Subject: Roman wall paintings
The Archeologisch Diensten Centrum (ADC, Archaeological Service Centre) carries out archaeological excavations (large infrastructural as well as small-scale) in the Netherlands. In the south of the Netherlands, we have been excavating a Roman villa. You are invited to take a look at <URL:http://www.romeinsevilla.nl> (in Dutch but with lots of photographs that speak for themselves). There, we have found halffabricate columns, a Roman iron window and... wallpaintings mostly in the frigidarium bath building. Over 50 crates of material, two mortar types and beautiful colours. No figures yet, but lots of plant ornaments. The fragments are being cleaned carefully by three university students with water, dentist instruments, soft brushes and cotton swabs. I am supervising the cleaning work. The next step would be consolidating the fragments since they are very brittle. Mostly, the colours and the mortar withstand the cleaning activities but the fragments remain very soft. Our wallpainting-expert wants to puzzle and figure out the structure and patterns but that is only possible when the fragments are stable. Advised by a conservator from Maastricht, we used a water soluble acrylic dispersion, Primal, on site on some of the most brittle fragments (20%). We would want to use it for consolidation, too (10%) either by spraying or by submerging the fragments. But I am not sure. I have heard that Primal would be similar to Rhodopas, something you wouldn't want to use on wall paintings. Other methods that were suggested to me: * Paraloid B72? in dichlorethylene, a method which apparently is also in use in France (Centre d'Etude des Pentures Murales Romaines) * white wood glue (10%) in water, a method used in the past, which creates a firm outer layer but is not very good reversible My questions are: would anyone have suggestions for me how to deal with our wall paintings? Ideas for treatment, storage or useful literature references, own experiences? Does anyone have experience with Primal or know about its effects? Or with Rhodopas? Drs. K.A.N. Abelskamp Coordinator Conservation Coordinator Arbo Archeologisch Diensten Centrum (ADC) Energieweg 14 Postbus 112 3751 LT 3750 GC Bunschoten The Netherlands +31 033 2998181 Fax:+31 033 2998180 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:23 Distributed: Wednesday, September 25, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-23-019 ***Received on Monday, 23 September, 2002