4.5 Article

Are the blue daemons really blue? Multidisciplinary study for the colours characterization of the mural paintings inside the Blue Daemons Etruscan tomb

Journal

JOURNAL OF CULTURAL HERITAGE
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages 257-264

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.culher.2020.09.002

Keywords

3D laser scanner; LIF; Raman XRF; Blue Egyptian; Etruscan tomb; Tarquinia

Funding

  1. COBRA regional project Sviluppo e diffusione di metodi, tecnologie e strumenti avanzati per la COnservazione dei Beni culturali, basati sull'applicazione di Radiazioni e di tecnologie Abilitanti, the Region of Lazio [lr13/2008, 1031]

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This study characterized the colors of the Blue Daemons tomb through 3D digitalization and analytical investigations, revealing the use of Egyptian blue pigment for the demons' skin and ochres for yellow and red details. Further analyses are needed to understand the composition of the painting palette and the conservation status.
This paper presents the results of a multidisciplinary study carried out for the characterisation of the colours of a famous Etruscan site: the Blue Daemons tomb. Here, 3D digitalisation and analytical investigations were necessary for conservative and educational purposes, in order to characterize the materials of the Etruscan art, preserve the memory of the archaeological remain and be able to transmit it to future generations. The 3D model of the tomb has been achieved with the multi-wavelengths laser scanner prototype developed by ENEA, allowing a truthful colour and structural digitalisation of the tomb without the influence of the bad illuminating conditions. Such a technique introduced a doubt about the validity of the tomb name: the daemons are really blue? Colorimetric measurements achieved with both the laser scanner prototype and a portable spectrophotometer have revealed greyish hue of the demoniac figures, requiring further and focused analyses on the colour palette of the painting in order to understand their composition and the state of conservation. For these purposes, Raman, XRF and LIF spectroscopies have been performed on the wall where the blue demons are represented. The results have detected the use of the pigment Egyptian blue for the daemons' skin and ochres for yellow and red details, confirming the legitimacy of the tomb name, although the presence of synthetic consolidants applied in previous restorations have altered colorimetric measurements. (C) 2020 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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