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Pre-Christian Roman Mosaics By Elizabeth Kendall, Parma Conservation |
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Photo: Allegorical Head 1 after conservation |
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Recently, eight small, pre-Christian Roman mosaics were bought from Sotheby’s,
London, by a Chicago couple for their private collection. The mosaics
were originally part of a marble tesserae floor from a villa on Monte
Rosario near Rome. The mosaic floor wasn’t discovered until 1823,
when two Englishmen, Lord Kinnaind and Lord William Russell, traveled
throughout Italy. They visited the excavation site, and arranged to jointly
purchase the floor, have it restored in Rome, and then brought to England.
The mosaics were brought to Woburn Abbey, near Bedford England, where
they were incorporated into a new mosaic floor, with reproductions having
been made of any missing areas of tile. Literature is scarce, but at some
point the floor in the abbey was disassembled, and the original parts
of the Roman floor were exhibited at the National Gallery of Edinburgh
from 1989 to 2009. When the exhibit closed, the mosaics were auctioned
at Sotheby’s. Miraculously, two female allegorical heads and six
still lives, all part of the original floor, were never separated, even
though they were sold in three (3) separate lots at auction. The Chicago
couple bought all eight so that they would remain together. Treatment began with the removal of the overpaint, which immediately
showed which tiles were original and which were simply made of colored
wax. The wax that was used as grout was removed around each tile, a meticulous
process using small dental tools that took months to complete under binocular
magnification. The process was painstaking, but ultimately rewarding.
What finally emerged were eight beautiful Roman mosaics that had distinct
patterns, shadows, and details that had been hidden for so long. In addition,
conservation revealed the color and uniqueness of each individual tile,
some as small as 1/8”, which led to the vibrant, authentic images
we can now see. When the true mosaics were revealed they were carefully re-grouted with an inert, reversible substance that was as close to the original Roman materials as possible. Finally, the grout was inpainted to approximate the neutral tones for each color. Missing tiles were replicated in texture and color in order to match adjacent tiles and patterns. Conserving these eight Roman mosaics was most humbling. Two thousand
years ago they were part of a floor in a Roman villa. They survived from
55 BC to the present day despite installation, excavation, restoration,
reassembly, disassembly, exhibition and auction. Even more astounding,
all eight pieces survived together, and are now safe, together, in a private
collection in Chicago. © Parma Conservation. All rights reserved. |
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Photos above: Allegorical Head 1 before and during conservation ![]() Photo: Bread after conservation ![]() Photo: Cake after conservation ![]() Photo: Allegorical Head 2 after conservation; detail ![]() Photo: Chicken before conservation; detail ![]() Photo: Sachet after conservation |
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Photo: Two Allegorical Heads during conservation |
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Photo: Chicken after conservation; detail |
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© 2011 Conservation
& Design International. All rights reserved |
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