Subject: 16th century joiner's marks
Kate Lowry <kate.lowry [at] museumwales__ac__uk> writes >I am looking at a 16th century painting on an oak panel consisting >of six horizontal planks. One of the planks has some joiner's marks >cut into it, which don't correspond to the adjacent plank. Four of >the strokes are verticals but there is also a triangular mark >pointing right. Does anyone have any information which could help to >interpret these marks or explain their significance? I also have a particular interest in all kinds of marks usually found on the back side of 16th and 17th century panels. I saw also some unusual situations where these marks are not so understandable on a first view, in Portugal. There I saw some painted panels made on Baltic oak, from those times, where gouge marks do not continue throughout from one board to the adjacent ones. These marks are, most times, made by lumberjacks when they are selecting and separating different quality of boards. Eventually, when the joiner bought the wood from the lumber dealer, perhaps he would consider these marks to choose the type of wood that he would need to elaborate a certain project. Then in his workshop he would cut them on his convenience, so after this procedure some marks get partially cut out. Perhaps those pointy gouge marks may indicate the growing direction of the tree, made by lumberjacks, and then just left there by the joiner? Or perhaps the provide an indication of that plank's position or orientation on a previous project and then re-used now on this painting? On other occasions we found vertical planks with original matching painting on the front side, but showing butterfly "original" reinforcements on the back side where each half of the butterfly (each dowel tail) was not matching on the joint. Afterwards we concluded that the boards had been re-used on a different rearrangement, from a previous project. In this situation radiography may help a lot to see if we have overlapped paintings. Hope I could help in any way, Miguel Garcia Assistant Conservator The Sherman Fairchild Center for Objects Conservation The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue New York NY 10028-0198 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:34 Distributed: Wednesday, December 12, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-34-006 ***Received on Wednesday, 21 November, 2007