CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS: Conference on Tempera painting between 1800 and 1950 
Experiments and innovations from the Nazarene movement to abstract art
 
15–17 March 2018 at the Pinakothek der Moderne, Bayerische 
Staatsgemaldesammlungen Munich, Germany hosted by the Doerner Institut and 
funded by VolkswagenStiftung and the EU project H2020 IPERION CH              
 
The conference aims to explore the revival of tempera painting between 1800 and 
1950 from the perspectives of art history, technical art history, conservation 
and material analysis. In the 19th century, the defining feature of tempera 
paints was their water-miscibility – a characteristic that clearly separated 
them from oil paints. In the first half of the 20th century, this use of the 
term was extended by some scholars and artists to every mixture of aqueous and 
non-aqueous binding media.
The renewed interest in tempera paints in the 19th century was, in part, due to 
a growing dissatisfaction with oil paints, which were felt to have too many 
drawbacks, such as insufficient luminosity of colour, slowness in drying and a 
tendency to crack, wrinkle and darken as they aged. Tempera, revered as part of 
the lost technique of the Old Masters, seemed a failsafe means with which to 
address the problems at hand. The study and rediscovery of historic tempera 
systems took various forms: scholarship applied to the ancient texts on 
painting, such as Cennino Cennini’s Il libro dell arte , direct examination of 
the paintings of antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance as well as 
material analysis and characterisation. These findings influenced artists 
practice and their choices of binding media: They experimented with a growing 
number of historically oriented and at the same time innovative tempera 
formulations. These could contain any of the following ingredients, often in 
complex combinations: egg, animal glue, plant gums, casein, waxes, soaps, milk, 
resins, glycerine and even drying oils. 
These paints were used both in Europe and America in manifold ways and with 
various motivations: At the beginning of the 19th century mural painters of the 
German Nazarene movement used tempera, later followed by those of the 
Wilhelmine era and by the French artist Pierre Puvis de Chavannes. From c. 1850 
onwards, tempera paints were employed in easel painting by many artists of a 
wide variety of schools (e.g. Academism, Symbolism, Historicism, Expressionism, 
New Realism, Surrealism, Futurism), including Arnold Bocklin, Wassily 
Kandinsky, Otto Mueller, Paul Klee, Otto Dix, Giorgio de Chirico and Gino 
Severini. However, they were also used for polychromy of sculpture, miniature 
painting on paper, scene painting and for room decoration.
To better understand the tempera revival and its consequences for 19th and 
20th-century art, the conference aims to create an interdisciplinary platform 
for knowledge exchange. A program of lectures and poster presentations will be 
complemented by practical workshops on tempera painting based on historic 
recipes as well as guided tours to Munich galleries, where we will explore the 
visual effects of tempera paints in 19th and early 20th-century works of art. 
 
The conference will focus on the following topics: 
 
1. The bigger picture: Exploring the cultural historical context of the 19th 
and early 20th century interest in painting techniques of the past.
- developments in nineteenth and twentieth-century art theory (e.g. 
material-oriented aesthetics) and discussion of their possible interactions 
with the interest in tempera painting
 - tempera painting as an alternative trajectory to the dominant history of oil 
painting 
- the various impacts of industrialization on artists materials, ideas and 
working processes in relation to the interest in painting techniques of the 
past 
- interactions between tempera painting techniques with other contemporaneous 
technologies (e.g. photography, printing processes, newly introduced machines 
for paint application such as airbrush etc.) 
 
2. A closer look at the sources: terminology and interpretation of 19th and 
early 20th-century sources on tempera painting. 
- art-technical sources on tempera painting techniques 
- problems of terminology and language: meaning and interchangeability of terms 
tempera, Leimfarbe, Wasserfarbe, watercolor, distemper, peinture a la colle, 
detrempe, tempera grassa’etc. in 19th and 20th-century sources 
 
3. In the studio: the practice of tempera painting between 1800 and 1950 and 
possible implications for conservation decisions. 
 - the manifold ways of working in tempera on different supports, for painting 
sculpture, for mural, scene and decorative painting in European countries and 
in North and South America
- artists individual motivations, their definition(s) of the term tempera, 
their sources and materials and their role models
- relations between individual painting techniques or working processes and the 
artistic content 
 
4. A closer look at the material: Methods for the scientific investigation of 
complex binder mixtures and materials in multilayered works of art. Progress 
and challenges in analysis and interpretation of analytical results. 
 
We invite art historians, technical art historians, conservators, and 
conservation and academic scientists to submit abstracts in English, of maximum 
500 words, for lectures or posters. They must contain the title, name(s) of 
author(s) and indicate the kind of contribution intended (lecture or poster). 
All contributions will be held in English. Help for translations of lecture 
manuscripts can be provided on request. Please send the abstracts together with 
a short biography (max 100 words) by 31 May 2017 to temp...@doernerinstitut.de. 
We intend to publish all lectures and posters as postprints.
We are happy to support young researchers with travel grants (max. 350 euro 
each). Their applications should contain the abovementioned abstract, the short 
biography and a short description of the individual scientific or scholarly 
interest (the latter max. 100 words).  
For further information please go to 
www.doernerinstitut.de/tempera_2018/en/index.html
  
 
Wibke Neugebauer, Eva Reinkowski, Renate Poggendorf, Heike Stege and Patrick 
Dietemann
Organising team of the Tempera conference
Doerner Institut
Barer Straße 29
80799 Munich
Email: temp...@doernerinstitut.de
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