Subject: Egyptian coffins
Carolyn Collins <ccollins_us [at] yahoo__com> writes >I am researching the manufacture and conservation of an ancient >Egyptian coffin coated in a black substance. Analysis of it has not >come back yet but it is likely a resin, pitch, or possibly bitumen. Wooden or polychrome artifacts from ancient Egypt, such as sculptures, shawabtis, coffins, cartonnages and mummy trappings quite often show black or blackened substances. Such material may be burial related contamination, could have been applied as an intentional black surface coating, or it may have had a different original appearance and turned black/ opaque with age. Very often such black material is referred to as "bitumen", but in reality not many analyses and identifications have been carried out. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston owns three cartonnages dating to the Third Intermediate Period, which are covered to varying extend with an opaque black material applied during the burial ritual (f. ex. Sue D'Auria et al, Mummies and Magic (Museum of Fine Arts: Boston, 1988), 220. Richard Newman analyzed samples from two of them and identified a mixture of oily and fatty materials, likely applied warm. For recent analysis of organic varnishes and coatings see: Margaret Serpico. "Resins, Amber and Bitumen," Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology" Paul T. Nicholsen and Ian Shaw, eds., (Cambridge University Press, 2000), 430-475. Treatment issues have ranged from surface dusting/ cleaning, to consolidation and discussions about possible removal of the black layer with curators, who were interested in exposing the often extensive painted decoration that lies hidden underneath. Test with infrared reflectography showed that the coating could be penetrated and designs underneath it could, thus, be retrieved and documented. Susanne Gansicke Associate Conservator of Objects Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115 617-369-3501 Fax: 617-369-3702 *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:5 Distributed: Thursday, June 21, 2001 Message Id: cdl-15-5-007 ***Received on Thursday, 21 June, 2001