Restoration by Hand and Computer
A Technician injects glue made of shark’s lung under paint detaching from a face (top), one of only a few still showing original pigment. An archer reveals details of hair (above) and hemp soles (below), but the figure lacks color until artist Doug Stern paints an Image (left) with a computer. Ravages of Floods, Fire, and time have erased original paint from statues such as this one of the high-ranking officer, possibly a general (below), discovered in Pit 1. Two similar “generation” have been found in Pit 2. Ancient pigments made from minerals were mixed with a binder such as animal blood or egg white to color the statues. Charcoal may have once tinted in the hair. Guided by flakes of paint and historical sources, Stern used a computer with an electronic pen and tablet to hang colors on photographs of the archer and the general (left) from Pit 1. Without actually tinting the original statues, an approximation of the figures’ original appearance is achieved and can easily be modified to reflect future research.
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True we are amazed by the magic of today’s technology.
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