Constantino
Brumidi
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Armed with scalpels
and girded with scaffolding, conservation technicians are
busy uncovering the original splendor -- unseen for generations
-- of Constantino Brumidi's Capitol murals. Brumidi, an Italian
artist, came to the Capitol in 1855 and during the course
of a quarter century painted the Apotheosis of Washington
on the Dome canopy, the Rotunda frieze and the Senate wing
corridors. Brumidi had mastered the fresco technique and
sculpture in Rome. After studying art there for 14 years,
he painted murals in the Vatican Palace and at a nearby church
called the Madonna dell'Archetto. When Brumidi participated
as a captain of the civic guard in the Republican Revolution
of 1848, however, his Italian career ended. Imprisoned and
later exiled, he emmigrated to the United States in the early
1850s.
Brumidi, and the team of artists and painters whom he assembled,
painted his murals in true fresco, drawing heavily from Pompeiian,
ancient Roman and classical Baroque influences. Brumidi was
known especially for depicting great Americans with allegoricalRoman
figures. His murals depict America's founders, American Indians
and other peoples of the Western Hemisphere -- as one conservator
has observed -- with great "individuality and dignity."
Brumidi's
ebullient personality and talent helped him to overcome
resentment from American artists and the xenophobia of
the 1850s. But while professional jealousy and contempt
for foreigners did little to hurt Brumidi's career, years
of moisture, leaks, dust and (for nearly four decades)
gas torchlight residue obscured the original splendor
of his work.
Through
as many as six periods of repainting, artists matched
their restoration colors not to Brumidi's original brights
but to the dirty and yellowed colors of the unrestored
murals. Passing judgment on his degraded and darkened
works, many scholars assumed Brumidi to be an inferior
artist. Consequently, by the 1950s even the man hired
to restore Brumidi's work on the canopy of the Dome believed
the mural's "chief qualities were architectural and historical" but
not artistic. Thus, Allyn Cox had no problem recommending
they be touched up, "even if it did involve more repainting
than is considered ethical in the best museum practice."
Curator
of the Capitol Barbara Wolanin, in her recently published
Constantino
Brumidi: Artist of the Capitol, suggests that
behind the layers of dirt, grime and over-paint that
have obscured Brumidi's work is hidden a new perspective
on the artist himself "That's what really motivated me
to do this book -- no one had really seen Brumidi; no
one had really seen his work the way it should have been," Wolanin
told an audience in November 1998 at a lecture sponsored
by the Society and the Library of Congress's Center for
the Book.
The
restoration process has been divided into two major phases.
In the late 1980s Bernard Rabin and a team of conservators
restored Brumidi's monumental work on the 4,664-square
foot canopy of the Dome highlighted by the Apotheosis
of Washington. The team also restored the 300-foot frieze
(the artist's last major work) just below it.
In
the early 1990s, nationally renowned art conservator
Christiana Cunningham-Adams initiated a study on the
Brumidi Corridors in the Senate wing of the Capitol.
Cunningham-Adams was convinced that Brumidi's ornate
panels were much darker than the artist had originally
conceived and executed them. She used the scala method
(a graduated exposure revealing paint layers step by
step) which requires conservators literally to scrape
off each layer of paint down to the original with a scalpel.
When Cunningham-Adams opened "windows" (small areas of
restored artwork) she confirmed her belief that the original
murals had been dramatically altered by over-paint. For
instance, the dark green borders that surround the wall
panels had been over-painted as many as 15 times; many
of the panels had been painted more than four times."It's
a common phenomenon, Cunningham-Adams said.
"When a layer of paint darkens and yellows with time, new
layers of paint are added in an attempt to match the old.
The change of palette can be quite dramatic; but what's
even more dramatic is the loss of artistic quality.
Cunningham-Adams
and her husband George W. Adams developed a ten-year,
multi-million dollar restoration project for the Brumidi
Corridors. Approved by Congress and initiated in 1996,
the program allows conservators to uncover Brumidi's
originals and preserve them. Old nicks, scratches and
gouges are retouched with watercolors and surfaces are
protected with a synthetic resin.
Cunningham-Adams'
work also advances the work of conservator Catherine
S. Myers, whose research into Brumidi's fresco technique
was funded by a Society fellowship. Myers's research
and Cunningham-Adams's restoration reveal that in the
Brumidi Corridors, the original murals were executed
in a rare lime-wash fresco technique: a sophisticated
method of painting in which water-based pigments are
absorbed in a wet lime surface. This method, whereby
crystals formed by the lime reflect light, adds a luminous
quality to the paintings and brightens the room.
Artist
of the Capitol, which devotes several chapters to the
restoration process, suggests -- as Wolanin put it--that "just
by getting up on the scaffolding and getting close to
his work" we now know that Brumidi's techniques were
much more complex than previously thought.
"Brumidi
did not just paint in true fresco but he combined all
kinds of techniques: tempera by using glue to get a poster-paint
effect, by using oils, by whatever techniques were going
to get the effect that he wanted," Wolanin said.
Brumidi
also mastered an artistic effect that still awes visitors
and tricks even those eyes familiar with the halls of
the Capitol. Trompe l'oeil (the French for "fool the
eye") is a technique of creating effects of light, shade
and perspective that make the image appear to be a three-dimensional
sculpture. Brumidi often relied on it in to convince
viewers that they were looking at carved frames or sculpted
cherubs. Trompe l'oeil gives flat walls the appearance
of depth and the illusion of greater space.
"This
is the first time in 100 years that the original artwork
painted by Brumidi and his assistants have been the way
he saw them," Cunningham-Adams said. "Rediscovering these
frescoes is a moving experience for us all.
The
U.S. Capitol Historical Society's gift catalog features,
among other Brumidi-related items: Wolanin's full-color,
generously illustrated book, jewelry based on Brumidi's
mural designs and a new scarf based on a restored panel
in the Brumidi Corridors. E-mail us at
uschs@uschs.org for
a free catalog or more information.
Visit
the Architect
of the Capitol's website to learn more about Constantino
Brumidi's art in the Capitol and about the restoration