10/15/2015
We will begin momentarily at 2pm ET
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to ACS members after one week.
www.acs.org/acswebinars Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 1
Have Questions?
“Why am I muted?” Don’t worry. Everyone is muted except the presenter and host. Thank you and enjoy the show.
Type them into questions box! Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 2
1
10/15/2015
Have you discovered the missing element?
www.acs.org/2joinACS Find the many benefits of ACS membership! 3
Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.
NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.
NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.
www.acs.org/2joinACS
4
2
10/15/2015
Don’t miss this past ACS Webinar with Suzanne Lomax from NGA! Alternative Careers: Chemistry and the Art Detective
5
http://bit.ly/ArtChemDetective
Let’s get Social…post, tweet, and link to ACS Webinars during today’s broadcast!
facebook.com/acswebinars
@acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect!
6
3
10/15/2015
How has ACS Webinars benefited you?
®
“As a high school teacher, [Chemistry and the Art Detective], provides more info to show students how chemistry is used in real jobs. This webinar was a great connection to the artists/art lovers in the classroom.
Victoria Hornik-Rosinski, Science Department, Cabrini Highs School
Be a featured fan on an upcoming webinar! Write to us @
[email protected] 7
facebook.com/acswebinars @acswebinars youtube.com/acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 8
4
10/15/2015
Learn from the best and brightest minds in chemistry! Hundreds of webinars presented by subject matter experts in the chemical enterprise. Recordings are available to current ACS members one week after the Live broadcast date. ®
Broadcasts of ACS Webinars continue to be available to the general public LIVE every Thursday at 2pm ET!
www.acs.org/acswebinars
9
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars
Thursday, October 22, 2015
“How’d We Do? Comparing Current Big Issues in Chemistry Education to Past Predictions” Bruce E. Bursten, Provost and Senior Vice President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Bill Carroll, Board of Directors, American Chemical Society
Thursday, October 29, 2015
“Pharmacokinetic Considerations in Drug Design and Development” Punit Marathe, Executive Director in the Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics Department at Bristol-Myers Squibb Shane Roller, Director of DMPK and Co-founder of Phoundry Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 10
5
10/15/2015
“The Material World of Color: Chemical Characterization of Pigments in Art”
Barbara Berrie Head of Scientific Research, National Gallery of Art
Eric Breitung Senior Research Scientist, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to the public after one week This ACS Webinar is being co-produced with National Chemistry Week
11
The Material World of Color: Chemical Characterization of Pigments in Art
Barbara Berrie, Head of Scientific Research National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. 12
6
10/15/2015
13
We’ll start with a few thoughts about what is color Instrumental methods used to identify and characterize colorants and some examples Unexpected discoveries about artists’ innovation and experimentation with colorants
14
7
10/15/2015
What is color? Color is the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, green, blue, and others. Color derives from the spectrum of light (distribution of light power versus wavelength) interacting in the eye with the spectral sensitivities of the light receptors. Color categories and physical specification of color are also associated with objects, materials, lights sources, etc., based on their physical properties such as light absorption, reflection, or emission spectra. By defining a color space, colors can be identified numerically be their coordinates.
wikipedia 15
http://www.oneonta.edu/faculty/baumanpr/geosat2/RS-Introduction/RS-Introduction.html
16
8
10/15/2015
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/clouds/color.htm
17
18
9
10/15/2015
19
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
What is the red pigment known as “Dragon Blood” made from? • • • • •
Insect Vegetable Mineral Dragon Synthetic organic
20
10
10/15/2015
Answer: vegetable The pigment is made from the resin from trees, most often Croton, Daemonorps or Draecaena trees
https://phytognosisblog.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/dragons-bloodtree.jpg
https://dragondreaming.wordpress.com/dra gons-blood/
21
Subtractive Primaries mixing paint
Additive Primaries mixing light
Livingstone, Margaret S. Vision and Art (Updated and Expanded Edition) : The Biology of Seeing. New York, NY: Abrams, 2013. 22
11
10/15/2015
Some Sources of Color Physical • • • • •
scattering Interference diffraction dispersion refraction
Chemical • ligand (crystal) field transitions • charge transfer -- ligand to metal -- metal to ligand -- intervalence -- band gap transitions -- lattice defects
23
Electronic Transitions in Organic Molecules
http://www.chemguide.co.uk/analysis/uvvisible/theory.html#top
24
12
10/15/2015
Cr3+
Mn+ Sn4+
Cu2+ Al3+
carminic acid
Many fun facts about red pigments at https://storify.com/ngadc/seeingredchat
25
Absorbance Spectra
Morales, Kathryn M. and Barbara H. Berrie. "A Note on Characterization of the Cochineal Dyestuff on Wool Using Microspectrophotometry." e-PreservationScience 12, (2015): 8-14.
26
13
10/15/2015
Some of the Analytical Methods Used to Identify Colorants in Works of Art Sample Required • • • •
chromatographic methods mass spectrometry optical microscopy (PLM) scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive (or WDS) analysis • infrared/Raman spectroscopy • X-ray powder diffraction
No Sample Required • X-ray fluorescence analysis • Raman spectroscopy • multispectral imaging – VIS-NIR-SWIR – XRF mapping
For more information on any of the techniques go to: http://cameo.mfa.org/wiki/About_CAMEO
27
Art Object Analyzer US Patent 4178513, Dec 11, 1979
Handheld XRF 2014
28
14
10/15/2015
X Ray Fluorescence (and Energy Dispersive) X Ray Analysis
e-1 or X ray Characteristic X ray
Energy levels of atomic orbitals
29
Seaurat, Seascape, 1890
30
15
10/15/2015
Texture is Given to the Surface using Calcareous Sand
Frédéric Bazille, The Ramparts at Aigues-Mortes, 1867 31
Vibrational Spectroscopy
Licensed under Public Domain via Commons https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Asymmetrical_stretching.gif#/media/File:Asymmetrical_stretching.gif
32
16
10/15/2015
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy Near-infrared imaging Raman spectroscopy
33
Micro-Raman spectrum reveals artist’s use of bismuth metal
Jean Bourdichon, Katherine Hours, 1480-1485 Trentelman, Karen.; Turner, Nancy.: J. Raman Spectr. 2009, 40, 577-584.
34
17
10/15/2015
NIR Reflectance Spectroscopy
Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist), 1950, Jackson Pollock. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund.
Fiber Optic Reflectance Spectroscopy
Maestà (Madonna and Child with Four Angels), c.1290, Master of Città di Castello. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Samuel H. Kress Collection.
35
36
18
10/15/2015
37
Scanning electron microscopy/ energy dispersive X ray analysis
38
19
10/15/2015
Orazio Gentileschi The Lute Player, 1608
Roy, A., B. H. Berrie. 1998. A new lead-based yellow in the seventeenth century. In: Roy A., Smith P., editors. Painting Techniques: History, Materials and Studio Practice Contributions to the Dublin Congress 7-11 September 1998. Dublin: IIC, London. p 160-165.
Pb Sn/Sb
39
Vincent van Gogh Self-Portrait, 1889 August, 1889 St. Rémy F 626
40
20
10/15/2015
http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/Collection/artist -info.1349.html?artobj_artistId=1349&pageNumber=1
Detail of the area of paint which was protected from light by the edge of the frame. The original violet color remains visible.
it is dark purple-blue…” Letter 604 /800
41
Audience Survey Question ANSWER THE QUESTION ON BLUE SCREEN IN ONE MOMENT
This is a scan of a color film transparency of the painting. Why does the background appear purple instead of blue in this image? • • • • •
The picture was taken in 1910 The picture was photoshop-ed He used magic paint The IR response of color film None of the above
42
21
10/15/2015
Why is the picture of van Gogh’s Self Portrait purple? Do you remember that I told you that we perceive color based on our reception of wavelengths of light in the so-called visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum? In comparison, the sensitivity of the chemical in color film that registers reds goes lower in energy than our eyes do. So, if there something that reflects in the close infrared spectrum the dye responds to it and creates a chemical we see as red. Cobalt blue, CoAl2O4, the major pigment van Gogh used in the paint in the background of this painting does in fact reflect this near infrared radiation, sometimes called the photographic region; the dye in the film undergoes a chemical reaction and makes the red color. In combination with the chemical that makes blue, we see purple! 43
Spectral Dye Density Curves of Kodak Elite Film
Fiber–Optic Reflectance Spectra of Cobalt Blue in Various Binders
44
22
10/15/2015
Br. 1990: 801 | CL: 604 From: Vincent van Gogh To: Theo van Gogh Date: Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, Thursday, 5 and Friday, 6 September 1889 letter 800 dated early September 1889://www.vangoghletters.org/vg/letters/let800/letter.html
• • • • • • • • •
Van Gogh Letter Example https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vincent_van_Gogh__Letter_VGM_491_-_The_Yellow_House_F1453_JH_1590.jpg
10 mètres toile Grands tubes 6 tubes blanc de zinc ,, ,, 2 ,, vert d’emeraude 2 ,, cobalt Petits tubes 2 Carmin 1 vermillon 1 Grand tube laque ordinaire 6 pinceaux Putois [fitch], 25 poil noir
45
1.
5% eosine A ppt by lead acetate
2.
5% eosine A on blanc fixe
3.
5% eosine A on clay
4.
5% eosine A on barytes and kiesselguhr
45
5. 10% eosine barium lake of brilliant orange R on blanc fixe
Jennison, 1900 The Manufacture of Lake Pigments
6. 10% eosine barium lake of brilliant orange R ppt on a clay and alumina lake, simultaneous with the production of blanc-fixe 46
23
10/15/2015
eosin
Geldorf M, de Keijzer M, van Bommel M, Pilz K, Salvant J, van Keulen H et al. Van Gogh's Geranium Lake. In: Vellekoop M, Geldorf M, Hendricks E, Jansen L, De Tagle A, editors. Van Gogh's Studio Practice. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum; 2013. p. 268-89.
47
48
24
10/15/2015
49
zinc white, chrome yellow, organic reds, emerald green, chalk, red lead?
ultramarine, chrome yellow, emerald green, zinc white
lead white, barium sulfate, yellow iron oxide, chalk
lead white, chalk, barium sulfate
50
25
10/15/2015
lead salt of eosin?
BSE image of a scraping of the pink paint on the palette
phloxine?
51
Pb
Al
Geldorf M, de Keijzer M, van Bommel M, Pilz K, Salvant J, van Keulen H et al. Van Gogh's Geranium Lake. In: Vellekoop M, Geldorf M, Hendricks E, Jansen L, De Tagle A, editors. Van Gogh's Studio Practice. Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum; 2013. p. 268-89.
52
26
10/15/2015
Microspectrophotometry
53
54
27
10/15/2015
λ ex 433nm λ cutoff 476nm
565
581
*
512
*
* acidified cochineal
*
55
anthraquinones Madder alizarin Carmine
carminic acid
xanthenes Rose Bengal
Geranium lake
erythrosine
phloxine 56
28
10/15/2015
Additional Resources •
http://www.nga.gov/content/ngaweb/conservation/publications/publicationlist.html
•
Sgamellotti A, Brunetti BG, Miliani C. Science and Art: The Painted Surface. Royal Society Of Chemistry; 2014.
•
Berrie BH. Rethinking the History of Artists' Pigments Through Chemical Analysis. Annual Review of Analytical Chemistry. 2012; 5: 441-59. http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-anchem-062011-143039
•
http://www.eu-artech.org/files/Ext_ab/Casadio.pdf
•
Shugar AN, Mass JL. Handheld XRF for art and archaeology. Leuven University Press; 2012.
•
Serrano A, van den Doel A, van Bommel M, Hallett J, Joosten I, van den Berg KJ. Investigation of crimson-dyed fibres for a new approach on the characterization of cochineal and kermes dyes in historical textiles. Analytica Chimica Acta. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aca.2015.09.046.
•
http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2015/van-gogh/color-fading 57
58
29
10/15/2015
Surprising Results • Glasses and frits of various colors including an orange-yellow which was designed for enamelling glass and painting ceramics • Metal flakes, including elemental bismuth, were used for dark colors. • Van Gogh used the brilliant eosin (with erythrosine and phloxine) from the time was available as an artist’s pigment.
59
Conclusion Artists love to experiment with new materials to get interesting and innovative color effects
60
30
10/15/2015
“The Material World of Color: Chemical Characterization of Pigments in Art”
Barbara Berrie Head of Scientific Research, National Gallery of Art
Eric Breitung Senior Research Scientist, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to the public after one week This ACS Webinar is being co-produced with National Chemistry Week
61
Don’t miss this past ACS Webinar with Suzanne Lomax from NGA! Alternative Careers: Chemistry and the Art Detective
http://bit.ly/ArtChemDetective
62
31
10/15/2015
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars
Thursday, October 22, 2015
“How’d We Do? Comparing Current Big Issues in Chemistry Education to Past Predictions” Bruce E. Bursten, Provost and Senior Vice President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Bill Carroll, Board of Directors, American Chemical Society
Thursday, October 29, 2015
“Pharmacokinetic Considerations in Drug Design and Development” Punit Marathe, Executive Director in the Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics Department at Bristol-Myers Squibb Shane Roller, Director of DMPK and Co-founder of Phoundry Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 63
“The Material World of Color: Chemical Characterization of Pigments in Art”
Barbara Berrie Head of Scientific Research, National Gallery of Art
Eric Breitung Senior Research Scientist, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Slides available now! Recordings will be available to the public after one week This ACS Webinar is being co-produced with National Chemistry Week
64
32
10/15/2015
How has ACS Webinars benefited you?
®
“As a high school teacher, [Chemistry and the Art Detective], provides more info to show students how chemistry is used in real jobs. This webinar was a great connection to the artists/art lovers in the classroom.
Victoria Hornik-Rosinski, Science Department, Cabrini Highs School
Be a featured fan on an upcoming webinar! Write to us @
[email protected] 65
facebook.com/acswebinars @acswebinars youtube.com/acswebinars
Search for “acswebinars” and connect! 66
33
10/15/2015
Benefits of ACS Membership Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) The preeminent weekly news source.
NEW! Free Access to ACS Presentations on Demand® ACS Member only access to over 1,000 presentation recordings from recent ACS meetings and select events.
NEW! ACS Career Navigator Your source for leadership development, professional education, career services, and much more.
www.acs.org/2joinACS
67
®
ACS Webinars does not endorse any products or services. The views expressed in this presentation are those of the presenter and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the American Chemical Society.
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 68
34
10/15/2015
®
Upcoming ACS Webinars www.acs.org/acswebinars
Thursday, October 22, 2015
“How’d We Do? Comparing Current Big Issues in Chemistry Education to Past Predictions” Bruce E. Bursten, Provost and Senior Vice President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Bill Carroll, Board of Directors, American Chemical Society
Thursday, October 29, 2015
“Pharmacokinetic Considerations in Drug Design and Development” Punit Marathe, Executive Director in the Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics Department at Bristol-Myers Squibb Shane Roller, Director of DMPK and Co-founder of Phoundry Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Contact ACS Webinars ® at
[email protected] 69
35