Conservation: revealing a hidden skeleton of death | Barniz de Pasto cabinet | V&A

Can you help us crack the code? Follow curator Nick, conservator Dana and conservation scientist Lucia on their journey to unravel the mysteries of this fascinating object. Made of a rare plant resin called mopa mopa and decorated with a technique known as Barniz de Pasto, the intricate piece is unlike anything else in our collection. When it was acquired in 2015, a routine x-ray revealed a remarkable discovery: a vivid skeleton of death, or memento mori, lay hidden beneath a layer of paint, applied some 300 years after it was made. Watch as the overpaint is finally removed to reveal the skeleton in all his glory, along with a cryptic message – the final part of the puzzle. 00:00 A secret skeleton 01:27 Colombian plant and animal life 02:03 What is mopa mopa? 04:14 European sea-monster or Andean deity? 05:10 Science conservation discoveries 06:08 Alterations and repairs 07:30 X-raying the cabinet lid 08:02 Micro computer tomography and XRF mapping 10:02 Meme
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