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BACKSTAGE

A fragile heritage
Conservation of the Last Supper

Leonardo painted the Last Supper using a dry technique: he applied the pigments to a white preparatory layer, which served to level and smooth the wall, instead of painting directly on the wet plaster. Hence the colours were not absorbed by the plaster, but rather superimposed on the wall. This made the painting much more vulnerable and fragile than fresco. This technique and the far from perfect environmental conditions caused the loss of pigment in the years immediately after the painting was completed. It also led to numerous attempts at restoration that over the centuries ended up by disfiguring its appearance and further harming its state of preservation.

Leonardo da Vinci, the Last Supper, 1494-1498, detail of Christ during the restoration by Pinin Brambilla Barcilon, 1977-1998. Milan, Cenacolo Vinciano Museum. © Mic – Direzione Regionale Musei Lombardia

Particolare della manica di Matteo durante il restauro di Pinin Brambilla Barcilon

Leonardo da Vinci, the Last Supper, 1494-1498, detail of Matteo during the restoration by Pinin Brambilla Barcilon, 1977-1998. Milan, Cenacolo Vinciano Museum © Mic – Direzione Regionale Musei Lombardia

For this reason, after the last major restoration work completed in 1999, measures were taken to prevent it from deteriorating further. The air quality is carefully controlled in the refectory, consequently only small groups of visitors are allowed inside, while the environmental factors are continuously monitored: these are some of the measures adopted to ensure the work’s preservation. Hence the painting can only be viewed by appointment, with a limited number of people and restricted viewing times in the refectory. An uncontrolled influx of visitors would lead to an excessive increase in both relative humidity, with increased condensation of water vapor, and particulate matter. For these reasons access has to follow a path divided by automatic doors that close and open alternately. This allows a first natural filtering of the air that enters from outside, rich in pollutants that might harm the painting.

particolare della tavola durante il restauro di Pinin Brambilla Barcilon

Leonardo da Vinci, the Last Supper, 1494-1498, table detail during the restoration byPinin Brambilla Barcilon, 1977-1998. Milan, Cenacolo Vinciano Museum. © Mic – Direzione Regionale Musei Lombardia

The state of conservation
Repainting and restoration over time

The Last Supper, 1901 ca (catalogo Anderson)

The image we see today offers only a faint memory of the masterpiece that could be admired by Leonardo’s contemporaries. Little is left of the original painting. The historical sources report that it had suffered considerable damage already a few years after its completion. In 1517 the canon Antonio De Beatis affirmed that the Last Supper “is beginning to decay”. In 1568 the artist and biographer Giorgio Vasari wrote that “we cannot make out anything more than a glowing stain”, badly blurred, and in 1625 Cardinal Federico Borromeo spoke of “falling flakes of paint”.
Clearly the Last Supper began to deteriorate a few years after its completion.
Leonardo did not use the traditional fresco technique to paint the Last Supper and the lunettes. He chose a method that would enable him to paint on dry plaster and work slowly, so as to be able to make changes to what he had already completed and lavish care on every least detail, working simultaneously on the whole surface of the painting. Fresco technique, on the other hand, requires the artist to work rapidly and does not allow for subsequent alterations, because the painter has to work on portions of plaster while it is still damp. Once it dries, no changes can be made. So this technique was poorly suited to Leonardo’s slow and meticulous approach, working with layer upon layer of paint.

The Last Supper after Luigi Cavenaghi’s restoration, 1908

In the Last Supper the artist painted on the wall as he would have done on a wooden panel, using greasy tempera made by mixing the pigments with egg yolk. This painting on dry plaster (called “a secco”) enabled him to create intense tones and refined effects of light.

Since the early 18th century, we have records of nine attempts at restoration of the Last Supper, although traces of similar earlier intervention have been found. In the past, however, restoration was understood as reconstruction and completion of the missing or decayed parts. For this reason it often involved repainting whole portions of the work. But by the 20th century, restoration was limited to preserving and consolidating the work with its gaps.

La chiesa e il refettorio di Santa Maria delle Grazie dopo il bombardamento dell’agosto 1943

The church and the refectory of Saint Maria delle Grazie after the allied bombing on 1943. © Mic – Direzione Regionale Musei Lombardia

Pinin Brambilla Barcilon a lavoro durante il restauro del Cenacolo, 1982

Pinin Brambilla Barcilon working on restoration of Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper, 1982. © Mic – Direzione Regionale Musei Lombardia

Mauro Pellicioli davanti al Cenacolo di Leonardo

Mauro Pellicioli and the Last Supper. The making of of the film “Il miracolo della Cena. Le vicende del capolavoro di Leonardo da Vinci”, by Luigi Rognoni, Rizzoli film, 1953

Pinin Brambilla Barcilon e Carlo Bertelli durante i restauri

Pinin Brambilla Barcilon and Carlo Bertelli working on restoration.

The last operation by Pinin Brambilla Barcilon, lasting over twenty years, from 1977 to 1999, for the first time sought to recover the parts painted by Leonardo, concealed by earlier overpainting, and restored to public view a work as close as possible to its original appearance.

Conservation technique of the <em>Last Supper</em>
INSIDE THE LAST SUPPER

Conservation technique of the Last Supper

Leonardo did not use the traditional fresco technique to paint the Last Supper and the lunettes. He chose a method that would enable him to paint on dry plaster and work slowly, so as to be able to make changes.

NEWS AND EVENTS

Notice to the public – Trade Union Assembly on Wednesday 13 November 2024

  • NEWS
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  • 11 November 2024
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  • Museo del Cenacolo Vinciano

Visitors are informed that from 12.30 to 14.30 on Wednesday 13 November 2024 an assembly of workers has been called by the trade unions. During this time slot, therefore, inconveniences for the public may occur due to the total or partial closure of the Last Supper Museum.

Notice to the public – Trade Union Assembly on Wednesday 13 November 2024

 Sales opening for the quarter November – December 2024 –January 2025

  • NEWS
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  • 24 September 2024
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  • Museo del Cenacolo Vinciano

On Tuesday, September 24th, starting from 12:00 pm, tickets for the quarter November – December 2024 and January 2025 will be available through the usual purchase channels
 
Please note that reservation is always mandatory for all types of tickets.

 Sales opening for the quarter November – December 2024 –January 2025

Increase in the number of visitors admitted to the museum

  • NEWS
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  • 27 February 2024
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  • Last Supper Museum

The experimentation to gradually increase the number of visitors allowed inside the Museo del Cenacolo Vinciano continues: starting on Friday, March 1, in conjunction with the start of Museo City, the event dedicated to enhancing the cultural heritage of the city of Milan, the number of visitors will be increased to 40 for all time slots, with an additional 105 daily tickets available (for a total of 215 additional tickets each day since the beginning of the experimentation).

Increase in the number of visitors admitted to the museum

Useful info for picking up radioguides

  • NEWS
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  • 31 July 2023 – 21 November 2024
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  • Museo del Cenacolo Vinciano

As a result of a new management of the service, it is announced that as of August 1, 2023, to collect the radio guides provided by the museum to bookers, it will be necessary to deposit an ID card at the special station located in the site’s ticket office.

Useful info for picking up radioguides
RESERVATIONS ARE COMPULSORY FOR ALL TYPES OF TICKETS
(*On Tuesday 24 September, starting at 12 noon, tickets for the November, December 2024 and January 2025 quarter will go on sale through the usual purchasing channels.)

For conservation reasons visit the visits last 15 minutes for a maximum number of 35 people at a time

Every visitor to the Museum
of the Last Supper

is part of an extraordinary
experience, also made
possible by the support
of all of you.

HOURS

From Tuesday to Sunday:
from 8.15 a.m. to 7 p.m.
(with last admission at 6.45 p.m.)

BOOKINGS

To guarantee everyone a safe visit,
in this first experimental phase,
the visits last 15 minutes for
a maximum number of 35 people at a time
Reservations are required.

INFO

Reservations* for the Cenacolo Museum will open every three months.
(*On Tuesday, June 18, starting at 12 noon, tickets for the August-September-October 2024 quarter will go on sale through the usual purchasing channels)