Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires

The 18th century Portuguese church furniture represents an extraordinary richness recognised worldwide, which demands safeguarding and valorisation. The identification of the wood of furniture artworks is the most important component for its comprehension and preservation. In this work wood anatomic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rocio Astrid BERNAL, Adelina VALENTE, José PISSARRA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi 2011-09-01
Series:International Journal of Conservation Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijcs.uaic.ro/pub/IJCS-11-15-Bernal.pdf
id doaj-2ad8a509ae214544b697c2c30a9fb7cb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2ad8a509ae214544b697c2c30a9fb7cb2020-11-24T23:31:02ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiInternational Journal of Conservation Science2067-533X2067-82232011-09-0123165178Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming InventoiresRocio Astrid BERNALAdelina VALENTEJosé PISSARRAThe 18th century Portuguese church furniture represents an extraordinary richness recognised worldwide, which demands safeguarding and valorisation. The identification of the wood of furniture artworks is the most important component for its comprehension and preservation. In this work wood anatomical characters of an 18th century Portuguese decorative furniture set from the Colegiada de São Martinho de Cedofeita, in Porto, were analysed to identify the woods used for manufacturing and to clarify their common names. Furthermore, the objectives were to recognise some of the criteria for choice of wood as well as the source of each wood. The woods identified from 16 fragments belong to Apuleia sp., Acacia sp., Neolamarckia sp. and Castanea sativa. Apuleia sp. and Acacia sp. woods most likely arrived from Brazil, while the Neolamarckia sp. woods likely arrived from India and the C. sativa woods from Portugal. The results are in accordance with the known Portuguese colonial sea routes of the 15th -18th centuries. Interestingly the terms found in the inventories can refer to finishing methods instead to the name of the woods, as for instance “oil wood” can refer to “oiled wood” or “linseed oiled wood”. The species choice may be related to the mechanical properties of the wood as well as the original tree size. Two large planks of Acacia sp. were used for the top of the “Portuguese arcaz”, and Apuleia sp. was found on main structural elements of this set of furniture, suggesting that wood colour was also important. Woods from Neolamarckia sp. and C. sativa, were also identified, being Castanea wood present only in the most recent pieces of the furniture set.http://ijcs.uaic.ro/pub/IJCS-11-15-Bernal.pdfWood anatomyWood identification18th century furnitureCabinet-makingAntique church furniture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rocio Astrid BERNAL
Adelina VALENTE
José PISSARRA
spellingShingle Rocio Astrid BERNAL
Adelina VALENTE
José PISSARRA
Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
International Journal of Conservation Science
Wood anatomy
Wood identification
18th century furniture
Cabinet-making
Antique church furniture
author_facet Rocio Astrid BERNAL
Adelina VALENTE
José PISSARRA
author_sort Rocio Astrid BERNAL
title Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
title_short Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
title_full Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
title_fullStr Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
title_full_unstemmed Wood Identification of 18th Century Furniture. Interpreting Wood Naming Inventoires
title_sort wood identification of 18th century furniture. interpreting wood naming inventoires
publisher Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
series International Journal of Conservation Science
issn 2067-533X
2067-8223
publishDate 2011-09-01
description The 18th century Portuguese church furniture represents an extraordinary richness recognised worldwide, which demands safeguarding and valorisation. The identification of the wood of furniture artworks is the most important component for its comprehension and preservation. In this work wood anatomical characters of an 18th century Portuguese decorative furniture set from the Colegiada de São Martinho de Cedofeita, in Porto, were analysed to identify the woods used for manufacturing and to clarify their common names. Furthermore, the objectives were to recognise some of the criteria for choice of wood as well as the source of each wood. The woods identified from 16 fragments belong to Apuleia sp., Acacia sp., Neolamarckia sp. and Castanea sativa. Apuleia sp. and Acacia sp. woods most likely arrived from Brazil, while the Neolamarckia sp. woods likely arrived from India and the C. sativa woods from Portugal. The results are in accordance with the known Portuguese colonial sea routes of the 15th -18th centuries. Interestingly the terms found in the inventories can refer to finishing methods instead to the name of the woods, as for instance “oil wood” can refer to “oiled wood” or “linseed oiled wood”. The species choice may be related to the mechanical properties of the wood as well as the original tree size. Two large planks of Acacia sp. were used for the top of the “Portuguese arcaz”, and Apuleia sp. was found on main structural elements of this set of furniture, suggesting that wood colour was also important. Woods from Neolamarckia sp. and C. sativa, were also identified, being Castanea wood present only in the most recent pieces of the furniture set.
topic Wood anatomy
Wood identification
18th century furniture
Cabinet-making
Antique church furniture
url http://ijcs.uaic.ro/pub/IJCS-11-15-Bernal.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT rocioastridbernal woodidentificationof18thcenturyfurnitureinterpretingwoodnaminginventoires
AT adelinavalente woodidentificationof18thcenturyfurnitureinterpretingwoodnaminginventoires
AT josepissarra woodidentificationof18thcenturyfurnitureinterpretingwoodnaminginventoires
_version_ 1725539152878895104