Hyperspectral imaging within a wider interdisciplinary perspective

The study carried on two panel paintings by Marco D’Oggiono, from the Pinacoteca di Brera, is the occasion for an interdisciplinary insight, which integrates the information acquired by reflectance hyperspectral imaging with other diagnostic techniques (e.g. digital radiography, microscopy and MA-XRF). The lecture will highlight the contribution of hyperspectral imaging as a tool to get a deeper knowledge of the artwork, merging the perspectives of conservators, art historians and heritage scientists.

2 hours
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Marcello Picollo

Graduate in Geology at the University of Florence, with PhD in Photonics (thesis title: “Study of artworks by using non-invasive UV-VIS-IR spectroscopic and thz-TDS imaging techniques”) at the University of Eastern Finland (UEF), Joensuu (Finland), has been a researcher at IFAC-CNR since 2001. Since 1991 he has been working in the study of works of art using spectroscopic techniques. In particular, he deals with the analysis of artistic materials, such as pigments and dyes, using specific spectroscopic techniques and non-invasive areas. Since 2009 he has been responsible for the SABeC Research Group Spectroscopy Applied to Cultural Heritage.

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Elena D’Elia

Elena D’Elia is a conservator trained in Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage at the University of Turin, specialized in the restoration of paintings on wood and canvas. In 2018 she obtained her master’s degree with a thesis entitled “Two panel paintings by Marco d’Oggiono from the Pinacoteca di Brera: conservation as an opportunity for an interdisciplinary insight and new knowledge” and she had the opportunity to collaborate with various scholars and relevant international institutions, including, in the scientific field, the IFAC-CNR of Florence, the LANDIS laboratory of the IBAM-CNR and the INFN-LNS of Catania and, for the historical-artistic research, the Department of 16th century Italian painting of the Musée du Louvre in Paris, with the support of the C2RMF. The interdisciplinary nature of the thesis led her to participate in the conference of the Pinacoteca di Brera dedicated to the Leonardeschi in 2019 and, in the same year, in Technart (Bruges, BE) and to publish both in Microchemical Journal and in Arte Lombarda (2020). Besides her professional activities as a conservator, she is currently pursuing a second master’s degree in History of Art (UniTo).

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Paola Buscaglia

Paola Buscaglia is a Conservator certified by the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage, specializing in artworks painted on organic supports. After working as a Conservator in various laboratories and as a free-lancer (1998-2006), in 2007 she was appointed full-time Conservator at CCR, working on research, teaching, and project management; in 2019 she became Coordinator of the Wooden Sculptures Conservation Lab, whose activity also involves the conservation and study of painted Egyptian artifacts. She deals in particular with integrated studies and research projects, and over the years has developed fruitful partnerships with several research institutions. In order to support her conservation-related efforts, she has acquired specific skills for the study of material deterioration mechanisms and for the planning of experimental activities on mock-up samples. In 2021, she has undertaken a Ph.D. program in Metrology at the Politecnico of Turin, Department of Applied Science and Technology, focusing on the development of highly specialized tools for the monitoring of conservation treatments.