Interactive drawing

Art-historical analysis

A visible fragment of a red and white bordure of the original late Romanesque or early Gothic mural painting under the Friulian Cycle from around 1400, preserved on the northern wall.[1]

[1] HÖFLER 1997, p. 133. The four layers of mural paintings extend throughout the entire length of the northern nave wall. Three scenes depicted on the same layer of murals follow each other from left to right: St George on horseback fighting a dragon, the Crucifixion, and Mary on the throne with St Barbara and St Dorothea. Judging from the Cosmatesque bordure, which frames the scenes with a pattern of alternating eight-pointed stars and combinations of squares, Janez HÖFLER 1997, p. 133, places this cycle in the opus of the travelling Friulian painters from around 1400. A fragment of one of the intermediate stages of the mural with a crisscross border is located to the right of the scene with Mary on the throne. The Doubting Thomas fresco, dated 1492, is located to its right. Based on its stylistic characteristics, Janez Höfler places it in the opus of the master from the hypothetical Leonard Thanner’s workshop in Udine, known from the upper band depicting saints in Podnanos and Naklo near Škocjan (HÖFLER 1997, pp. 133–134). In addition to the abovementioned murals on the northern wall, the interior side of the former Gothic window in the southern wall features a fragment of a mural depicting a beardless bishop holding a key in his hand. Janez Höfler believes that this mural could possibly represent one of the patron saints of Friuli or Gorizia, perhaps St Hilary or St Tatian and that it shows traits of the soft style of the Carinthian orientation. Thus, it could be conditionally associated with the Master of Srednja vas near Šenčur, who painted in Predjama around 1450. On this basis, he dates the fresco between 1440 and 1450 (HÖFLER 1997, p. 134). The top of the Crucifixion scene was covered by a mural painting of the Crucifixion painted in 1860 by Giovani Serazin and Giovanni Trampus. The fresco is signed and dated. According to an oral source, it was taken down and restored by Mira Ličen Krmpotić.

The late 13th or early 14th century.[1]

[1] Cf. HÖFLER 1997, p. 133.

Technical analysis

Pigments: white lime (calcite), red earth (haematite)

Analytical techniques: OM, Raman, XRD

Already to the naked eye, the plaster looks bright. This is confirmed by the cross-sections of the collected samples, where the lime as a binder is dominated by small, bright grains of aggregate, which sometimes also includes much larger, angular, and darker grains (Fig. 1). The XRD analysis of the sample revealed a high calcite content, with the presence of quartz barely detectable. The plaster in question was probably made of lime and crushed limestone with some quartz particles, so it is a high-quality plaster known especially from the Italian Trecento painting as a base for al fresco painting.

Only the white and red colours – the white lime and red earth that the Raman spectroscopy identified as calcite and haematite – have been preserved. The binder is lime from the plaster.

The cross-section of the sample reveals painting on fresh plaster, i.e. al fresco. The potential use of limewash is still being established.

Only a part of the vertical red bordure has been preserved, which is lighter at the edges. It looks like the red colour was applied in two layers, the lower one lighter and the upper one darker, which, however, has not been confirmed by the sample. The bordure was painted with broad brushstrokes. No incisions or underdrawings can be discerned.

Gallery

Virtual 360° view

Stomaž, Succursal church of St Thomas, Stage 1 (Stomaž), 2024 (last updated 6. 9. 2024). Corpus picturarum muralium medii aevi, https://corpuspicturarum.zrc-sazu.si/en/poslikava/phase-1-stomaz/ (22. 6. 2025).