- in
which the paint-strokes of the
overpainting become more
resonant and powerful. When
properly done,
overpainting does not need to
completely obscure...
- All-over
painting refers to the non-differential
treatment of the
surface of a work of two-dimensional art, for
instance a painting. This
concept is most...
-
overpainting,
without the
danger of the
colors physically blending and
becoming muddy. If
underpainting is done properly, it
facilitates overpainting...
- Cascone,
Sarah (2023). "An 1837
Portrait of an
Enslaved Child,
Obscured by
Overpainting for a Century, Has Been
Restored and
Acquired by the Met". ArtNet. "The...
-
artistic purposes. Hand-colouring is also
known as hand
painting or
overpainting. Typically, watercolours, oils,
crayons or pastels, and
other paints...
- 1499–1510. Long
thought to be a copy of a lost
original veiled with
overpainting, it was rediscovered, restored, and
included in an
exhibition of Leonardo's...
- and upward-pointing
Saint John the Baptist, also in the Louvre. The
overpainting transformed the
image of St. John into one of a
pagan deity, by converting...
-
state of
preservation and the fact that
there is no sign of
repair or
overpainting is rare in a
panel painting of this date. In the
painting Virgin and...
- a
Rubens painting that had been lost. Once
layers of old
varnish and
overpainting were
removed over a
period of two
months by art
conservator Simon Rollo...
-
making it
relatively darker and more colorful, and
removed some of the
overpainting. However, as of 1972, the
repainting done in
various restorations had...