The work carried out so far consists firstly in consulting a very wide range of historical documents witnessing the importance of the smell of paint in the sensory landscape of the period under study. Meetings and online interviews with specialists in the history of material culture as well as restorers have enabled me to better understanding some of the issues raised by the written sources. The necessary material for the writing of the book has thus been gathered, making it possible to determine a ten-chapter structure.
Moreover, several articles and papers has allowed the dissemination of the first research results.
Built on this research, the project of historical reconstruction of the smell of a painter's studio in collaboration with the Lyon Fine-Arts Museum (secondment) has been considerably delayed by the pandemic circumstances despite the strong support provided by the cultural department of the Museum. The curator in charge of the 19th century collections, S. Paccoud, immediately encouraged me to work with the color cabinet of Fleury Richard, a colorist painter from Lyon at the beginning of the 19th century, whose studio collection is owned by the museum (private diary, archives, etc.).
Along with the consultation of these documents at the Museum, the first step was to analyze the pigments to better understand them. This led to two sessions of analysis carried out on the raw pigments and then on the paintings by a team of scientists from Université Claude-Bernard Lyon 1: Amina Bensalah-Ledoux (Institut Lumière Matière), Davy Carole (Laboratoire Multi-matériaux et interfaces), Cécile Le Luyer (ILM), Gérad Panczer (ILM) and Anne Pillonnel (ILM). The results of the analyses have been presented at a public lecture at the Lyon Fine-Arts Museum, on a radio program and are the topic of two collective articles in preparation which will be submitted to two open access journals.
Thanks to the advice of a renowned restorer and specialist of the 19th-century material culture of painting, B. Trémolière, we identified four smells dominating the atmosphere of the painter’s studio: rabbit-skin glue, turpentine, varnishes, and linseed oil. During a visit at the Center for Research and Restoration of Museum of France organized by M.-A. Paulin, a restorer, the exchanges with the restoration team gave me precious details concerning the reconstruction of varnishes used in the 18th century, which contained several natural resins still used today in perfumery. With the perfume composition company Givaudan (a long-time patron of the museum), a meeting with perfumers who will prepare the olfactory reconstructions as well as a perfume evoking the different components of the smell of a painter’s studio has been scheduled for March 2022 with a goal to present the project to the Museum in November 2022.