1. GC/MS and proteomics to unravel the painting history of the lost Giant Buddhas of Bāmiyān (Afghanistan)
- Author
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Ilaria Bonaduce, Eugenio Galano, Erwin Emmerling, Leila Birolo, Roberto Vinciguerra, Anna Lluveras-Tenorio, Catharina Blaensdorf, Maria Perla Colombini, Lluveras tenorio, Anna, Vinciguerra, Roberto, Galano, Eugenio, Blaensdorf, Catharina, Emmerling, Erwin, Colombini, Maria Perla, Birolo, Leila, and Bonaduce, Ilaria
- Subjects
Proteomics ,Far East ,Egg protein ,lcsh:Medicine ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Coating Materials ,Painting ,Amino acid analysis ,Database and Informatics Methods ,Paint ,lcsh:Science ,Paints ,media_common ,Mammals ,Multidisciplinary ,Asia, Eastern ,Art ,Ruminants ,Milk Proteins ,Milk ,visual_art ,Physical Sciences ,Vertebrates ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Amino Acid Analysis ,Sequence Analysis ,Research Article ,Bioinformatics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Materials Science ,Casein ,Tempera ,Ancient history ,010402 general chemistry ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Milk Protein ,Bronze Age ,Bovines ,Binders ,Animals ,Molecular Biology Techniques ,Molecular Biology ,Materials by Attribute ,Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Animal ,Protein ,010401 analytical chemistry ,lcsh:R ,Afghanistan ,Organisms ,Proteomic ,Proteins ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Phosphoproteins ,0104 chemical sciences ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,Amniotes ,lcsh:Q ,Paintings ,Cattle ,Peptides ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
A chemical investigation of the organic paint binders of the Giant Buddhas of Bāmiyān was performed using an analytical approach based on mass spectrometry, combining traditional gas chromatography/mass spectrometry protocols with advanced proteomics methodologies. The research was carried out on a selection of rescued fragments. The data revealed the use of egg proteins as the paint binders of the original layers, in accordance with the traditional use of this proteinaceous medium in antiquity, spanning from the Mediterranean basin to the Far East, and already in the Bronze Age. Egg tempera was thus known to artists of the region in the first centuries AD, probably also due to the position of the Bāmiyān valley, which was connected to the Silk Road. Milk was found in the first historical overpaintings. A new proteomics approach was used, which was able to identify the source of the milk proteins present in the restoration layers, despite their age and degradation. In particular cow's and goat's milk were both found, in agreement with the documented presence of rich pastures in the Bāmiyān valley when the historical restorations were carried out. Investigating the materials of the Giant Buddhas not only enabled us to obtain isolated data on these invaluable works of art, which are now lost, but contributes to understanding the big ªpuzzleº of our past and the development of our culture, by implementing and supporting written sources, stylistic and anthropological studies with molecular data.
- Published
- 2016