Conservation: dramatic transformation of a huge royal portrait

Conservation: dramatic transformation of a huge royal portrait

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Conservation: dramatic transformation of a huge royal portrait
Watch Senior Conservator Laura Ledwina as she conserves an imposing royal portrait from Iran, painted in 1810, bringing it back to its former glory, ready for display in the galleries. The painting is of Fath 'Ali Shah Qajar, a 19th-century ruler of Iran, and the portrait itself is huge – a whopping 233.9cm high x 118.4cm wide! Depicted with gold, jewels, thousands of pearls and an impressive bushy beard, it aims to show the Shah's power and splendour, as well as his masculinity – but why? Listen in as Senior Curator Tim Stanley tells us why the painting is so important, and follow Laura as she uses infrared and RTI imaging to reveal previous conservation work, as well as the possible shadow of a second nostril (suggesting overpaint may have been used to give the Shah a nose job!). 00:00 What is this painting and why is it interesting? 02:23 Problems with the painting – overpaint, cracks 03:07 Conservation – removing surface dust, dirt, inactive mould 03:26 Examining with UV light 03:50 How to remove varnish sustainably? 04:18 Protecting the sensitive pigment 04:34 Peeling off a tissue loaded with solvent to reveal a ghost image 05:37 Fath 'Ali Shah's public image and retouching the crown 06:50 Consolidating raised cracks and applying new paint 08:01 Why does the Shah have so many jewels? 09:41 The Shah has a nose job?!?! 10:32 Applying new varnish 11:16 Before and after conservation See the painting in the galleries: https://www.vam.ac.uk/features/digitalmap/find/room/FAC0000_49806?zoom=4&latlng=-3443.25%2C3467.55 Watch more transformational conservation: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe2ihXndm5js3qWDF7kSHLJjBbZ5XG9g0&si=rTjZs2zhDMlfMacg See more objects from the Islamic Middle East: https://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/islamic-middle-east?srsltid=AfmBOoqFNs02NMtlUZ5MplsQQmWMghJaWlFR3T8yWMs3bjYHQ57Wa6jC