Fragment of Wall Painting with a Scene of Two Horsemen Slaying a Serpent early 20th century This work, once believed to be a rare example of pre-Mongol painting, was recently shown to have been made with pigments containing modern components. Remarkably, the forger seems to have worked on an arch fragment and chose images evocative of stories in the Shahnama (Book of Kings), including horsemen slaying a snake. No comparable miniature painting is known from archaeological contexts or extant buildings. Elemental analysis by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF) detected the following modern pigm


Fragment of Wall Painting with a Scene of Two Horsemen Slaying a Serpent early 20th century This work, once believed to be a rare example of pre-Mongol painting, was recently shown to have been made with pigments containing modern components. Remarkably, the forger seems to have worked on an arch fragment and chose images evocative of stories in the Shahnama (Book of Kings), including horsemen slaying a snake. No comparable miniature painting is known from archaeological contexts or extant buildings. Elemental analysis by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF) detected the following modern pigments: emerald green, produced since 1814; chrome yellow, synthetized in the early 19th century; white baryte, used as extender since the late 18th century, and zinc white, produced since the late 18th Fragment of Wall Painting with a Scene of Two Horsemen Slaying a Serpent. early 20th century. Gypsum plaster; painted. Attributed to Iran. Plaster


Size: 3811px × 3433px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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