For a painting that is over 300 years old, The Virgin of Valvanera is in remarkably good condition. One would fully expect that a painting of this age has undergone several attempts at restoration (by both skilled and amateur hands). Contrary to what is usually the case, this painting has not incurred major structural damage in the form of tears or losses, has never been lined (i.e. attached to a secondary canvas or solid support material), and has not been severely over-cleaned or extensively repainted.
The painting is constructed of a fairly coarse canvas attached to a wood strainer that features fixed joins (as opposed to a stretcher, which has adjustable joins.) The canvas comprises three pieces that had been sewn together prior to stretching and painting. As was a common practice in the time and region, the outer edges of the canvas had been glued to the front face of the strainer and reinforced with tacks on the perimeter.
There is evidence that the bottom original four inches or so of the canvas had been damaged by water and cut off in a past restoration campaign. One of the strainer’s bottom diagonal corner braces is missing and the other has obviously been cut and moved to accommodate the painting’s newly-shortened vertical dimension. The bottom strainer member and remaining lower batten have been severely weakened by wood-boring insect activity. While the canvas is remarkably intact aside from the missing bottom edge, there are several relatively small tears and holes which had been patched or sewn in various past restoration campaigns. Deformations at the lower left corner are caused by awkward re-gluing of the canvas to the adjusted bottom strainer member.
Water Damage
The face of the painting shows clear evidence of water damage in the form of extensive paint loss along the left and bottom edges, particularly in and around the text in the lower left corner where large areas of the dark red ground layer are left exposed. One can only guess at the circumstances leading to the damage: Was the painting hanging where rainwater from a leaking roof traveled down the supporting wall? Was it stored on the floor in standing water? Was the nature of the water source a weather event (flood) or man-made (burst pipe)? The effects of any of these scenarios would yield the same type of damage. In addition, some areas of the paint surface show signs of localized heat exposure in the form of tiny, burst bubbles. This may suggest that the painting had been too close to candle flame or the like.
Past Attempts at Cleaning & Repair
The paint surface is varnished with a mixture of oil and natural resin, followed by modern applications of at least two types of synthetic resin. Between the coating layers, past restorers and conservators had made various attempts at cleaning and repair. Harsh cleaning has scrubbed the oil/resin varnish off of the textural high-points (leaving darkened pools of varnish in the “valleys” between the brushstrokes and canvas weave) and abraded thinner layers of paint, especially the translucent dark browns and blacks in the tree hollow surrounding the Virgin and Child. Someone had also used a stiff, red putty to cover large areas of paint loss and adjacent original paint along the side and bottom edges. Other losses throughout the painting have been filled with at least two generations of white putty. These fills and other bare losses are retouched with both oil paint and modern pigment/resin mixtures. A major goal of the current conservation treatment is to regain image clarity by removing the “mask” of numerous surface coatings as well as the remnants of darkened varnish and old restoration materials meant to serve as hasty remedies for various condition issues.