• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle
Danish painters used beer to create masterpieces, but not the way you think thumbnail

Danish painters used beer to create masterpieces, but not the way you think

May 26, 2023
Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America thumbnail

Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America

June 21, 2026
Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts thumbnail

Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts

June 21, 2026
Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense thumbnail

Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense

June 21, 2026
World Cup Tourists Love Ranch thumbnail

World Cup Tourists Love Ranch

June 21, 2026
Cuba Passes 176 Historic Reforms to Open Its Economy to Private Banks and Real Estate thumbnail

Cuba Passes 176 Historic Reforms to Open Its Economy to Private Banks and Real Estate

June 21, 2026
Potential first Atlantic tropical cyclone of the year developing in the Gulf thumbnail

Potential first Atlantic tropical cyclone of the year developing in the Gulf

June 18, 2026
LeBron James in active negotiations with Los Angeles Lakers on new deal thumbnail

LeBron James in active negotiations with Los Angeles Lakers on new deal

June 18, 2026
You Can’t Charm an AI Agent Over Dinner — But You Can Pass Its Background Check. Here’s How. thumbnail

You Can’t Charm an AI Agent Over Dinner — But You Can Pass Its Background Check. Here’s How.

June 18, 2026
Children's Lemonade Stand Robbed in Broad Daylight in Boston... thumbnail

Children’s Lemonade Stand Robbed in Broad Daylight in Boston…

June 15, 2026
Why Hasan Piker thinks Democrats are moving in his direction thumbnail

Why Hasan Piker thinks Democrats are moving in his direction

June 15, 2026
Boston Cop Wows Kilt-Wearing Scottish World Cup Fans with Viral Soccer Ball Juggling Display thumbnail

Boston Cop Wows Kilt-Wearing Scottish World Cup Fans with Viral Soccer Ball Juggling Display

June 15, 2026
Trump at 80 works to project strength as political woes mount thumbnail

Trump at 80 works to project strength as political woes mount

June 15, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
66 °f
Wellfleet
58 ° Tue
63 ° Wed
68 ° Thu
61 ° Fri
  • Login
  • Register
FREE Cape Cod News
DONATE
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Free Cape Cod News
No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
  • Videos
Home Lifestyle Nature

Danish painters used beer to create masterpieces, but not the way you think

FREE Cape Cod News by FREE Cape Cod News
May 26, 2023
in Nature, News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Donate
0
Danish painters used beer to create masterpieces, but not the way you think thumbnail
633
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

Behind a beautiful oil-on-canvas painting is, well, its canvas. To most art museum visitors, that fabric might be no more than an afterthought. But the canvas and its chemical composition are tremendously important to scientists and conservators who devote their lives to studying and caring for works of art.

When they examine a canvas, sometimes those art specialists are surprised by what they find. For instance, few conservators expected a 200-year-old canvas to contain proteins from yeast and fermented grains: the fingerprints of beer-brewing.

But those very proteins sit in the canvases of paintings from early 19th century Denmark. In a paper published on Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, researchers from across Europe say that Danes may have applied brewing byproducts as a base layer to a canvas before painters had their way with it.

“To find these yeast products—it’s not something that I have come across before,” says Cecil Krarup Andersen, an art conservator at the Royal Danish Academy, and one of the authors. “For us also, as conservators, it was a big surprise.”

The authors did not set out in search of brewing proteins. Instead, they sought traces of animal-based glue, which they knew was used to prepare canvases. Conservators care about animal glue since it reacts poorly with humid air, potentially cracking and deforming paintings over the decades.

The authors chose 10 paintings created between 1828 and 1837 by two Danes: Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, the so-called “Father of Danish Painting,” fond of painting ships and sea life; and Christen Schiellerup Købke, one of Eckersberg’s students at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, who went on to become a distinguished artist in his own right.

The authors tested the paintings with protein mass spectrometry: a technique that allows scientists to break a sample down into the proteins within. The technique isn’t selective, meaning that the experimenters could find substances they weren’t seeking.

Mass spectrometry destroys its sample. Fortunately, conservators in the 1960s had trimmed the paintings’ edges during a preservation treatment. The National Gallery of Denmark—the country’s largest art museum—had preserved the scraps, allowing the authors to test them without actually touching the original paintings.

Scraps from eight of the 10 paintings contained structural proteins from cows, sheep, or goats, whose body parts might have been reduced into animal glue. But seven paintings also contained something else: proteins from baker’s yeast and from fermented grains—wheat, barley, buckwheat, rye.

That yeast and those grains feature in the process of brewing beer. While beer does occasionally turn up in recipes for 19th century house-paint, it’s alien to works of fine art.

“We weren’t even sure what they meant,” says study author Fabiana Di Gianvincenzo, a biochemist at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia.

The authors considered the possibility that stray proteins might have contaminated the canvas from the air. But three of the paintings contained virtually no brewer’s proteins at all, while the other seven contained too much protein for contamination to reasonably explain.

“It was not something random,” says Enrico Cappellini, a biochemist at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, and another of the authors.

To learn more, the authors whipped up some mock substances containing those ingredients: recipes that 19th-century Danes could have created. The yeast proved an excellent emulsifier, creating a smooth, glue-like paste. If applied to a canvas, the paste would create a smooth base layer that painters could beautify with oil colors.

A mock primer made in the laboratory.
Making a paint paste in the lab, 19th-century style. Mikkel Scharff

Eckersberg, Købke, and their fellow painters likely didn’t interact with the beer. The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts provided its professors and students with pre-prepared art materials. Curiously, the paintings that contained grain proteins all came from earlier in the time period, between 1827 and 1833; it’s possible that the Academy might have changed its preparation methods by the mid-1830s.

The authors aren’t certain how widespread the brewer’s method might have been. If the technique was localized to early 19th century Denmark or even to the Academy, art historians today could use the knowledge to authenticate a painting from that era, which historians sometimes call the Danish Golden Age.

This was a time of blossoming in literature, in architecture, in sculpture, and, indeed, in painting. In art historians’ reckoning, it was when Denmark developed its own unique painting tradition, which vividly depicted Norse mythology and the Danish countryside. The authors’ work lets them glimpse lost details of the society under that Golden Age. “Beer is so important in Danish culture,” says Cappellini. “Finding it literally at the base of the artwork that defined the origin of modern painting in Denmark…is very meaningful.”

The work also demonstrates how craftspeople repurposed the materials they had. “Denmark was a very poor country at the time, so everything was reused,” says Andersen. “When you have scraps of something, you could boil it to glue, or you could use it in the grounds, or use it for canvas, to paint on.”

The authors are far from done. For one, they want to study their mock substances as they age. Combing through the historical record—artists’ diaries, letters, books, and other period documents—might also reveal tantalizing details of who used the yeast and how. Their work, then, makes for a rather colorful crossover of science with art conservation. “That has been the beauty of this study,” says Andersen. “We needed each other to get to this result.”

Read More

Tags: naturescience

FREE Digital Newspaper Subscription!
Sign up for your free digital subscription. The FREE Cape Cod News

Unsubscribe
FREE Cape Cod News

FREE Cape Cod News

Free Cape Cod News is what's happening in the Cape Cod, U.S and World & what people are talking about right now. Local newspaper. Stay in the know. Subscribe to get notified about our latest news.

Related Posts

Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America thumbnail
Business

Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America

by FREE Cape Cod News
June 21, 2026
Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts thumbnail
News

Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts

by FREE Cape Cod News
June 21, 2026
Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense thumbnail
Politics

Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense

by FREE Cape Cod News
June 21, 2026
World Cup Tourists Love Ranch thumbnail
News

World Cup Tourists Love Ranch

by FREE Cape Cod News
June 21, 2026
Load More
Please login to join discussion

Follow Us on Twitter

FREE Cape Cod News - Your source for local Cape Cod news, latest breaking U.S. and World news. Every day, all day. Subscribe for your favorite categories.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
USDC stablecoin breaks dollar peg following Silicon Valley Bank collapse thumbnail

USDC stablecoin breaks dollar peg following Silicon Valley Bank collapse

March 13, 2023
Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts thumbnail

Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts

June 21, 2026
Children of Boston Revel in the Experience of Shen Yun thumbnail

Children of Boston Revel in the Experience of Shen Yun

April 4, 2022
Cuba Passes 176 Historic Reforms to Open Its Economy to Private Banks and Real Estate thumbnail

Cuba Passes 176 Historic Reforms to Open Its Economy to Private Banks and Real Estate

0
World Cup Tourists Love Ranch thumbnail

World Cup Tourists Love Ranch

0
Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts thumbnail

Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts

0
Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America thumbnail

Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America

June 21, 2026
Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts thumbnail

Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts

June 21, 2026
Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense thumbnail

Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense

June 21, 2026

FREE Cape Cod News On Twitter

Today’s News

  • Miserable K-shaped economy might actually be fading, as lower-income families bounce back, says Bank of America June 21, 2026
  • Cumberland Locations Deliver Two $1M Wins in Massachusetts June 21, 2026
  • Republicans raise concerns that Trump’s Iran deal could come at Israel’s expense June 21, 2026
  • World Cup Tourists Love Ranch June 21, 2026
  • Cuba Passes 176 Historic Reforms to Open Its Economy to Private Banks and Real Estate June 21, 2026
Bring Cape Cod Home. Stunning beach prints, perfectly framed gifts. Bring Cape Cod Home. Stunning beach prints, perfectly framed gifts. Bring Cape Cod Home. Stunning beach prints, perfectly framed gifts.
ADVERTISEMENT
FREE Cape Cod News

Copyright © 2026 Free Cape Cod News

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
  • Login
  • Sign Up

Copyright © 2026 Free Cape Cod News