Subject: Removing sulfate from azurite polychromy
I am treating a 14th c. marble Madonna for the Duke University Museum and have a situation where a thin, discolored (by iron oxide and carbon) sulfate layer covers original azurite polychromy. The museum director would like to have this layer removed for both aesthetic reasons and because the blue pigment distinguishes her as the Madonna (and not just a generic female saint). Sulfate corrosion also covers unpolychromed areas and I've been able to swell it sufficiently with methyl cellulose and deionized water poultices to remove it carefully with a scalpel. This is not possible in the areas of polychromy because the paint is soluble in water (very little original binder remains). Does any one have a suggestion as to how best to attempt the removal of the sulfate layer over the azurite so as not to risk loss of the pigment? Susan White White Conservation Services New York NY *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:1 Distributed: Friday, June 14, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-1-012 ***Received on Thursday, 13 June, 2002