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INPAINTING

My Restorative Inpainting Work

    

Below are several "before & after" examples of the 18th & 19th century heirloom portraits and landscape paintings I restored while working as the Inpainter at ReNewell, Inc. Fine Art Conservation at the Morris Gallery in Columbia, South Carolina. The works are oil on canvas, measuring approximately 24"x30" - 32"x40", with fairly substantial damage. I worked on many paintings such as these, as well as much older 17th century artworks and the occasional retablo. Clients were typically private patrons and a handful of museums throughout the Southeastern USA.

before
after

What is Inpainting?

  

The job of a traditional fine art Inpainter is to quite literally *paint into* damaged works of art after they have been chemically treated and/or any damaged surface areas (scratches, tears, missing or flaking paint) have been repaired by the Art Conservator, thereby replacing any missing areas of paint. Ideally, this process is intended to be apparent to an observer upon a thorough, close-up inspection, but the inpainted areas blend perfectly in terms of tone and color so they are not visible from a distance.

About the Inpainting Process:

   

In the three "before" images above, the artworks were already cleaned and any areas where the paint was missing had been painstakingly filled with a white stabilizing putty compound. The inpainting process itself usually took me between one day and two weeks per painting, depending on the amount of damage. It was tedious, exacting work requiring precise painting and complex color mixtures and glazes; basically a matter of color matching. I always thought of inpainting as a sort of glorified paint-by-numbers. Except there were no numbers, the palette of colors was essentially infinite and in many instances key areas of the painting would be missing, such that certain portions of the subject matter would be completely obliterated. At these times I had to rely on adjacent areas of the image anatomy for visual cues to help me reconstruct the missing areas. It was challenging, precision work that required a steady hand, an eye for detail, a good sense of color, and an insane amount of patience.

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