
British Man Discovers Nearly 400-Year-Old Paintings While Renovating Kitchen
NDTV
The paintings featured scenes from a 1635 book called Emblems by poet Francis Quarles.
A British man renovating his kitchen discovered a 400-year-old wall paintings of "national significance" in his flat in northern England. According to the BBC, Luke Budworth, who is a medical researcher at Leeds University, uncovered the friezes, dating back to about 1660, on a wall at his home in Micklegate in York city. Mr Budworth said he was "very excited" to find the paintings and want to conserve them for future generations.
According to the outlet, the 29-year-old was giving his flat's kitchen a refresh last year when contractors noticed a mysterious infrastructural situation underneath his cupboard. "I got my tools out and started chipping away at the board. As soon as I lifted the panel off, there it was, beautiful colours, with some still remaining layers of wallpaper from the Victorian era," he said.
Mr Budworth's investigation then led him to discover that the paintings featured scenes from a 1635 book called Emblems by poet Francis Quarles. He revealed that the newly exposed frieze depicts a Biblical scene in which a man in a cage is pulled along by an angel. It also features a man in a white cart who "looks like he's riding to the kingdom of heaven".
As per CNN, Mr Budworth then contacted Historic England about the paintings and the team helped him find out more about their significance. A representative was sent to survey the artwork and take some detailed professional photographs. The public body even gave Mr Budworth a high-quality, life-size replica of the frieze and advised him to cover it up in order to preserve it.
