overpaint - meaning and definition. What is overpaint
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What (who) is overpaint - definition

PAINT LAYER APPLIED OVER DRIED PAINT, AS PART OF THE ORIGINAL WORK OR DURING CONSERVATION
Overpaint

Overpaint         
·vt To color or describe too strongly.
Overpainting         
Overpainting is the final layers of paint, over some type of underpainting, in a system of working in layers. It can also refer to later paint added by restorers, or an artist or dealer wishing to "improve" or update an old image—a very common practice in the past.
overpaint         
¦ verb cover with paint.
¦ noun paint added as a covering layer.

Wikipedia

Overpainting

Overpainting is the final layers of paint, over some type of underpainting, in a system of working in layers. It can also refer to later paint added by restorers, or an artist or dealer wishing to "improve" or update an old image—a very common practice in the past. The underpainting gives a context in which the paint-strokes of the overpainting become more resonant and powerful. When properly done, overpainting does not need to completely obscure the underpainting. It is precisely the interaction of the two that gives the most interesting effects.

Overpainting was used extensively in many schools of art. Some of the most spectacular results can be seen in the work of Jan van Eyck.

It can be difficult to distinguish overpainting from underpainting in finished historical artworks in the absence of scientific tests. X-rays are often used to examine paintings because they allow the conservation technician to see what is hidden beneath a surface without having to damage it, depending on the materials used. By using different intensities of X-rays, experts can see different layers of paint and determine whether a canvas was ever painted over.

Examples of use of overpaint
1. Layers of overpaint thought to have been added in the latter part of the 17th century were removed.
2. As the restoration proceeds, professional conservators are carefully peeling off, layer by layer, the years of discolored overpaint and varnish that had sullied Brumidi‘s work, essentially showing it off as it was more than 100 years ago.
3. Conservators are hard at work, painstakingly removing layers of overpaint as they uncover the original brightness of the murals by the Michelangelo of the Capitol‘‘ along five connected hallways on the first floor of the Senate wing.
4. Layers of overpaint were removed to reveal the Dutch artists Portrait of an Elderly Woman in a White Bonnet, an intimate study of the effects of light, which dates from about 1640.
5. They work in the late afternoon and evening, when there is less foot traffic in the Capitol‘s hallways. What they‘ve been doing is actually removing the overpaint with scalpels,‘‘ Wolanin said. It‘s not really scraping, but it‘s slicing the layers off so they don‘t damage what‘s underneath.‘‘ From a distance the murals look alike, so much so that they often are mistaken for wallpaper, Wolanin said.