supporting piece that carries the faade or architecture, together with its constituting elements, columns, cornices, beams and an articulated series of ornamental elements contained in it: the sculptures, paintings and decorative features. This complex system is inextricably linked to the architectural space the
altarpiece was created for.
Given all of the above, many of the seminar's participants brought to the fore
the importance of the supporting structure of altarpieces and of the architectural area of the buildings in which they were erected.
It was also acknowledged that methods of constructing altarpieces can offer
significant information regarding commercial trade between countries belonging to the same geographic area (such as Peru, Bolivia and Mexico, or Belgium
and the Baltic) as well as transatlantic exchanges. These trade relations validate the assumption that there were common parameters regarding building
typology and, perhaps, the development of schools of altarpiece construction. All this information, accessible only to conservator-restorers at the time
of an intervention, can be retrieved from direct examination of the structure
and supports. A properly conducted restoration is therefore an essential source
of not only technical information, but also commercial, geographical and historical information.
227
Building continuity, a
collaborative undertaking
It is understood that restoration must be directed or conducted by professionals in conservation/restoration who have sufficient training to enable them to
contribute to the knowledge of the cultural asset regarding its significance in
terms of aesthetic meaning, historical importance and physical integrity.
Conservator-restorers have been acknowledged to be the persons who, by
virtue of their direct contact with the work of art, must have a well-developed
sensitivity towards the tangible and intangible aspects of the works themselves, as well as great humility in approaching intervention. They can have
definitive effects as promoters of processes that preserve heritage, ensuring
that the cultural, spiritual, social and even economic values inherent in this
heritage are well balanced.
228
Their actions are directly related to a work of art's acknowledgment, inasmuch
as its restoration is the methodological moment for that recognition, in its most
tangible and material aspects, as well as in its dual aesthetic and historic polarity as it is passed down to future generations.
Direct involvement of the community to which an altarpiece belongs in the
issues affecting restoration interventions, operating choices, execution of work
and maintenance is no doubt something that gives an added value to the
knowledge acquired. As a consequence, it contributes to the reappraisal of heritage, by the individual, the community and the whole society.
Aspects involved are manifold: religious, artistic, historical, and cultural. Also,
every community has its own traditions that justify the usage given to the
piece in the present.
This involvement must necessarily be born of a political choice and the Taller
de Retablos can be singled out as an instrument to promote this kind of decision-making in many countries. It facilitates the enactment of programs
through relevant institutions - Formal Training Institutes - in collaboration
with the institutions that are in charge of the artifacts and with the community in which the assets themselves exist. In the specific case of programs involving a community's representatives who may be responsible for the maintenance of altarpieces without the involvement of professional restorers, the
goal shall be to include in the training as broad an awareness as possible of the
need to preserve heritage, as well as the importance of ensuring the survival
of such heritage so that it can be transmitted to future generations.
Dialogue and communication must be encouraged at every level through
different means and using a language that everyone involved can understand, to ensure that the community is included as an active entity, understands the work of art's values and commits itself to its maintenance and
protection. Sometimes the community expects results that are different from
those attained. An organic, well-defined project can clearly set forth what the
expectations ought to be, and, by sharing the decision-making processes, it
can favor a smaller risk of misunderstandings. Here, the professional reappears on the scene as a direct and indirect promoter: In view of their constant
presence on site and contact with the community, they may seek to be more
in touch with that community, so that they can know its values first-hand
and become an interpreter and spokesperson for the more technical aspects
of the work, in order to facilitate an adequate understanding of these aspects
by the community.
The Taller de Retablos has brought different realities face to face, as, over time,
varying situations have evolved, driven by geographical and historical developments. Historical and current contexts may not necessarily coincide. In
those cases in which religious sentiment may have disappeared, there can be
little doubt that the original values have shifted. It is important to ensure that
both the restoration-intervention and the preservation professionals operate
keeping in mind all the values that may come into play.
Analyzing the question of cultural and religious conscience regarding the heritage of wooden altarpieces, one can reasonably say that in some cases wooden altarpieces have lost and continue to lose their original meaning as cult
objects, both through religious change and through change in lifestyle. It goes
without saying that this situation places the cult objects in a different light than
that in which they existed in the past, so that these objects, now lacking the
original strength of the dialogue with their communities, find themselves
placed in buildings which have turned from churches into museums or find
themselves physically transferred from churches to the seats of museums. Values change and, in this environment, restoration runs the risk of turning into
an aseptic operation, one that approaches the object in total isolation from its
original context. In other cases, communities continue to have a strong sense
of identity, and they identify themselves with their objects and places of cult.
In these contrasting instances, the work of art might be exposed to candid
intervention. There is still a generalized lack of awareness for the need to preserve this heritage, understanding preservation in the modern sense of the
term. Instead of proper preservation, it is common to witness improper reintegration and maintenance practices.
Awareness of these realities, effectively different in their approach to and
enjoyment of the cultural heritage represented by wooden altarpieces, has led
to an exceptionally positive result.
The most important result of the meeting lies in having brought together different attitudes regarding how wooden altarpieces are perceived, as well as
different sensitivities in the scientific make-up of restoration. This does not
mean that a scientific approach towards preservation and restoration is completely different from other approaches, only that the perception and interpretation of concepts vary. We have on the one hand the ideological torch-bearer regarding the basic theoretical and technical approach, and on the other
hand a vision of the object-altarpiece that is dictated by an emotional
approach, based upon a deep faith and an operating relation with the very
object, which is still imbued with the function the community has vested in it.
From this coming together, in our opinion, an important result has emerged:
the necessary scientific approach that a conservation-restoration intervention
absolutely has to have cannot be separated from the religious, historical and
Evolving values
229
230
Final results
Notes
1. An advisory committee composed of two
experienced private conservators, Manuel
Jimnez Carrera and Francesca Tonini, and
Teresita Loera Cabeza de Vaca, head of the
Coordinacin Nacional de Restauracin del
Patrimonio Cultural, Instituto Nacional de
Antropologa e Historia, Mexico
2. As provided for by the historical documents regarding the professional personality
and the deontology of the ConservatorRestorer ICOM-CC, 1984, as well as by the
ECCO Document, 1993.
Francesca Tonini
231
Concerned about the general status of altarpieces known as retablos, a group
of historical heritage professionals from North America, South America, and
Europe met in Seville, Spain, from May 12 to 16, 2002. After examining a number of issues related to altarpieces, they proposed a series of recommendations
to the various individuals and organizations involved in the management and
conservation of altarpieces. These recommendations take an integral, methodological approach to the conservation of these cultural assets.
Antecedents
Considerations
Principles
Considerations for
application of the
methodology
232
notable physical stress. It must be borne in mind that very few materials or
techniques exist that sufficiently guarantee reversibility and inalterability over
time and which are compatible with existing materials.
In all processes (whether cognitive or operational), a spirit of open dialogue
should be maintained among all parties involved, to ensure a balance of
understanding and viewpoints.
The community should be involved in protecting the cultural heritage
through an appropriate outreach policy.
Action taken with respect to the altarpiece should be used as an educational and training tool at a variety of levels, thereby contributing to the community's appreciation for and cultural identification with this heritage.
233
All studies or activities required for the altarpiece, regardless of the phase of
conservation in question (research, assessment, intervention, follow-up, maintenance, dissemination, etc.) must always be justified, articulated, and supported by the altarpiece's values, condition, and detected needs, as well as sustained by viable management mechanisms.
Decision-making
The decision to conduct any activity must be made directly by the parties
involved in the process of protecting and conserving the specific cultural heritage. The advisory or consulting bodies of the respective country, as well as
the technical commissions established for such purposes, must also be taken
into account. The decision must be based upon a proposal formulated through
a variety of documents, including a preliminary report, statement of conservation urgency, project plan, maintenance plan, etc.
Considering the values that an altarpiece represents and the complex factors
involved, any intervention on an altarpiece must necessarily follow a structured process throughout its phases, whether cognitive or operational. Such a
process must enable rational, feasible responses to any unknowns that may
arise, and apply the scientific, methodological rigor demanded today in relation to this cultural asset. Important aspects include the legal level of protection, administrative situation, parties involved in its socio-cultural management, state of conservation of the altarpiece and its surroundings, previously
existing documentation, intervention, etc.
The process should be articulated in a series of stages:
Preliminary Report: The preliminary diagnostic accomplished through an
initial inspection, in which the scope of the activity is specified in general
terms, including its priority (urgent, regular, systematic, comprehensive,
maintenance, etc.), as well as its technical, scientific, social, and economic
complexity. This inspection must be made by a team of qualified professionals, who will issue a report, specifying their reasons and rationale in
connection with the above-mentioned aspects.
Research/Preliminary Studies, conducted with the following objectives:
assess the condition or state of the altarpiece in its context
Intervention process
234
Intervention
The intervention must be consistent with the content defined and articulated
in the approved, agreed upon project document. Its execution and supervision
must be directed by technical personnel specialized in the conservation and
restoration of cultural heritage, whose professional qualifications are consistent with the legal requirements established in each country. Similarly, the
technical support personnel needed to carry out the specifically planned activities must be available.
If new information should come forth during the intervention process on
account of which it is recommendable to make substantial changes to the content of the project, those changes need to be justified through a new evaluation
and supported through new studies, in order to develop a supplementary
project that makes it possible to complete the intervention.
The intervention process must be reflected upon in a document or Final Report
that describes, as necessary, the results of the studies, activities conducted,
documentation generated, intervention follow-up activities, and proposals for
continued maintenance, to transmit this information to future generations. In
that way, over time, this dossier will provide a source of information for future
interventions or research.
Seville, May 16, 2002
Contributors' biographies
235
Has worked for more than forty years in the world of restoration and for thirty years as a teacher of restoration theory. In 1968, he earned a degree in
restoration from the Muses Classs et Contrls of France and, in the same
year, he participated in the first course on mural painting organized by
ICCROM, in Rome. He headed Mexico's Department for the Restoration of
Cultural Patrimony from 1974 to 1977 and the Escuela Nacional de Conservacin, Restauracin y Museografa between 1983 and 1992, both entities
belonging to the Instituto Nacional de Antropologa e Historia of Mexico. He
has participated in several conservation and restoration projects in Mexico and
Latin America, working in museums, on mural paintings, paintings on canvas,
archaeological finds and gilded altarpieces.
Franoise Descamps
236
Carmen Fortunata
Huanay Herrera
Holds a degree in fine arts from the Universidad de Sevilla in the specialties of
painting and restoration. She specialized in conservation and restoration at
Madrid's Instituto del Patrimonio Histrico Espaol, at the Institut Royal du
Patrimoine Artistique, Brussels, and at the Museum of the Department of Art
History and Archaeology of the Universit Catholique de Louvain in Belgium.
She worked as a restorer for the Spanish Ministry of Culture and for the Biscayne (Basque Country, Spain) Diputacin Foral in designing and implementing its Restoration Workshop, in which she now works as Chief of Restoration
Services, responsible for Movable, Archaeological, Documentary and Paleontological Heritage. She has given papers at domestic and international seminars and conferences. She is a founding member of the Polychromed Sculpture
Latin Group and has taught several courses in Spain on the study and treatment of polychromed sculpture.
Is a conservator-restorer for the Instituto Nacional de Cultura, in the Department of Conservation and Restoration in Lima, Peru, where she coordinates
several restoration projects for the institute, many of which involve international cooperation. She has both attended and participated in several workshops and training programs related to the conservation, presentation and
management of movable cultural heritage and museum objects. She also
teaches at the Escuela Nacional Superior Autnoma de Bellas Artes of Peru in
the plastic arts and in private schools.
237
Graduated in both art history and the conservation of painting on canvas from
the Universit de Paris 1, Panthon-Sorbonne. She received additional training
at the Universit Catholique de Louvain, Belgium, and at the Institut Michelet
d'Art in Paris, where she addressed specific questions of contemporary art.
She has worked as an independent conservator in France and Portugal. Since
1994, she has been active in teaching the conservation of painting at the Escola Superior de Conservao e Restauro in Lisbon and is currently a lecturer in
the Department of Conservation and Restoration of the Faculdade de Cincias
e Tecnologia of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, where she is completing her
doctoral degree. She has participated in several research projects concerning
polychromed sculpture, as well as in seminars related to the education of conservators, their status and their competence.
Obtained her degree in the restoration of cultural assets from the Escuela
Nacional de Restauracin y Museografa Manuel del Castillo Negrete, with
a thesis focusing on the conservation problems of altarpieces. Her postgraduate studies were on cultural management and cultural policies at the Universidad Autnoma Metropolitana - Organizacin de Estados Americanos.
She currently works as a restorer of movable assets at the Instituto Nacional
de Antropologa e Historia (INAH) Regional Center in Morelos, Mexico,
where she has also served as director and assistant director. Between 2002
and 2005, she was INAH's National Coordinator for the Restoration of Cultural Heritage.
Agns Le Gac
Hector Oswaldo
Prieto Gordillo
238
Jos Mara
Rodrguez Acosta
Carlos M. Ra Landa
Is director of conservation and restoration for Bolivia's Vice Ministry of Culture. He has taken several specialization courses in the conservation and
restoration of works of art, both in Bolivia and abroad. He heads and coordinates various projects for the restoration of altarpieces and other movable
assets in several regions and cities of Bolivia. He has been responsible for a
project on methodological intervention on altarpieces, which has been carried
out through cooperation with the German government and supported, in part,
by funds from the Getty Grant Program.
239
Graduated in art history and fine arts from the Universidad de Barcelona.
After working as a documentation specialist for the Servicio de Restauracin
de Bienes Muebles of the Gobierno General de Catalua, she joined the Getty
Conservation Institute in 1996 as part of the Getty Graduate Internship Program. While there, she worked for different conservation projects, gaining
expertise in the recording of conditions and in documentation techniques, as
well as in management planning. In 1998, she became a research fellow and
continued to contribute to the Institute's ongoing field projects in the Czech
Republic, Mexico and El Salvador. In November 2000, she moved back to
Barcelona, where she is working as a registrar, managing the collections at the
Fundaci Joan Mir.
Is the director of the Institut Royal du Patrimoine Artistique - Belgium. During the many years she was in charge of the Institute's Department of Conservation-Restoration, she led major conservation work in Belgian heritage.
Trained as an art historian at the Universit Catholique de Louvain, she also
studied conservation and was a student of Agns Ballestrem. The study, conservation and restoration of polychromed wooden altarpieces has been one of
her major interests, and she has been leading conservation work on altarpieces
originating from the well-known School of Antwerp and from the Brabant
region. She teaches at the Institut de Formation des Restaurateurs d'Oeuvres
d'Art in Paris and at the cole Nationale Suprieure des Arts Visuels de la
Cambre, in Brussels. She is the author of more than fifty articles on polychromed sculptures.
Is a restorer of movable assets, having received her degree from the Escuela de
Conservacin, Restauracin y Museologa de COLCULTURA, validated by
Colombia's Universidad Externado. She coordinated the workshop for wooden and polychromed sculpture at the Centro Nacional de Restauracin and at
the Escuela de Conservacin, Restauracin y Museologa. She has also headed
the Centro Nacional de Restauracin of the Direccin de Patrimonio of the
Ministry of Culture, and currently works as Advisor for the Direccin de Patrimonio of the Ministry of Culture. She teaches the wood workshop at the
Escuela de Restauracin de COLCULTURA and at the Facultad de Restauracin de Bienes Muebles of Colombia's Universidad Externado.
Irene Sen
Myriam Serck-Dewaide
Francesca Tonini
Holds a degree in restoration from Mexico's Escuela Nacional de Conservacin, Restauracin y Museografa (ENCRyM) and, since 1994, a professorship at the Polychromed Sculpture Restoration Workshop Seminar at the same
school. She is in charge of coordinating various restoration projects of polychromed sculptures and altarpieces in museums, churches and communities,
carried out by the school's students. She has given papers at seminars and
workshops on techniques and criteria for conservation and restoration and she
has also been an advisor and thesis director on subjects related to polychromed sculpture and altarpieces. She coordinates the Altarpiece Restoration
Seminar, the Study of the constructive system of the San Cayetano altarpiece
at La Valenciana, Guanajuato research project and the research project concerning the Materials employed in polychromed sculpture, all projects of the
ENCRyM.