A very comprehensive study of the workshop production of John de Critz the Elder was undertaken by Edward Town for his article in the July 2012 issue of The Burlington Magazine. The varying quality of de Critz’s paintings was considered in light of the revelation that portraits continued to be produced by his workshop after the master’s eye sight had ‘fayled him’. And Town’s fascinating article puts forward the likely hypothesis that portraits might be priced according to the master’s input. These arguments are supported by the evidence gained from TSR’s infrared reflectography, which strongly suggests the repeated use of a face pattern for portraits of de Critz’s patron, Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury; a method that would have facilitated the quick and efficient production of multiple portraits.
Posted on Tue 13 Sep, 2022
TSR’s Infrared Reflectography of the Courtauld Gallery’s Botticelli Altarpiece Helps Shed New Light on the Artist’s Workshop Practice
Posted on Fri 16 Jul, 2021
Clare & Kate publish New Technical Discoveries revealing Rubens’s Artistic Process
Posted on Fri 02 Oct, 2020
‘Tales of the Unexpected’ – TSR’s reflectograms aid ‘Discovering Beuckelaer?’
Posted on Fri 02 Oct, 2020
TSR’s Infrared Reflectography helps to understand the development of Rubens’s Great Landscape
Posted on Wed 03 Apr, 2019
Technical Examination Helps English Heritage Confirm 15th Century Painting as Botticelli
Posted on Tue 03 Jul, 2018
TSR’s Infrared Reflectography Helps to ‘Discover the Secret Techniques of an Old Master’ at Sotheby’s