Wall Murals Uncovered In 19th Century Dodgingtown Home
Wall Murals Uncovered In 19th Century Dodgingtown Home
Date: Fri 29-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
murals-Cunningham-Adams
Full Text:
with cuts: Wall Murals Uncovered In 19th Century Dodgingtown Home
BY ANDREA ZIMMERMANN
Richard and Jaclyn Krikorian have found buried treasure under layers of paint
and small patches of wallpaper in the dining room of their 1890s Dodgingtown
home. Their discovery? Wall murals.
The mural in the best shape, a landscape, will be restored with the help of
fine arts painting conservator Christiana Cunningham-Adams of Newtown.
"I think it adds character," said Mr Krikorian. "[In refurbishing the rooms]
we wanted to stay with the Victorian style of the house."
The mural was painted directly on the plaster wall and appears to be oil,
rather than tempera (a medium with a water-soluble binding) because of the
types of cracks exhibited. That is fortunate, said Ms Cunningham-Adams,
because tempera would be a lot more fragile.
"We should think of ourselves as surgeons who are going to sew up problems,
rather than interpret art," she said. Some people have the misconception that
"we put on little berets and go to it with a paint brush," instead of
in-painting or just "retouching" where the loss is.
The many cracks in the painting are a "visual distraction that diminish the
painting's legibility," she explained. If you were having guests to your home,
you would clear off the dining room table and put things away so the beauty of
the room and furniture would be apparent. A white newspaper laying on a wood
table would draw your eye because it is of high optical value, and thereby
disrupt the overall impression of the room, itself, she said.
Because of the cracks in the mural, "you're not feeling the chill air going
through these brittle twigs, the rolling of the sled, the interesting
perspective of the fence," said Ms Cunningham-Adams, pointing to various
elements in the painting. You're not seeing the relationships in what is
depicted - for instance: How important is the pounding of the water on the
still winter day?
Restoration is a slow process, the first phase is conservation of the piece by
arresting decay. Ms Cunningham-Adams looks at how the piece was made and how
the materials are standing up; she then attempts to arrest decay. The next
step is to determine how to recover some of the legibility of the painting and
recover some of the original aesthetic character.
"You can't take a painting back to the way it looked when it was first painted
- you're going to require too much cosmetic make-up and it's not a good idea
to camouflage all those indications of the object's life and age," said the
conservator. "You don't want to take the object out of it's natural place in
time and art history... There's a delicate balance in the effort to recover
aesthetic legibility and leaving some natural indications of age."
The varnish which covered the mural definitely helped hold in it in place all
these years, said Ms Cunningham-Adams. But it has yellowed and now dulls the
subtle colors in the painting.
"I didn't even notice some things until after she started to clean it," said
Mr Krikorian. For instance, the sled tracks, the well, and the whiteness of a
roof all became apparent when the varnish was removed from a small section.
"The thing about this painting that is so incredible is the detail... The
detail suggests the artist wasn't a professional muralist. Professionals
tended to do a much more simple `stage set' design" in a continuum around the
room. But he may have been an easel painter, she explained.
Gloria Richardson, who grew up in the house behind the Victorian era home,
remembers seeing this particular landscape mural as a young child. "The
father, Frank Shepherd, I think probably did the paintings. He was so
artistic. He carved fancy hair combs from steer and oxen horns [as a living.]"
Ms Richardson, who knew the elderly spinster daughters, has a letter dated
1852 regarding Mr Shepherd's business.
Town Historian Dan Cruson is researching the history of the house, now a
two-family home, located at the intersection of Dodgingtown and Flat Swamp
roads. He hopes that he will find clues as to when and by whom the painting
was rendered.
"This is so special - the detail, composition, brush work. It is well balanced
- you could look at it forever. This person knew how to paint," said Ms
Cunningham-Adams. "It's a wonderful thing and it's got to be saved."
That is why she is donating her time to carefully test the piece, clean off
the old varnish, put a protective matt finish on it, use a gesso compound to
fill deep gouges to the level of the painting and stabilize the work, and then
instruct the homeowners as to how they can safely retouch the artwork. As in
any restoration work, each phase will be documented through photography.
The purpose of the placing a finish over the painting before retouching is to
avoid "contamination" and allow for the new paint to be removed in the event
of error. The retouching for this piece will be done in watercolor. "You
always use something different than the original type of paint so your work
can be distinguished," said Ms Cunningham-Adams.
Tradition of Murals
The traditional role of wall painting - ranging from cave paintings to tromp
l'oeil - was to open up a room, to immediately get an airier feeling. And the
popularity of wall murals in the US has come in waves since the early 1700s,
the conservator said. The most recent example would be during the 1930s when
the Work Projects Administration put many artists to work painting murals in
post offices and government buildings.
Many of the wall paintings in this country have been lost because tastes and
styles change and walls are town down or painted. So the Krikorians, and
others like them who choose to restore murals, are `making an enormous
contribution,' according to Ms Cunningham-Adams.
"It's important that the public be made aware of the value [of wall murals]...
- our aesthetic history," she said. Preserving this type of artwork will help
people understand where our present culture comes from. "We have got to have
that perspective... We learn a lot about who we are today by looking at where
we've been."
The interest in architectural restoration - recovering the elegance and
aesthetics of another period - began about 20 years ago, she said. "Most art
historians in this country have not taken [wall painting] seriously. But I
think that's changing with the publicity about the restoration of the Sistine
Chapel," said the conservator.
Ms Cunningham-Adams offers conservation consulting, and treatment of canvas
and panel paintings, polychrome sculpture, and wall paintings to museums,
historical societies, churches, government agencies, and private collectors.
She has applied her expertise to the conservation of more than 100 murals
executed in diverse techniques and styles, and dating from the 1st to the 20th
centuries. Her partner and husband, engineer George W. Adams, plans and
manages the projects, directs all scientific analysis and all documentation,
analyzes environmental conditions and control, as well as other aspects of the
conservation. One of the projects they are currently working on is the
restoration of two large oil painting murals at the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, DC.
The conservator said she really wants to help restore the Krikorians wall
mural for Newtown, for the community; it is part of our cultural heritage. And
if the homeowners take care of the mural and keep it as a showpiece, those who
see it and whoever has the house next will see that it has been valued.
"Respect engenders respect," said Ms Cunningham-Adams.
Anyone in town who has a mural in their home, or who has information on the
artists who might have painted wall murals in this area, are invited to
contact Town Historian Dan Cruson at 426-6021, or Christiana Cunningham-Adams
and George Adams at 426-7135. They are interested in documenting the artwork,
and can offer suggestions as to how best to preserve and restore the
paintings.
