Browsing by Author "Pueyo, Xavier"
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Item Digital Layered Models of Architecture and Mural Paintings over Time(The Eurographics Association, 2021) Guardia, Milagros; Pogliani, Paola; Bordi, Giulia; Charalambous, Panayiotis; Andujar, Carlos; Munoz-Pandiella, Imanol; Pueyo, Xavier; Ortega, Lidia M. and Chica, AntonioThe European project Enhancement of Heritage Experiences: The Middle Ages. Digital Layered Models of Architecture and Mural Paintings over Time (EHEM) aims to obtain virtual reconstructions of medieval artistic heritage -architecture with mural paintings- that are as close as possible to the original at different times, incorporating historical-artistic knowledge and the diachronic perspective of heritage. The project has also the purpose of incorporating not only how these painted buildings are and how they were, but also what function they had, how they were used and how they were perceived by the different users. EHEM will offer an instrument for researchers, restorers and heritage curators and will “humanize” the heritage proposing to the spectator of the 21st century an experience close to the users of the Middle Ages.Item Digital Layered Models of Architecture and Mural Paintings over Time(The Eurographics Association, 2020) Guardia, Milagros; Pogliani, Paola; Bordi, Giulia; Charalambous, Panayiotis; Andujar, Carlos; Pueyo, Xavier; Spagnuolo, Michela and Melero, Francisco JavierThe European project Enhancement of Heritage Experiences: The Middle Ages. Digital Layered Models of Architecture and Mural Paintings over Time (EHEM), approved in the call for JPICH Conservation, Protection and Use (0127) in the year 2020, aims to obtain virtual reconstructions of medieval artistic heritage - architecture with mural paintings - that are as close as possible to the original at different times, incorporating historical-artistic knowledge and the diachronic perspective of heritage, as an instrument for researchers, restorers and heritage curators and to improve the visitor's perceptions and experiences. In the digital models elaborated we intend to develop, as concrete objectives: 1. The understanding of architectural complexity, which is usually regularized geometrically. 2. Solving chromatic problems. The analysis of pigments, the arrangement of the pictorial layers and the successive restorations suffered, with the help of conservation and restoration technicians, will allow us to digitally specify the original colouring of the paintings. 3. Raise and propose the resolution of lighting problems. To date, trials have been carried out for the restitution of these problems in digital models based on the analysis of natural lighting, which we intend to improve. We also propose to deal with artificial lighting by chandeliers or oil lamps, which produced effects of painting vibration at the moment when, for liturgical reasons, the images ''acted''. 4. To approach digitally the different perspectives of the medieval building and its paintings according to the categories of users. To this end we have chosen three sites that because of their complexity will serve as case studies: The early medieval church of Santa Maria Antiqua in Rome (Italy), a mural palimpsest, consisting of up to ten layers of overlapping painted plasters, realised during a relatively short period of life (sixth-ninth centuries), which also poses architectural challenges of visual resolution given that it was transformed into a church from the Domitianic entrance hall in the Roman Forum to the imperial Palace on the Palatine hill. The hermitage of Sant Quirze de Pedret (Spain), with its complex architectural genesis from the tenth century, was decorated at the head of the church at two different times by superimposing a layer on the previous one. The discovery of its paintings, their removal and the transfer to two museums took place at two different moments (1921 and 1937) and with very different procedures. At the same time, years later, radical interventions were made to the building, altering the two pictorial phases in its ''virtual'' presentation. The Engleistra or Place of Seclusion founded by Neophytos (Agios Neophytos Monastery, Cyprus) The oratory was excavated in the rock from a natural cave and was decorated, at different times during the Middle Ages, with Byzantine wall paintings. The extreme nature of the site and the irregular nature of the rocky surface that house these cycles, comprising of up to five phases constitute a fundamental challenge for their digital presentation.Item Digital Reintegration of Distributed Mural Paintings at Different Architectural Phases: the Case of St. Quirze de Pedret(The Eurographics Association, 2022) Munoz-Pandiella, Imanol; Argudo, Oscar; Otzet, Immaculada Lorés; Comas, Joan Font; Casademont, Genís Àvila; Pueyo, Xavier; Andujar, Carlos; Ponchio, Federico; Pintus, RuggeroSant Quirze de Pedret is a Romanesque church located in Cercs (Catalonia, Spain) at the foothills of the Pyrenees. Its walls harbored one of the most important examples of mural paintings in Catalan Romanesque Art. However, in two different campaigns (in 1921 and 1937) the paintings were removed using the strappo technique and transferred to museums for safekeeping. This detachment protected the paintings from being sold in the art market, but at the price of breaking the integrity of the monument. Nowadays, the paintings are exhibited in the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya - MNAC (Barcelona, Catalonia) and the Museu Diocesà i Comarcal de Solsona - MDCS (Solsona, Catalonia). Some fragments of the paintings are still on the walls of the church. In this work, we present the methodology to digitally reconstruct the church building at its different phases and group the dispersed paintings in a single virtual church, commissioned by the MDCS. We have combined 3D reconstruction (LIDAR and photogrammetric using portable artificial illumination) and modeling techniques (including texture transfer between different shapes) to recover the integrity of the monument in a single 3D virtual model. Furthermore, we have reconstructed the church building at different significant historical moments and placed actual paintings on its virtual walls, based on archaeological knowledge. This set of 3D models allows experts and visitors to better understand the monument as a whole, the relations between the different paintings, and its evolution over time.