Subject: Oil painting cleaned with onion
A recent query by Kenneth Schaudt asked for advice about a painting that someone had cleaned with a cut onion. I was interested to learn that people still do this, and when I came across a pertinent paragraph by Caroline K. Keck, in her now out-of-print book, How to Take Care of Your Pictures: A Primer of Practical Information (published jointly by the Brooklyn Museum and the Museum of Modern Art, N.Y., in conjunction with the Brooklyn Museum's "Take Care" exhibition in 1954), I thought it worth sharing. The following paragraph is by Mrs. Keck and is quoted here with her permission: Cleaning Paintings with Onions and Potatoes Because there has been so much talk about cleaning paintings with onions and potatoes I wish to report that we have tried these two materials and that they do clean off the surface dirt. However, they do it less effectively than other materials and the hard texture of both cut onions and cut potatoes is rougher and tougher on the surface of a painting than a swab of absorbent cotton. In tests with both these vegetables we found it necessary to wipe off the film they leave on the surface, so that cotton swabs were used anyway. I had a notion that onions and potatoes might even clean little boys, but a violent form of protest prevented me from making any positive tests in this field. *** Conservation DistList Instance 9:72 Distributed: Friday, April 26, 1996 Message Id: cdl-9-72-001 ***Received on Friday, 19 April, 1996