Materials Science Reveals Clues About Pigment Degrading on Painting

A University of Delaware prof is part of a team studying the paint’s material microstructure in a painting by Henri Matisse in an attempt to determine why the cadmium sulfide is changing color.

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12:58 p.m., Dec. 20, 2011--The painting Le Bonheur de vivre, by Henri Matisse, is revered as one of two masterpieces that changed the course of painting in the early 20th century.

Unlike anything that came before it, with its shocking colors and radical spatial distortion, the painting caused an uproar among French audiences when it was first shown in 1906, according to Martha Lucy, associate curator at the Barnes Foundation.

Matisse used a lot of vibrant yellows in the work, also known as The Joy of Life, particularly a warm yellow made from cadmium sulfide. Unfortunately, portions of the painting containing cadmium sulfide are turning, alternately, white or brown, degrading the work, which is part of the Barnes Foundation collection.

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