Karakteristika og identifikation af okker - samt dets anvendelse som pigment i ældre skandinavisk helle- og kalkmaleri
Characteristics and Identification of Ochre – Together with its Use as a Pigment in Early Scandinavian Rock Art and Frescos/Seccos
Abstract
This thesis focuses on the material referred to as ochre. The aim of the project is to present the
composition and formation of ochres and the analytical methods that can be used to identify them.
Contextual examples of how it has been used as a pigment are introduced. One of the main
purposes of this study is to form the foundation for a later master thesis. The subject was mostly
studied through literature surveys. A case study of six presumed ochre samples from Sweden,
Australia and a pigment cabinet at the Department of Conservation in Gothenburg was carried out
using stereo and polarisation light microscopy, Scanning electron microscopy with energydispersive
X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX) and attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform
infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). Ochres are often mixtures of iron containing minerals such as
hematite and/or goethite and clay minerals. Hematite and goethite are distinguishable in, among
others, colour, crystal form and crystallization. By using X-ray diffraction analysis, the
crystallization can be determined. The formation of ochre is a result of the decomposition of rocks
through chemical weathering. Hematite and goethite are favoured by specific environmental
conditions. Dry and tropical climate supports formation of the former, humid and temperate climate
of the latter. Characterization of the six case study samples is based on the literature, the
examination and the analysis results. The two Swedish samples seem to contain both goethite and
ferrihydrite and the four other samples presumably contain goethite, hematite or a mixture of
goethite and hematite. Scandinavian Stone Age rock art motives are usually animals or humans
painted in red with animal fat as the binding media. Goethite is yellow in colour but is the one
favoured by the Scandinavian climate. Hematite is red and can be obtained by heating goethite
higher than 260°C. A processing of the original earth pigment before application on the rock
surface would therefore be likely during the Scandinavian Stone Age. When it comes to the
Scandinavian frescos/seccos, ochre has been used as the main pigment in fresco painted parts due
to its stability in alkaline environments. The binding medium can be calcium oxide and the pigment
is applied to both wet and dry surfaces.
Degree
Student essay
Other description
Uppsats för avläggande av filosofie kandidatexamen i
Kulturvård, Konservatorprogrammet
15 hp
Institutionen för kulturvård
Göteborgs universitet
2016:08
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-06-20Author
Søgaard, Ingrid
Keywords
hematite
goethite
red earth
crystallization
polarization light microscopy
SEM-EDX
ATR-FTIR
Series/Report no.
ISSN 1101-3303
ISRN GU/KUV—16/08--SE
Language
other