Subject: Fingerprints as an attribution tool
Anthony D. Ayers <raphaelmad [at] aol__com> writes >Regrettably there is one proven scientific method that has yet to be >embraced by the art historical community, that being fingerprint >analysis. ... I am forwarding this response from my colleague Nancy Lloyd: At the Harvard University Art Museums we conducted a study of the fifteen terracotta bozzetti and modelli in our collection that are attributed to Gian Lorenzo Bernini (see Sketches in Clay for Projects by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Eds. Ivan Gaskell and Henry Lie. Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, 1999.) Part of this study included the analysis of the fingerprints found in the clay to determine whether the terracottas were made by Bernini or by members of his workshop (or both). One difficulty was that the prints were fragmentary, and were produced by ten fingers; to get a match we needed the same print from the same finger. To prove a non-match (that more than one person modelled the objects) would therefore be more difficult as we did not start with a full group of Bernini's ten prints. Only those fingerprints from gestures related to the actual clay modeling were photographed, with color slide film under raking light. A 1 cm metal rod was included in the image for scale. Thirty-nine fingerprints were found and photographed altogether, including five supplied from two models by the Detroit Institute of Art. More prints were found, but were too fragmentary or distorted to be used, or too difficult to photograph because of location. The slides were digitized, opened in Adobe Photoshop and cropped, sharpened and the contrast increased. The images were then printed full scale and sent to a fingerprint expert. One match was found on two terracottas in the Fogg collection, the models produced for commissions dated twenty years apart. As an aid to other researchers, all of the prints we found were published, reproduced at 1.5x. Subsequent to this study, Tony Sigel has continued to photograph fingerprints during his examinations of Bernini terracottas in other collections, and has found a further match to the first two matched prints. He performed the print comparison analysis himself. These results were presented in the lecture "Bernini Terracottas: Technical Analysis, Modeling Technique, Authorship", at the conference Earth and Fire: Contributions to the Study of Italian Terracotta Sculpture, the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, April 2002, and will be published in the future I believe that there is a fairly long history of examining fingerprints, particularly those on works by Durer (Gerhard, Holzheu, "Die Daktyloskopie als Mittel zur Identifizierung von Kunswerken," Restauro, no. 1 (January 1989): 40-42) and Da Vinci. I have seen references for analysis done on Linear-B tablets, as well. As for Raphael, hand prints/ fingerprints were photographed (but not analyzed) on School of Athens during its restoration <URL:http://www.vatican.va/museums/patrons/index.htm>. Nancy Lloyd Tony Sigel Associate Conservator of Objects and Sculpture Straus Center for Conservation Harvard University Art Museums 32 Quincy Street Cambridge, MA 02138 617-496-1903 Fax: 495-0322 *** Conservation DistList Instance 17:66 Distributed: Thursday, April 15, 2004 Message Id: cdl-17-66-001 ***Received on Tuesday, 13 April, 2004