Relics in medieval altarpieces? Combining X-ray tomographic, laminographic and phase-contrast imaging to visualize thin organic objects in paintings

Journal Article (2007)
Author(s)

K. Krug

L. Porra

P. Coan

A. Wallert

J. Dik

A. Coerdt

A. Bravin

M. Elyyan

P. Reischig

L. Helfen

T. Baumbach

Contributor(s)

Copyright
© 2007 Krug, K. et al. ; International Union of Crystallography
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2007
Copyright
© 2007 Krug, K. et al. ; International Union of Crystallography
Related content
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

X-ray radiography is a common tool in the study of old master paintings. Transmission imaging can visualize hidden paint layers as well as the structure of the panel or canvas. In some medieval altarpieces, relics seem to have been imbedded in the wooden carrier of paintings. These are most probably thin organic fibrous materials such as paper or textile, which in traditional radiography are shadowed by the more absorbing surrounding material. This paper studies the application potential of synchrotron-based tomographic and laminographic imaging complemented with phase-contrast imaging for detection of such relics. The techniques are applied to a dummy painting. The results demonstrate that by using these imaging methods it is possible to threedimensionally visualize hidden cavities in panels and detect thin fibrous low-Z materials sandwiched between a high-Z paint layer and a thick wooden panel.

Files

Krug_2007.pdf
(pdf | 1.2 Mb)
License info not available