The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, May 22, 2013
 
17th century shipwreck to be freeze-dried, rebuilt by researchers at Texas A&M University
This 2001 photo provided by Texas A&M University shows the hull of the 17th-century French ship La Belle at the Texas A&M University Center for Maritime Archaeology and Conservation in Bryan, Texas. Researchers plan to rebuild the 54 ½-foot vessel, which will become the centerpiece of the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin. The supply ship was built in 1684 and sank two years later in a storm on Matagorda Bay, about midway between Galveston and Corpus Christi, Texas. AP Photo/Texas A&M University.

By: Michael Graczyk, Associated Press

BRYAN, TX (AP).- More than three centuries ago, a French explorer's ship sank in the Gulf of Mexico, taking with it France's hopes of colonizing a vast piece of the New World — modern-day Texas.

Like La Salle in 1685, researchers at Texas A&M University are in uncharted waters as they try to reconstruct his vessel with a gigantic freeze-dryer, the first undertaking of its size.

By placing the ship — La Belle — in a constant environment of up to 60 degrees below zero, more than 300 years of moisture will be safely removed from hundreds of European oak and pine timbers and planks. The freeze-dryer, located at the old Bryan Air Force base several miles northwest of College Station, is 40 feet long and 8 feet wide — the biggest such machine on the continent devoted to archaeology.

Researchers will then rebuild the 54 ½-foot vessel, which will become the centerpiece of the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin.

From a historical perspective, it's "an icon of a small event that dramatically changed the course of Texas history," said Jim Bruseth, who led the Texas Historical Commission effort to recover the remains.

The supply ship was built in 1684 and sank two years later in a storm on Matagorda Bay, about midway between Galveston and Corpus Christi.

"When La Belle sank, that doomed La Salle's colony and opened up the door for Spain to come in and occupy Texas," Bruseth said. "People can see firsthand how history can turn on a dime."

"It's an important piece in ship architecture," said Peter Fix, conservator at the school's Center for Maritime Archaeology and Conservation. Researchers have determined that unlike earlier vessels, the frames on La Belle were marked specifically by the French craftsmen so the wood comprising the hull could follow the complex curve of the ship.

"This was the age of Enlightenment when math was coming into more play," Fix said.

After a more than decade-long hunt, Texas Historical Commission archaeologists found it in 1995 in 12 feet of murky water. Then began the tedious recovery that involved constructing a dam around the site.

After the water was pumped out, teams dug through up to 6 feet of mud in the Gulf of Mexico seabed to retrieve the nearly intact ship and some 700,000 items, from swords, cannons and ammunition to beads and mirrors intended for trade. Archaeologists also found one skeleton, believed to be a crew member or settler among the some 40 people aboard.

The ship was then transferred to the Texas A&M lab, where the water-logged wood has been immersed in a chemical solution to keep it solid.

Initially, the ship was being reassembled in a two-stage chemical process, but as oil prices rose, so did the cost of the key chemical, polyethylene glycol. They decided the freeze-dry process was more economical and would shorten the preservation timeframe. So, the hull was disassembled and the wood was categorized and digitally scanned so that they could make molds of its original shape.

A New York-based firm that specializes in scientific equipment built the submarine-like freeze dryer.

"If we were to take any piece of wood, say it's been in the water for 300 years, and pull it out, it would shrink, crack, warp within a couple of days," Fix said. "The physical stress on wood would essentially cause it to fall apart and crumble and powder into pieces."

But scientists know that at the right temperature and pressure, water can go from being solid to gas and skip the liquid phase.

"It's a slow, controlled process and depending on the thickness of material, over four to six or seven months, we know that timber has lost most of its bound water and it's safe to bring out," Fix said, noting that they're experimenting with smaller pieces to "make sure nothing goes wrong."

A similar preservation using freeze-dryer technology is planned for a medieval ship discovered in 2002 in Newport, South Wales. That vessel is about twice the length of La Belle.

The La Belle rebuilding will start late next year at the Bullock Museum.

"I can't wait," said Bruseth, who is serving as guest curator for the exhibit. "It's just fantastic to see this project reach the point where we'll actually be reassembling the ship as a permanent installation."

Rene-Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle was the first European to travel the Mississippi River south to the Gulf, claiming all the land along the Mississippi and its tributaries for France in 1682. In 1685, he sailed from France with more than 300 colonists aboard four ships, La Belle among them, to establish a settlement at the mouth of the Mississippi.

Maps of the time show he believed the river was closer to Mexico, and his expedition missed the Mississippi by hundreds of miles.

"They were guessing," Bruseth said.

His team established a colony near Matagorda Bay, but it was ravaged by disease, rattlesnakes and Indians. Three years later, La Salle led a handful of survivors inland in search of the Mississippi. The explorer didn't make it out of Texas; he was murdered by his own men.


Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

August 15, 2012

Historic artifacts, kept in storage for years, are now on display at New York's Capitol

From Medieval to Modern: Christie's Fall Sale of Japanese & Korean Art in September

MoMA presents first U.S. museum solo installation by artist collective Slavs and Tatars

Christie's presents the Fall Sale of South Asian Modern and Contemporary Art

American art and Modernism provides common language in cross-cultural dialogue

Exhibition of works of art from the Serapión & Belk Collection opens at the Museo de Arte de Ponce

Longtime Cosmopolitan magazine editor Helen Gurley Brown, 90, dies in New York

Handle with fun: RM Auctions lifts the gavel on Bruce Weiner's world famous Microcar Museum

Philadelphia Museum of Art acquires "The Fox and the Grapes" dressing table

Indian and Southeast Asian art astounds at Christie's New York in September

Preview Berlin Art Fair to expand its dynamic profile for eight edition at Tempelhof Airport

1907 Ultra High Relief Double Eagle brings $1+ million to lead Heritage's $27.5+ Million auction

Chrysler Museum shakes up contemporary collection with installation of Remix Redux

The Fifth Annual Governors Island Art Fair opens September 1

Array of London Olympic memorabilia up for auction

17-foot-long Burmese python caught in Everglades; taken to Florida Museum of Natural History

Longest-running UK comic book 'The Dandy' may end

Fine Art Asia 2012 introduces renowned galleries and forges new partnerships

Bellevue Arts Museum focuses on fiber for second edition of BAM Biennial

August 14, 2012

Cleveland Museum of Art acquires two stellar Classical and Pre-Columbian objects

Art Fund launches £3.9m appeal to acquire Nicolas Poussin masterpiece for the nation

Gagosian Gallery presents John Chamberlain Sculptures in NYC's Seagram Building Plaza

An important private collection of 19th century sculpture leads Christie's Decorative Arts Sale

A unique medal awarded to Chiang Kai-shek on offer at Spink's Hong Kong auction

Sotheby's appoints Dr. Tao Wang to head New York Chinese Works of Art Department

Kerlin Gallery presents summer group exhibition featuring new works by six artists

New works by six contemporary artists added to The Jewish Museum's permanent exhibition

Imperial Chinese porcelain to take centre stage this November at Eskenazi in London

Century of Royal London brought to life in Museum of London Royal Timetrip app

The Studio Museum announces 2012-13 Artists in Residence; chosen from a pool of over 200

Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents West Coast debut of experimental filmmaker Alia Syed

Akron Art Museum Director to step down after record tenure New Chief Curator to start August 20

Lars Von Trier challenges the people to reinterpret six great works of art through the lens of their camera

Eric Knowles heads to Liverpool to unearth hidden gems for Bonhams

Famous street artists inspired by Klimt in live art show

Groundbreaking comic artist, educator Kubert dies

4 dead, about 20 injured in big Seoul fire near a 600-year-old palace

August 13, 2012

Stedelijk Museum to reopen in September after ambitious renovation and expansion project

"Nomads and Networks" at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery presents the artistic side of Iron Age nomadic life

Five decades of paintings, watercolours, prints and drawings by John Bellany at Open Eye Gallery

Berlin Art Week : A response to increasing competition among the world's art centres

Renovations and a new work by Grayson Perry add to Morris Gallery's rich tapestry

Resident artist Mike Osborne's photographs on view at Artpace San Antonio

Elmhurst Art Museum opens six rambunctious. full bodied and gregarious exhibitions

Italian man cleared of Auschwitz barbed wire theft after it was found in his luggage

Project One Gallery presents an exhibition by Facebook's first resident artist

Acclaimed art installation by Gordon Matta-Clark to address pollution problems in the midwest

Jonathan Ferrara Gallery showcases artists from the burgeoning St. Claude Arts District of New Orleans

Manchester's Castlefield Gallery re-launches with an exhibition of new work by artist Dave Griffiths

You can afford these stories at the tunnerl this October by the West Harlem Art Fund

Newly installed hearing aid compatible technology makes Museum visit more enjoyable

New Installation by Glasgow-based artist Mick Peter on view at Collective's space in Edinburgh

Salon des Artes at W.I.P. presents: The Battle of the Artists; a live artist "Game Show"

August 12, 2012

BioMuseo designed by Frank Gehry aims to safeguard our natural heritage for the future

Aperture Foundation announces dynamic first app: Merce Cunningham: 65 Years

First exhibition worldwide by photographer Romney Müller-Westernhagen opens at Camera Work

MoMA retrospective explores the avant-garde works by moving image artists The Quay Brothers

Back by popular demand: Famed Dutch and Flemish masterpieces return to Peabody Essex Museum

Leslie Sacks Fine Art opens an exhibition showcasing the most recent additions to the collection

Jupiter Artland in Edinburgh unveils exciting line up of three artist commissions for 2012

Painterly video animations of abstract and figurative scenes by Jacco Olivier on view at Artpace

Summer series of exhibitions at Quint Contemporary features works by Kim MacConnel

Small Skyscraper by artist Chris Burden towers over Pasadena, California

Steve Bandoma: New Work from Kinshasa on view at Jack Bell Gallery in London

Jessica Rath's "take me to the apple breeder" opens at Jack Hanley Gallery in New York

Exhibit at the National World War II Museum focuses on scientists' role in Holocaust

Parrish road show features two new artist's projects

Margaret Evangeline's Sabachthani Why have Your Forsaken Me? to be published in November

AIPAD Photography Show New York announces 2013 Show Dates

Dreams, Imagination and Reality: Seattle's Vrijmoet selected for the 5th Beijing International Art Biennale

Clark House opens Prabhakar Pachpute's "Canary in a Coalmine" exhibition

August 11, 2012

Exhibition featuring an entire range of media by Ed Ruscha on view at Kunsthaus Bregenz

1873 dime sells for a pretty penny: $1.6 million at Stack's Bowers Galleries in Philadelphia

"Eyes Closed/Eyes Open: Recent Acquisitions in Drawings" on view at MoMA

Detroit Institute of Arts offers rare opportunity to see Johannes Vermeer painting

Dr. Nancy Berliner appointed Wu Tung Curator of Chinese Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"Dear John & Dominique": Letters and drawings from the Menil archives on view at the Menil Collection

State Hermitage Museum presented a universal Hermitage Museum application for iPhone and iPad

Propeller of 1946 United States Douglas C-53 Skytrooper plane crash in Swiss glacier

National Gallery of Victoria celebrates 100,000th visitor to "Napoleon: Revolution to Empire"

Civil War remnants discovered by archaeologists beneath Virginia's College of William and Mary

Lisa Corinne Davis presented by Gavin Spanierman at Peter Marcelle Gallery in Bridgehampton

California's Designing Women, 1896-1986: A Museum of California Design exhibition at the Autry

Asia Society Museum appoints Michelle Yun as Curator, Modern and Contemporary Art

Bertrand Delacroix Gallery presents artists Elizabeth Allison & Joseph Adolphe

"Leslie Hewitt: Where Paths Meet, Turn Away, Then Align Again" on view at Artpace in San Antonio

Norman Rockwell Museum to present "Girl Scout Festival: A Centennial Celebration"

Museum of Glass selects Joanna Sikes as Director of External Affairs

Milwaukee Art Museum hires new Exhibition Designer

August 10, 2012

Four installations by Antony Gormley featured in exhibition at Bank of Brazil Cultural Centre

Sotheby's Hong Kong 2012 Autumn sale series to be held from 5 to 9 October

Guggenheim Museum in New York acquires sculptural work by George Segal

Getty Villa displays ancient masterpiece on loan from the Capitoline Museums in Rome

Increased turnover boosts Mallet's figures as it enters new markets for art and antiques

Life-size 'Airfix' artwork of 1959 Le Mans-winning Aston Martin offered for sale at Bonhams

Claremont Rug Company acquires globally significant private collection of 19th century Oriental carpets

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam celebrates John Cage on his 100th Anniversary

University of Florida's Harn Museum of Art appoints Carol McCusker as Curator of Photography

Wang Xingwei curates new exhibition at Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing

ASGARD: The conserved 1914 Howth gun running vessel goes on display at the National Museum of Ireland

Throckmorton Fine Art exhibiting Buddhist and Mayan sculptures at Antique Ethnographic Show

555 Nonprofit Gallery and Studios: Ex-jail cells serve as artist studios in southwest Detroit

Second annual Texas Contemporary Art Fair returns to Houston

Middle class ice sculptures melt away at the Republican and Democratic Conventions

Phoenix Art Museum's new Latin American photography exhibition examines politics, power of place

Exhibition of young Japanese art opens at the Kunstraum Kreuzberg

Dennis Lee Mitchell's dark smoke patterns on paper on view at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art

Baseball cards found in attic and Babe Ruth top $4.5+ million Heritage Sports Platinum Night event

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site