1. Introduction
Paul Delvaux was a Belgian painter born on 23 September 1897 in Antheit (Belgium) who passed away on 20 July 1994 in Veurne. Known for his surrealistic style, Delvaux was one of the leading figures of the Belgian Surrealist movement.
Born into a bourgeois family with a lawyer father, Delvaux had difficulty convincing his family to let him pursue a career as an artist [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5]. In October 1919, thanks to the support of painter Franz Courtens (1854–1943) [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9], Delvaux entered the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels in the decorative painting class of Belgian symbolist painter Constant Montald (1862–1944) [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
10,
11,
12]. He also attended the evening drawing classes led by Belgian symbolist painter Jean Delville (1867–1953) [
2,
3,
4,
5,
7,
8,
12,
13]. The latter is well known for the quality of his drawings, as well as for his attraction to large-format paintings.
He drew inspiration from various sources, such as Renaissance masters; classic literature; and the works of his contemporaries, including Giorgio de Chirico and René Magritte.
One of the key elements of Delvaux’s style was his portrayal of the female figure. He frequently depicted nude or semi-nude women in his paintings, presenting them as mysterious and ethereal beings. These female figures often appeared as passive objects of desire, evoking a sense of intrigue and vulnerability. Delvaux’s portrayal of women sparked discussions and debates around gender dynamics and objectification in art.
Another notable aspect of Delvaux’s style was his choice of settings. He often depicted desolate urban landscapes with deserted streets and empty squares. These urban environments, devoid of human presence, added to the eerie and uncanny atmosphere of his works. The juxtaposition of solitary figures against deserted backdrops created a sense of isolation and heightened the dreamlike quality of his paintings.
Delvaux also drew inspiration from classical art and literature. His works often referenced mythological and historical themes, incorporating elements from ancient Greek and Roman culture.
The use of light and shadow was integral to Delvaux’s style, adding a sense of mystery and drama to his compositions. He skillfully employed chiaroscuro, a technique that emphasizes the contrast between light and dark, to enhance the visual impact of his works. The play of light and shadow heightened the depth and three-dimensionality of his figures and contributed to the overall haunting ambiance of his paintings.
Despite facing criticism for his unique style, Delvaux remained true to his artistic vision throughout his career. His works continue to captivate audiences with their enigmatic narratives, skillful execution and thought-provoking themes. Paul Delvaux’s artistic style not only exemplified Surrealism but also established him as one of the most renowned painters of the movement, leaving a lasting impact on the art world.
Although important, the academic training of the painter is not sufficient to understand his technique and the material he used. The study of his painted production through complementary imaging methods and non-destructive analysis makes it possible to deliver relevant information on this subject. Focusing on paintings from the first part of his long career allowed us to pinpoint the importance of his training and his own technique. Following the presentation of the studied corpus and the analytical protocol carried out systematically on each painting, we present the main results with respect to the support, the preparatory layer, the preparatory drawing, the changes in composition and reuse of paintings, the pictorial layer and the dripping phenomenon.
2. Materials and Methods
In order to study Delvaux’s painting materials and pictorial technique, artworks covering the first thirty years of the painter’s career, from 1928 to 1958, were analyzed. This paper discusses the results obtained for this first
corpus belonging to the collection of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels (RMFAB) (
Table 1):
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt [Couple whith child in the forest] (
Figure 1a),
Le couple [The couple] (
Figure 1b),
Jeune femme rêvant [Dreaming young woman] (
Figure 1c),
Sans titre [Untitled] (
Figure 1d),
L’incendie [Fire] (
Figure 1e),
Pygmalion (
Figure 2a),
Nocturnes (
Figure 2b),
La voix publique [Public voice] (
Figure 2c) and
L’hiver [Winter] (
Figure 2d). The same analytical methodology was applied to the whole
corpus, thanks to the mobile laboratory available at the Centre Européen d’Archéométrie (CEA) of the University of Liège.
Technical imaging was performed on the whole set of paintings. First, high-resolution photographs were acquired using a digitization system designed by the CEA [
14]. For images in visible light and under ultraviolet light (induced fluorescence), a Nikon
® Z7-II camera with a Z-MC 105mm f/2.8 Nikkor
® lens was used to capture images, with each close-up recording a small area of the painting (
cm). The images were then assembled using PTGui software
®. Infrared reflectography (IRR) was performed using an Osiris
® camera sensitive in the 0.9–1.7
m range and halogen lamps. X-ray radiography (XRR) was performed with the use of an Oxford-Instrument
® 5000 series X-ray source operating between 40 and 50 kV at 1 mA, with two flat panels from X-Ris
® and Balteau NDT
®.
Figure 3 shows the different imaging methods used for the female figure on the left in
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt. The surfaces of the paintings were also examined with Dino-Lite
® digital microscopes.
Scanning-mode XRF spectroscopy (MA-XRF) has become an essential tool to visualize the elemental distribution of a surface in recent years [
15,
16,
17,
18]. The device used is composed of a Moxtek
® Magnum X-ray source (with a Ag anode, 40 kV voltage and a current of 120
A and a Silicon-Drift 123SDD Amptek
® X-ray detector. The scanning step was set to 1 mm with a dwell time of 300 ms. The obtained spectra were processed in batch mode using PyMCA [
19]. The second technique is Raman spectroscopy (RS), enabling the characterization of the molecular composition of the analyzed material [
20,
21]. This analysis was performed with an Enwave Optronics
® device (I-Dual-G portable Raman analyzer), with a 785 nm laser with power varying between 30 and 300 mW and a spectral resolution of 6 cm
in the spectral domain of 100–3000 cm
. For each point of analysis, three acquisitions generally lasting 30 s with a laser power of ≈100 mW and a 500
m spot size were carried out. The spectra were then processed using GRAMS
®.
3. Results
3.1. Support
Following his Academy teachers, Delvaux undeniably favored large formats. In the studied corpus, the smallest painting is Jeune femme rêvant, with dimensions of cm, and the largest is La voix publique, with dimensions of cm.
In consulting catalogs of Delvaux’s oil paintings [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
22,
23], it is remarkable that two-thirds of his oil production is on canvas. The rest comprise paintings on wooden panels, as well as on plywood (triplex, multiplex, unalite, masonite), which was a rather modern support in the 20th century. We observed some careless phenomena on plywood, such as glue drippings on the back of the sheets. On one of the paintings studied in this work (
Nocturnes) features a handiwork in the lower left corner.
3.2. Ground Layer
Analysis of the ground layer was performed on the edges of the paintings. All the canvases of the studied
corpus have a white ground layer, as shown in
Table 2. The white coloring is due to the presence of two white pigments for the two earliest paintings of the
corpus (
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt and
Le couple), namely lead white ((PbCO
)
Pb(OH)
) and zinc white (ZnO). The narrow absorption band at 1050 cm
in the Raman spectrum is characteristic of the presence of lead white [
24,
25,
26]. Zinc white was identified based on the presence of zinc only. In the case of
Jeune femme rêvant and the two parts of
L’incendie, lithopone (ZnS·BaSO
) was identified on the basis of the joint presence of zinc, barium and sulfur. However, we cannot rule out the possibility of a combination of zinc white and barium sulfate. As shown in
Table 2, calcium is also present but as a trace element when the ground layer is composed of the supposed lithopone [
25].
Unlike canvases, a preparation layer is not necessarily present on plywood, as we observed for Nocturnes and L’hiver.
Pygmalion is a special case of the
corpus because the preparation layer that composes it is green. MA-XRF performed on the edge of
Pygmalion revealed the presence of barium, sulfur, zinc and cobalt. The Raman spectra obtained for the ground layer show a narrow vibrational band at 980 cm
, which testifies to the presence of barium sulfate [
24]. As a reminder, barium sulfate is part of the composition of lithopone. Again, the presence of lithopone or zinc white accompanied by barite can be proposed. In both cases, these pigments give a white color and therefore do not justify the green color. Microscopic enlargements show that a single green pigment is present and not a mixture of blue and yellow pigments. As cobalt and zinc are correlated in the MA-XRF spectra, the use of cobalt green pigment (CoO·ZnO) in this ground layer can be proposed.
With respect to the use of a colored ground layer, we find in the literature the testimony of Danielle Canneel, Delvaux’s model from 1966 to 1984 [
2], relating that Delvaux had already sketched all the sets and most of the characters in white on a dark canvas [
2]. Moreover, in the painting
La pose (1979) (
Figure 4a), several characters are represented in the process of painting a nude model. The preparations of their canvases are dark gray, and they execute their sketches in white (
Figure 4b). These pieces of evidence are posterior to the studied paintings, showing the application of a white preparation. The technique of preparing the canvas therefore evolved during his career, but we do not yet know when he began to use a dark preparation layer. As for the green color in particular, the literature does not mention whether canvases other than
Pygmalion benefited from a similar colored ground layer.
3.3. Preparatory Drawing
Before making this preparatory drawing, Delvaux attached great importance to the study of his subject by making a number of sketches and drawings [
2,
3,
4,
5,
8].
IRR shows the presence of a preparatory drawing made using dry carbon material, such as charcoal or pencil, in three paintings of the studied corpus:
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt,
Jeune femme rêvant and
Le couple. For the first two, a grid drawn in carbon pencil is visible. Therefore, the paintings anterior to
L’incendie, 1935, have a preparatory drawing executed with dry carbon material. For the rest of the corpus, the preparatory drawing is an oil sketch (
Table A1).
Figure 5 emphasizes the black line of the nude female figure wearing foliage from
Pygmalion, overhung with flesh-colored paint, which means that Delvaux painted the guidelines of his composition before applying the pictorial layer. We are tempted to underline a parallel with the studies of the paintings. The literature states that until 1932, Delvaux carried out his studies in carbon pencil or charcoal, and afterwards, he used Indian ink [
2,
27].
At the preparatory drawing stage, Delvaux had already made the first corrections, such as adjustment of the position of the main characters or even corrections to their silhouettes. The most reworked preparatory drawing is that of
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt. As an example,
Figure 6 shows a photograph and the IRR of the bust of the main male figure in
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt; the position of the nipples changed seven times, and that of the navel changed six times, with several thicknesses of the hips and different positions for the arms.
3.4. Changes in Composition and Reuse of Paintings
Writings alluding to the painter’s technique report that he frequently changed elements during pictorial execution [
2,
3]. Indeed, one can observe reliefs on the surface of the paintings that do not coincide with the visible composition. XRR revealed the presence of pentimenti throughout the
corpus (examples are shown in
Figure 3 and
Figure 7).
XRR shows some drastic changes in composition, such as the addition or deletion of personages. We often observe a correction at the level of the main figures (
Table A1), i.e., changes to features, a modified position of the face, and adjustments to the curves of the body and the position of the arms or legs. Occasionally, some changes are identified in the background elements of the composition, such as buildings or wall ornaments.
In
L’incendie, after removing a female figure in a dress, as revealed by XRR (as shown in
Figure 7), the artist performed a radical transformation. He cut the painting in order to keep the right part with the subject of the fire [
23]. This part, which was dated and signed, has been in the possession of the RMFAB since 1994. The second part, which was thought to be lost, was found by Pierre Ghêne and given to the museum in 2014 [
6]. The state of this part testifies to its poor conservation conditions. According to Debra’s book, when a painting did not find favor with the artist, he would remove the canvas from its stretcher, roll it up and store it in a loft until it was recycled [
1].
These paintings on canvas are not the only ones to be recycled. XRR of
La voix publique revealed a double composition, as evidenced by rotating the XRR by 180 degrees, as shown in
Figure 8. The red frames highlight the underlying composition. In the upper left corner, a female figure is visible, and the right frame emphasizes the presence of a frame, as well as the bust and head of an imposing reclining nude female figure.
The results obtained during the study of the paint layer of the paintings of the corpus will be presented below by color.
It is important to mention that Delvaux had a preference for oil-based colors, despite the arrival of acrylic in the middle of the 20th century. According to his nephew, Charles Van Deun, the painter favored Rembrandt oil-based colors by Royal Talens [
28].
His classmate, Jules Payro (1899–1971), already an experienced painter, advised Delvaux on how to make his first palette [
1,
2]. The colors that make it up, in addition to white and black, are as follows: ultramarine blue, English red, yellow ocher and emerald green. He would remain faithful to this palette for a long time before adding cadmium yellow, vermilion and cobalt blue [
1].
3.4.1. White
The following white pigments (
Table 3) were identified thanks to the performed analyses according to the obtained RS spectra (
Figure 9): lead white, zinc white, lithopone, calcium carbonate (CaCO
) and titanium white (TiO
) in the form of anatase. RS effectively differentiates anatase from rutile. Indeed, rutile has two major narrow absorption bands at 440 cm
and 610 cm
, while the most intense and narrow absorption band of anatase is at ≈140 cm
, with lesser narrow absorption bands at 194, 326, 393, 512, 635 and 794 cm
[
24,
29]. Calcium carbonate is identified by the presence of a narrow absorption band located at 1080 cm
in the Raman spectrum [
24].
Lead white was used in all the canvases studied herein. We were able to observe the gradual replacement of this pigment in the painter’s palette in accordance with the trend of the time. Indeed, for the three earliest paintings in the corpus, dated 1928–1931, it is the only white pigment used in the pictorial layer. For both parts of L’incendie, it is accompanied by lithopone, given the joint presence of barium, sulfur and zinc, although we cannot exclude that these are zinc white and barium sulfate.
The white pigment of the pictorial layer of the two plywood boards dated 1939 is zinc white accompanied by barite. For L’hiver, the most recent painting in the corpus, we identified zinc white and calcium carbonate. We can note the absence of lead white in these three paintings.
Three white pigments are part of the composition of the pictorial layer of
La voix publique: lead white, zinc white and titanium white in the form of anatase. As this is a reused painting, the analyzed pictorial layer is doubled, which explains the number of identified white pigments. In this painting dating from 1948, several observations can be made about the use of titanium white by Delvaux. Historically, in Europe, titanium white was marketed for the first time in fine paint in the form of pure anatase in 1925. Its marketing in the form of pure rutile dates from 1946 [
29,
30]. Note the late use of titanium white by the artist and the use of anatase, although rutile was already available at this time. Also, contrary to previous literature [
1], it was not Delvaux’s students who advised him to use titanium white, given that Delvaux’s teaching career began in 1950 [
1,
2,
3,
9,
10] and that
La voix publique was produced before this date.
3.4.2. Black
Carbon black was identified in all the studied paintings (
Table A1). In RS, two wide absorption bands located at ≈1350 cm
and ≈1580 cm
characterize the presence of carbon black [
24,
31], as shown in
Figure 9. Carbon black was identified in many of the Raman spectra obtained in this study. Although MA-XRF cannot identified carbon [
18], calcium is the most common secondary element of the various carbon blacks [
25,
31]. By comparing calcium distributions obtained by MA-XRF with those obtained by IRR, which highlights the carbonaceous matter, the presence of carbon black was effectively identified.
The Raman spectra, the IRR and the calcium distribution obtained by MA-XRF show that in general, carbon black was used for the black elements of the composition, as well as to create shadow effects. The calcium distributions shown in
Figure 10 effectively demonstrate the presence of calcium in areas of darker skin tones.
3.4.3. Red
The red pigments identified in the pictorial layers of the studied paintings are red iron oxide pigment, cadmium red (Cd(S,Se)) and vermilion (HgS). The first was identified due to the presence of iron in the pictorial layer. The identification of cadmium red is due to the joint presence of cadmium and selenium [
25,
26,
32]. Vermilion was identified thanks to the detection of mercury by MA-XRF and the presence of two narrow absorption bands located at 252 cm
and 343 cm
in the Raman spectra [
24,
25,
33]. As shown in
Table 4, red iron oxide pigment is the most used, unlike vermilion, which was identified only in
L’hiver. Despite the fact that cadmium red was an expensive pigment at the time, Delvaux seemed to favor it over vermilion. He sparingly used it for details like the elastic hair of the sculptress in
Pygmalion, to color the skin of faces or draw contour lines, as shown in the selenium and cadmium distributions of the woman on the left in
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt (
Figure A1).
In fact, using red to draw contour lines at the level of the flesh of the characters is a common practice in the paintings of Delvaux. We observed this in all the paintings studied with the exception of
L’hiver.
Figure 11 shows such a red line on the face and arm of the female figure in
Untitled, as well as the iron distribution of an area of the canvas. The red color of these lines associated with iron shows the use of an iron oxide pigment. In the earliest paintings of the
corpus, the line is easily noticeable and thick. With practice, the painter made it more discreet; in
La voix publique, it is visible in the ears of female figures and more difficult to see elsewhere.
White, black and red are used in the flesh tones of the characters in the compositions. The results make it possible to affirm that Delvaux mixed the white and red already present on his palette. In other words, he did not add an extra color to achieve the desired tone. As already stipulated, the addition of black made it possible to induce a light effect by shading of the skin. He used this technique for all the studied painting in the
corpus, with the exception of
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt. In order to make the pink tone of the skin, Delvaux added red (Cd and Se distributions in
Figure A1), and to lighten it, he added a bit of white.
3.4.4. Blue
The performed analyses revealed the use of two blue pigments by the painter, namely cobalt blue (CoO·Al
O
) and ultramarine blue (Na
Al
Si
O
S
). The first, cobalt blue, was marketed as a substitute for natural ultramarine in the early 19th century. Cobalt blue pigment remains an expensive pigment, even though it is less expensive than genuine ultramarine [
31]. The second, artificial ultramarine blue, was industrialized in 1830 and dominated the market until the arrival of phthalocyanine blue (C
H
CuN
) in 1935 [
33]. Cobalt blue was identified in the two earliest paintings in the
corpus (
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt and
Le couple). We assumed the use of this pigment because only cobalt was detected in the blue area by MA-XRF [
31]. Ultramarine blue was found in
Pygmalion,
La voix publique and
L’hiver, as shown in
Table 4. Ultramarine blue was identified by RS, with a narrow absorption band located at 540 cm
, as shown in
Figure 12 for the blue signature of
L’hiver, indicating the presence of this pigment [
24,
33,
34].
For the blue pigments used by Delvaux, note that he used cobalt blue early compared to what is found in the literature. According to Debra’s book, Delvaux started using this pigment because it had been recommended by his students at La Cambre school, so after 1950 [
1]. Our results show the use of this pigment for
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt, which is dated to 1928–1929.
Note that other research has been carried out on
Les nœuds roses (oil on canvas,
cm, 1937) [
35],
Faubourg (oil on panel,
cm, 1956) [
21] and
La Genèse (oil on wall,
cm, 1960) [
36]. The blue pigments used for the first canvas are Prussian blue (Fe
[Fe(CN)
]
xH
O) mixed with ultramarine blue [
35]. For
Faubourg, it is a mixture of ultramarine blue, titanium white and phthalocyanine blue [
21] while for
La Genèse, the mixture is composed of ultramarine blue, titanium white and phthalocyanine green [
36]. This information is important and makes it possible to construct an initial timeline of the use of blue pigments in the painter’s palette: a systematic use of ultramarine blue in paintings can be dated to after 1937.
3.4.5. Yellow
In this section on yellow pigment, we recount Delvaux’s words about the yellow in van Gogh’s painting
Les Tournesols: “The yellows that van Gogh sought so long have turned brown there because this one was not rich and could not use good colors. He used chrome. And the chrome yellows don’t last. ” [
7,
37,
38]. Delvaux therefore seems to have had some knowledge of the quality of pigments. Unlike van Gogh, he had the chance to live from his art. And before that, his parents, as well as his first wife, supported him financially [
1]. This allowed him to choose quality materials, in particular quality pigments such as cobalt blue and cadmium red, which are relatively expensive [
26,
31].
Yellow pigments that were identified in the
corpus are yellow iron oxide pigment and cadmium yellow (CdS), as shown in
Table 4. The yellow pigment based on iron oxide was identified by MA-XRF thanks to the detection of iron [
31] in the yellow areas of
Le couple and
Jeune femme rêvant. In
L’hiver and
Pygmalion, the green color of the vegetation was achieved by means of a mixture of black and yellow pigments.
Figure 13 shows the presence of yellow and black grains in the green of the vegetation in the painting. Black is made of carbon black, given the results of RS (broad bands at ≈1350 and ≈1580 cm
) and MA-XRF. The yellow pigment in
Pygmalion was identified as yellow iron oxide through the detection of iron by MA-XRF in this green area. The yellow pigment in
L’hiver is cadmium yellow, given the presence of cadmium in this area [
26] and, more precisely cadmium yellow PY37, as MA-XRF does not show the presence of zinc, which, accompanied by cadmium, would have indicated cadmium yellow PY35 [
25,
39,
40].
3.4.6. Green
Unlike
Nocturnes and
L’hiver, the green color of the other paintings in the
corpus comes from a single green pigment and not from a mixture of pigments. The presence of a green based on chromium oxide was identified in
Couple avec enfant dans la forêt (see chrome distribution in
Figure A1),
Le couple and
La voix publique. This identification was carried out through the detection of chromium by MA-XRF [
25,
29]. The analyses, unfortunately, do not allow us to advance whether it is a chromium oxide or a hydrated chromium oxide.
Table 4 indicates the presence of chlorine in the green of the pictorial layers of
Pygmalion and
Nocturnes.
Figure 14 illustrates this chlorine distribution for the female figure on the left in
Nocturnes. We noticed that it is also present in the skin tones and does not seem to be at the origin of the green color of this painting. For the moment, no hypothesis can be proposed on its origin.
3.4.7. Purple
The violet color is part of the pictorial layer of two paintings of the studied corpus. In
La voix publique, it is used to color large purple nodes. Unlike in
L’hiver, where its presence is more subtle and barely noticeable, it colors a veil of a character in the background. In both cases, digital microscopy showed that the purple comes from a pure pigment and not from a mixture of blue and red pigments. The purple color of both paintings is composed of cobalt and phosphorus according to MA-XRF.
Figure 15 clearly shows that the cobalt present in the violet areas is associated with phosphorus and not with arsenic. In view of our results, we can suggest that it is a cobalt violet (Co
(PO
)
) [
25,
41]. In the violet area of
L’hiver, manganese was detected, in addition to cobalt and phosphorus. For this painting, a mixture of purple pigments may have been used: cobalt violet and manganese violet (MnNH
P
O
).
3.4.8. Brown
As we can see in
Table 4, MA-XRF systematically detected iron in the brown of the studied paint layers. This result is not surprising, since many brown pigments are based on iron oxide. For the three oldest paintings in the corpus, the brown pigment is composed of iron oxide only, as we can see, for example, in
Figure A1. Therefore, it is composed of a mixture of iron oxide and manganese oxide. In
Figure 16, the iron and manganese distributions of part of
L’incendie illustrate the joint presence of these two elements in the brown hair of the female figure. The detection of manganese by MA-XRF can be interpreted as the use of an umber brown pigment [
25,
42].
3.5. Dripping Phenomenon
For the whole
corpus, with the exception of
Jeune femme rêvant and the two parts of
L’incendie, the photographs under ultraviolet light reveal a recurring phenomenon (
Table A1). As shown in
Figure 17, these are non-pigmented and translucent drips that appear while the pictorial layer is drying. These drips are sometimes even visible to the naked eye, as in
L’hiver, where they stand out as yellowish on the white tiles.
For the moment, their exact nature remains uncertain. Additional analyses involving mass spectrometry would provide more information about them. We can assume that they come from the addition of a yet undefined component to the oil paint. Indeed, in images from Delvaux’s studio, there are bottles of pure linseed oil but also turpentine, charcoal fixative and retouching varnish (shown in
Figure 18) [
28]. In addition, In Debra’s book, Delvaux testified to having only ever used pure linseed oil [
1]. This statement by the artist may mean that he chose tubes of oil paint based on pure linseed oil, which could mean that he was reworking the thickness or the gloss of the oil paint with pure linseed oil.
These same drips were observed in the study of
Les nœuds roses but were not been identified for sure [
35]. It is therefore a recurring phenomenon in the oil paintings of Delvaux that deserves to be further explored.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
The study of these nine works provides novel knowledge on the process of elaboration and on the constituent materials of the early works of Paul Delvaux. A summary of the identified pigments is presented in
Table 4. A more complete presentation of the overall results is presented in
Table A1.
For the elaboration process, the application of a preparation layer is dependent on the type of support. Indeed, all canvases of the studied corpus have a white ground layer, unlike plywood, which does not necessarily have one. Moreover, the ground layer can sometimes be colored, as in Pygmalion.
For the preparatory drawing, the second stage of the development process, a grid was used in two paintings: Couple avec enfant dans la forêt and Jeune femme rêvant. The preparatory drawing of the paintings anterior to L’incendie, 1935, was done using dry carbonaceous material such as charcoal or pencil. After that, the preparatory drawing was made based on an oil sketch. From then on, a parallel was made with the studies of the works which were carried out in pencil or charcoal until 1932, when the artist began to use Indian ink. It would be interesting to analyze works dated from 1930 to 1934 in order to effectively date this change.
Then, in accordance with what is found in the literature, various changes and corrections were observed in the compositions. Changes were also made during pictorial execution, as evidenced by the many observed pentimenti. They can be discreet, such as are correction of the position of the main characters or even the removal of the elements that make up the ground of the composition. But they can also be more drastic, like the removal or addition of a character. Once the painting is finished, the changes in composition do not end there, as shown in L’incendie and in La voix publique.
For the pigments that make up the pictorial layer, the palette is relatively poor and composed of inorganic pigments (
Table A1). Some technical characteristics of the painter were observed, such as the use of carbon black to create luminosity and shadow in the flesh of the figures or the use of red paint in the lines of the flesh.
The results of the study of these nine paintings allowed a first approach regarding the evolution of the different pigments in the painter’s palette. It is particularly noticeable with the blues and the whites.
The last result is the presence of non-pigmented translucent drippings that are visible under ultraviolet light. These drips are recurrent in Delvaux’s paintings and appear when the paint layer dries. This phenomenon deserves special attention, requiring other methods of analysis.
To conclude, it is important to remember that the studied corpus only covers thirty years of the painter’s career, from 1928 to 1958, which is a small part of Delvaux’s work, since he began his painted production just after his training at the Academy in 1920 and he stopped painting only shortly before his death in 1994. Although the results revealed in this article already give us a lot of information on the process of creation and on the material used to make them, they are not representative of the painter’s career. They bring up a lot of questions. Are there other paintings with a green ground layer? Is it possible to find an explanation for the absence of a ground layer on certain plywood? When did the painter switch to oil sketching? What is the timeline of the evolution of the different pigments in the painter’s palette? What is the exact origin of these drippings? We hope that by increasing the number of studied artworks, we can answer these questions with more precision and, perhaps, discover other technical particularities of Paul Delvaux.