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Alfie Robinson's avatar

This is great. I am glad someone is taking this on seriously! One thing to add: surely one of the biggest problems with these reconstructions is that they are mostly on the wrong surface. That is, they're reconstructed using plaster rather than marble. This is a fatal blow to their claim to a higher truth than the severely damaged originals that are actually beautiful to look at. Use of marble is sometimes done, but it is rare. See https://journals.openedition.org/techne/2656#ftn42 You can tell that the marble reconstruction is a *bit* better: it still looks jarring but it doesn't have that blaring neon effect that the plaster-based reconstructions do.

Plaster is far more opaque than marble, and the reflections are more diffuse. Paint, though, is translucent. Whatever is beneath paint matters. A lot! If you paint over marble, you have a dense surface that will lend itself to subtle shades. Also marble has subsurface scattering, i.e. light passes through it, scatters, and some of the rays come back out again. Exactly like skin. Plaster of paris, on the other hand, is 'dead' to the eye—no subsurface scattering.

Interestingly, videogame artists have noticed the same phenomenon. 3D renders of the 00s made human beings look like they are made of thick rubber. This is because the light simulation just had rays bounce straight off. By contrast, once you start modelling subsurface scattering, you have human beings of warmth and complexity. See a good demo here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI_QUtgJHH8

To my mind, reconstructions that only pay attention to the paint film on top of the sculpture are just as prejudicial and problematic as the 'cleaned' originals stripped of colour. They only exist to prove a limited point, and they create all sorts of misconceptions along the way.

Peter McLaughlin's avatar

I really liked this, and I'm very convinced about the central thesis about classical sculpture. But I wish there was more detail and rigour in the discussion of modern attitudes among academics and restorers: I find the speculation that they're trolling a bit unsatisfying, not knowing enough about the field to decide if it's plausible or not.

There are some tantalising bits in the piece about this already. The rule that you can't restore anything that you don't have specific evidence of seems like it would be very important in why these modern reconstructions look so bad. Where did that rule come from? what is the justification for it? is it something specific about classical sculpture that means the rule led to silly and bad reconstructions, or is it a bad dogma across all contexts?

I, an outsider, would have naively assumed that restoration was more about returning a work to the way it had previously been received, where you have decent evidence of what it previously looked like. Whereas the reception of classical statues has always (in the modern world) been paint-less, and in my head repainting them is less 'restoration' and more of a new creative act; even if you are trying to imagine what they actually historically looked like, that will require more creative imagination about how the Greeks and Romans thought rather than slavish obedience to evidence (cuz we don't have that). I think the author would agree with me, but clearly the academics don't, and I'd be interested to learn more about where they've gotten their ideas and where they went wrong.

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