Portal:Afghanistan:Arts:World's First Oil Paintings found in Afghan Caves

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World’s first oil paintings found in Afghan caves

By AFP, Jan 25.

AFP

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Afghan art1.png

Forget Renaissance Europe. The world’s firstoil paintings go back nearly 14 centuries to murals in Afghanistan’s Bamiyancaves, a Japanese researcher says.

Buddhist images painted in the central Afghan region, dated to around 650 AD,are the earliest examples of oil used in art history, says Yoko Taniguchi, anexpert at Japan’s National Research Institute for Cultural Properties.


A group of Japanese, European and US scientists are collaborating to restore damaged murals in caves in the Bamiyan Valley, famous for its two gigantic statues of the Buddha which were destroyed by the Taliban in 2001. In the murals, thousands of Buddhas in vermilion robes sit cross-legged,sporting exquisitely knotted hair.


Other motifs show crouching monkeys, men facing one another or palm leavesdelicately intertwined with mythical creatures. The paintings incorporate a mix of Indian and Chinese influences, and are most likely to be the works of artists travelling on the Silk Road, which was the largest trade and cultural route connecting the East and the West.

The Los Angeles-based Getty Conservation Institute analysed 53 samples extracted from the murals. Using gas chromatography methods, the researchers found that 19 had oil in the paint. “Different types of oil were used on the dirt walls with such a sophisticated technique that I felt I was looking right at a mediaeval board painting datingfrom 14th or 15th century Italy,” Taniguchi told AFP.

The discovery would reverse common perceptions about the origins of oilpaintings. The technique is widely believed to have emerged in Europe leadinginto the Renaissance, which flowered from 1400 to 1600.—AFP

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