HISTORY OF PLASTER

The Art of Plaster has a long history as one of mankind's ancient
architectural and decorative techniques, reaching a zenith in the ornamental ceilings of
Europe during the 16th Century. However, by the 19th Century, due to a shift in trends
toward machine-made products, this exquisite Art was almost lost.
Plaster Relief Artist Steve Selos is now making strides towards not
only reintroducing this rich decorative technique, but in advancing the very scope of
the medium. Selos has copyrighted a number of his more unique desgins, and in the European
tradition showing pride of craftmenship, he signs his work.

HISTORY OF DECORATIVE PLASTER AND STUCCO
Source: Institute for Masonry and Construction Research, University of Malta.
The oldest plaster were found in Mesopotamia (Region between the Tigris
and Euphrates rivers in W Asia ) around 9000 BC. People of 'Ain Ghazal in Jordan (Around 7500 BC )
used lime mixed with unheated crushed limestone to make plaster which was used on a large scale
for covering walls, floors, and hearths in their houses. Often, walls and floors were decorated
with red, finger-painted patterns and designs. In ancient India and China, renders in clay and
gypsum plasters were used to produce a smooth surface over rough stone or mud brick walls, while
in early Egyptian tombs, walls were coated with lime and gypsum plaster and the finished surface
was often painted or decorated. Greeks took recipe from Egyptians and they improved it .Greeks
philosopher and Historian Theofrast (360 B.C.) precisely described fabrication and application
of plaster. Modeled stucco was employed throughout the Roman Empire. The Romans used mixtures of
lime and sand to build up preparatory layers over which finer applications of gypsum, lime, sand
and marble dust were made; pozzolanic materials were sometimes added to produce a more rapid set.
Following the fall of the Roman Empire, the addition of marble dust to plaster to allow the
production of fine detail and a hard, smooth finish in hand-modeled and molded decoration was
not used until the Renaissance. Around the 4th century BC, the Romans discovered the principles
of the hydraulic set of lime, which by the addition of highly reactive forms of silica and alumina,
such as volcanic earths, could solidify rapidly even under water. There was little use of hydraulic
mortar after the Roman period until the 18th century.
Plaster decoration was widely used in Europe in the Middle Ages where, from the
mid-13th century, gypsum was used for internal and external plaster. Animal hair was employed as
reinforcement, with additives to assist set or plasticity including malt, beer, milk and eggs. In
the 14th century, decorative trawled plaster, called pargeting was being used in South-East England
to decorate the exterior of timber-framed buildings. This is a form of incised, molded or modeled
ornament, executed in lime putty or mixtures of lime and gypsum plaster. During this same period,
terracotta was reintroduced into Europe and was widely used for the production of ornament. In the
mid-15th century, Venetian skilled workers developed a new type of external facing, called Marmorino.
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