4.0 Article

Effect of Lining Papers on the Permanence of Painting Papers in Japanese Scroll Paintings During Moist Heat Ageing

Journal

STUDIES IN CONSERVATION
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 248-261

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00393630.2020.1870363

Keywords

Japanese painting; hanging scroll; accelerated ageing; animal glue; wheat starch paste; organic acids

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [17F17396]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17F17396] Funding Source: KAKEN

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By sizing Japanese painting paper with the required solution, the discolouration and oxidation of the paper can be effectively reduced, ensuring its permanence in the hanging scroll.
A Japanese painting paper is sized with an aqueous solution of alum and animal glue followed by brushing with a mixture of pigments of various colours and aqueous animal glue solution. Subsequently, to mount the Japanese painting to a hanging scroll, the backside of the painting is lined with a first lining paper using wheat starch paste for mechanical support. To evaluate the permanence of the painting paper as a composite material in the hanging scroll, the deterioration behaviour of the unlined painting paper and the lined painting paper was compared considering the material dynamics. After moist heat accelerated ageing (80 degrees C, 65% RH), in the sample immersed in a CuSO4 5H(2)O solution, cellulose was oxidised by Cu2+ to generate organic acids in the painting paper, and Cu2+ and organic acids migrated to the lining paper. Consequently, the discolouration and oxidation of the painting paper in the lined complex were relatively low compared with those of the unlined painting paper. The pH decrease in the painting paper was also small in the lined complex. Moreover, if the animal glue solution was coated on the painting paper, a buffer effect was shown to operate against the organic acids derived from the oxidation of Cu2+, thereby inhibiting the migration of Cu2+ into the lining paper. In conclusion, the presence of the lining paper inhibited the decrease in the physical strength and degree of polymerisation of the cellulose in the painting paper, thus contributing to its permanence in the lined hanging scroll.

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