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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Corti is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Corti.


Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy | 2017

Non-invasive techniques for revealing the palette of the Romantic painter Francesco Hayez

Laura Rampazzi; Valentina Brunello; Cristina Corti; Elena Lissoni

This paper describes the first systematic analysis of the palette of Francesco Hayez, one of the most outstanding artists of European Romanticism, whose painting technique has never been extensively investigated despite the plethora of artistic studies. He lived in a particular moment in the history of painting, as in the first half of the 19th century many synthetic pigments were available, also in tin tubes, but traditional materials were still used. Sixteen paintings on canvas and on panels, created between 1823 and 1868, were analyzed in situ through non-invasive techniques (infrared reflectography and infrared reflection spectroscopy). Imaging investigation provided clues on painting technique, revealing some cases of pentimenti and underdrawings. A preliminary survey was carried out on a hundred pure pigments used up to the 19th century and on new synthetic colours, in order to attain reference spectra for the interpretation of painting spectra. The portable infrared instrument provided insight into Hayezs painting materials, identifying barite, ivory black, lead-tin yellow, Naples yellow, ochres, Prussian blue, and white lead. The pigments were often blended, to obtain a unique fabric appearance or to attain cold shades. The results pointed to a siccative oil as a binder, mixed with white lead so that it could act as a catalyzer in polymerization reactions, and in some cases with a proteinaceous binder and resins. The preparation was made with gypsum and white lead mixed with a siccative oil. The results showed that the artist used a typical traditional palette, throughout his career, in order to lead to brilliant colours and with long-term stability. Anyway, the possible presence of cobalt blue in a few paintings suggests that Hayez had probably started testing the new colours, since the second decade of 19th century.


Archaeometry | 2017

Unveiling the Use of Creta in Roman Plasters: Analysis of Clay Wall Paintings From Brixia (Italy): Use of creta in Roman plasters: wall paintings from Brixia (Italy)

R. Bugini; Cristina Corti; L. Folli; Laura Rampazzi

The paper describes the analysis of a particular kind of plaster from the walls of the Roman Sanctuary (first half of the 1st century BCE) in the centre of Brixia (now Brescia, Italy), which is an outstanding example of Roman Republican architecture. The walls were plastered and painted with different patterns, imitating marble panels and curtains. Optical microscopy on thin sections, X-ray diffraction, and infrared spectroscopy were performed on several samples of the plaster in order to reveal the execution technique. The palette consisted of glauconite, celadonite, Egyptian blue, and red and yellow ochres. In some cases, an organic compound, possibly a lipidic compound, was present in the external paint layer, as a surface treatment. The plaster contains two superimposed coats: the render coat with lime binder and sandy aggregate; the finish coat with a clay fraction (illite, chlorite, kaolinite), together with calcite from slaked lime and grains of quartz, silicate and carbonate rocks. Although Vitrivius’ De Architectura reported the use of creta (clay) as daub smeared on reed vaults, the Sanctuary of Brixia represents the first documented use in Roman buildings in a painted plaster laying on a stone masonry wall.


Thermochimica Acta | 2013

Thermal analysis and archaeological chronology: The ancient mortars of the site of Baradello (Como, Italy)

Cristina Corti; Laura Rampazzi; Roberto Bugini; Antonio Sansonetti; Marco Biraghi; Lanfredo Castelletti; Isabella Nobile; Clelia Orsenigo


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2011

Monuments as sampling surfaces of recent traffic pollution

Laura Rampazzi; Barbara Giussani; Biagio Rizzo; Cristina Corti; Andrea Pozzi; Carlo Dossi


Archaeometry | 2016

Technology of Medieval Mortars: An Investigation into the Use of Organic Additives

Laura Rampazzi; Maria Perla Colombini; Claudia Conti; Cristina Corti; Anna Lluveras-Tenorio; Antonio Sansonetti; Marco Zanaboni


Archive | 2017

Unveiling the use of creta in Roman plasters: analysis of clay wall paintings from Brixia (Italy)

Roberto Bugini; Cristina Corti; Luisa Folli; Laura Rampazzi


Archive | 2018

The use of mortars to imitate white marble and other stones

Roberto Bugini; Cristina Corti; Luisa Folli; Laura Rampazzi


Applied Surface Science | 2018

An interdisciplinary approach to a knowledge-based restoration: The dark alteration on Matera Cathedral (Italy)

Laura Rampazzi; Alessia Andreotti; Mario Bressan; Maria Perla Colombini; Cristina Corti; Oana Adriana Cuzman; Nicola d'Alessandro; Lolita Liberatore; Lorenzo Palombi; Valentina Raimondi; Barbara Sacchi; Piero Tiano; Lucia Tonucci; Silvia Vettori; E. Zanardini; Giancarlo Ranalli


XXV SILAE Congress | 2016

The paleonutrition from 500 BC to 500 AD: case studies between the Adda and the Ticino River (Northern Italy)

Sila Motella De Carlo; Valentina Brunello; Cristina Corti; Laura Rampazzi; Lanfredo Castelletti


Archive | 2016

Hellenistic Mortar and Plaster from Contrada Mella near Oppido Mamertina (Calabria, Italy)

Cristina Corti; Laura Rampazzi; Paolo Visonà

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