VIRDIAN:
Virdian ia a very
stable and powerful cold green. It's a Chromium oxide dihydrate. Guignet of
Paris patented the process for manufacturing viridian or transparent oxide of
chromium in 1859. Its excellent permanence and lack of toxicity could replace
all other greens, both ancient and modern.
Names for
Viridian:
Alternative
names: Guignet's green
Word origin:
The name "Viridian" comes from Latin viridiS: green.
Non-English
names:
Ø German: Chromoxidhydratgrün
Ø French: Vert émeraude
Ø Italian: Verde ossido di cromo
Origin:
artificial
Chromium:oxide
dehydrate
Example of
use by artists
Viridian analysis
spots fake Van Gogh
Vincent Van
Gogh, Café Terrace at Night, 1888, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo.
Van Gogh used
for a painting only some tubes. Never all. For his masterpiece, Night terrace
he used: Prussian blue and viridian and some carmine for the blue air and the
door in the front. Yellows were only chrome lemon and for the orange he used
the chrome lemon and geranium lake.
Studying
paint compositions may give quite specific answers on ancient pigment
production and adds to the armory of forensic research. Analyses on more than
90 paintings from around the turn of the 20th century (Van Gogh, Kandisky,
Hodler, Klee) have revealed that the majority of samples with viridian contain
a production by-product, a low water containing amorphous chromium oxide borate
which is absent in contemporary viridian. In contrast to modern samples of the
post-war period, earlier viridian products are associated with this process
related by-product, amorphous chromium oxide borate. This pigment information
is used in combination with other data for the authentication and dating of
paintings.
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