Encaustic and the Photographic Image

By Deborah Winiarski

In its infancy, photography was compared, often unfavorably, with painting and was viewed as a shortcut to art. Early creative photographers such as Gertrude Käsebier approached the camera as a tool, manipulating  images to reach an artistic vision, while those such as Paul Strand valued ‘straight’ rather than manipulated photographic printing, valuing the formal qualities of light, shadow and sharp focus that are unique to photography. A champion of photography as a fine art form in its entire range of expression was Alfred Stieglitz, who was responsible for first introducing photography into museum collections.

The artists whose works are shown here bring the rich histories of encaustic and photography together in unique and intriguing ways. Whether using vintage photographs, digital images, remote capturing, or cyanotype, these artists have found their distinctive visual expressions in the combination of encaustic and the photographic image.


Jill Skupin Burkholder

Jill Skupin Burkholder, Fisher, Hidden Catskills, 2014; encaustic, charcoal and image from a trail camera on birch panel; 24 x 24 x 3 inches

“A motion-sensitive trail camera records and instantly transmits surveillance-style snapshots to an iPhone. These ‘photo texts’ from the animals are triggered by chance creating random, intimate compositions uniting the world of the seen with the unseen. We become joined for an instant through the mystical window of technology.”


Elena De La Ville

delaville_torso_trees-3Elena De La Ville, Torso/Trees, 2015; photography, wax, resin; 24 x 24 inches

“In the Torso series I deal with the change and transformation as we grow and age. I photograph the human body and capture earth images, merging them to show our interconnectedness and dependency on the physical world. Through ephemeral materials, paint and wax, I address sensuality, ageing, and transience.”


Heidi F. Beal

beal_talking-to-god-behind-the-indian-wall_3Heidi F. Beal, Talking To God Behind The Indian Wall, 2015; mixed media with encaustic and photography on panel; 13 x 13 inches

“I often use one photographic image repeatedly in my work to explore a theme from different perspectives. The female form in this piece is an example of this practice. She ‘talks to God’ with her back to a sacred garden setting.”


Jeri Eisenberg

eisenberg_momiji-no14_3Jeri Eisenberg, Momiji No.14, 2014; archival ink on Kozo paper Infused with encaustic medium;
triptych, 36 x 34 inches

“As a photo-based artist, my work is indisputably tied to the real world; but I de-emphasize photography’s representational or reporting qualities, and stress instead its expressive nature. I want to convey an essence and provide a visceral connection. The various techniques I use, including encaustic, help to achieve this.”


Fran Forman

forman_portrait2Fran Forman, Portrait No.2, 2015; photograph, photo montage, rice paper, oil paints, gold leaf, encaustic on birch panel; 12 x 12 inches

“My photographic images and mixed media works blur the boundaries between the real and the unreal. These visual narratives evoke a sense of transience, longing, memory, and dislocation. My process is an act of intuition and investigation. I construct dreamy visions and altered habitats with found or borrowed disparate sources.”


Marybeth Rothman

rothman_laurali_2Marybeth Rothman, Laurali, 2015; photo collage, encaustic and mixed media; 40 x 48 x 2 inches

“The photo collage in this series consists of my photographs, vintage photographs and ephemera that have been digitally altered, combined and repurposed to add narrative texture to the Mermaid’s bodies and garments.”


Wayne Montecalvo

montecalvo_three-out-of-four_2Wayne Montecalvo, Three Out of Four, 2016; stained paper, ink, acrylic paint, silkscreen prints layered on wax, wax on panel; 29 x 64 inches

“I am working with the idea of a photograph being more than representation. Staining the paper gives me more to work with, and allows the unpredictable. I want the observer to view the image as a whole composition and see more than only subject matter.”


Susan Lasch Krevitt

laschkrevitt_indoor-cowgirl_1Susan Lasch Krevitt, Indoor Cowgirl, 2015; cyanotype, cotton textiles and encaustic on birch panel; 6 x 12 x 2 inches. Photo: M.M. Krevitt

“This new series of work reaches back to explore the shadows of memory. I use encaustic and the cyanotype process to transform both images and three-dimensional objects. This is a step out of my sculptural comfort zone and into a more planar surface.”


Beauty and Truth: The Art / Science Connection

By Deborah Winiarski

In his 1930 essay, The World As I See It *, Albert Einstein wrote, “The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science.” As an artist, I too see the natural overlap of science and art. Investigation of the mysterious is at the core of both practices. Both artists and scientists ask the biggest of questions of themselves and of their work: What is true? Why does it matter?

Though artists look to reconcile their own feelings within their work and scientists deal primarily with probabilities, they both search deeply and painstakingly for answers in places where hand and mind are free—the scientist’s laboratory and the artist’s studio. The works below find direct inspiration from the mystery of the sciences—biology, geology, astronomy, physics—bringing the beauty of these micro and macro worlds to light.


Kay Hartung

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Kay Hartung, Bio Flow 5, 2015; encaustic, pan pastel, pigment stick on wood panel;
30 x 30 inches

“My work is inspired by the microscopic world. I imagine the energy and interactions that go on in the body and the mind to produce action and thought. I am exploring the connections between science and art, conscious of the profound effects that these minute biological forms have on the universe.”


Elise Wagner

wavehorizoni-72dpiElise Wagner, Wave Horizon I, 2016, encaustic and oil on panel, 42 x 42 inches.
Photo: Rebekah Johnson Photography

“Concepts for my work often coincide with breakthroughs in science that I find particularly compelling. Wave Horizon is my interpretation of contemporary astronomical discoveries about gravitational waves. The image is not interpreted in a literal sense, rather is a starting point for color and inspiration for the creation of movement, depth and atmosphere.”


Kim Bernard

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Kim Bernard, Wave Phenomena, 2016; fabric, dye, encaustic medium, stainless steel;
disc diameters range from 18 – 54 inches

“This installation was inspired by images of sound vibrations and the natural phenomena of the movement of sound made visible. The book, Cymatics, by Hans Jenny was the catalyst for the series, where meticulously recorded sound vibrations at various frequencies were made visible through the use of powders, pastes and liquids.”


Lorrie Fredette

fredette_commoncarrier_1

Lorrie Fredette, Common Carrier, 2015; beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, nylon line, steel;
52 x 48 x 48 inches

Common Carrier, suspended in an important artery in this venue, utilizes the symbolic references of vessel and corridor. The architecture serves as the ‘host’ of an unknown contagion where the interchange of virus (the art) and victim (the building) reproduce and escape to reach its next target (the viewer).”


Jeanne Heifetz

heifetz_surface-tension-22_3Jeanne Heifetz, Surface Tension 22, 2013; copper, graphite, bronze, zinc, nickel, wax, on quartzite; 24 x 24 inches. Photo: Jean Vong

“We are hard-wired to seek out visual pattern, yet patterns that are easy to discern do not hold our attention. Foam’s unstable configuration challenges us to perceive its underlying architecture. Confronted by complex, hybrid forms that refuse to resolve into a predictable arrangement, our neural pathways remain excited, questioning, alive.”


Tracy Spadafora

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Tracy Spadafora, Intervention (Part 3), 2016, encaustic and mixed media on braced wood panel,
20 x 20 x 2 inches

“This piece, from my DNA series, suggests the complex and often delicate relationship of man and nature. The bittersweet vine added to this work provides a visual reference to DNA, which is also echoed in the twisting red pattern below.”


Laura Moriarty

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Laura Moriarty, Driving Around In The Mountains, 2016, beeswax, pigments, 12.5 x 14 x 8 inches

“Taking poetic license with geology, I compare processes of the studio with processes of the earth. Layers of color form the strata of a working process where the immediacy of the hand is replaced with a sense of deep time.”


* The complete text of Albert Einstein’s essay, The World As I See It, can be found here.

Poetics of the Found

By Deborah Winiarski

In 1961, William C. Seitz, then Associate Curator of Painting and Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art, curated the exhibition and wrote the accompanying book, The Art of Assemblage, which recognized for the first time that “. . . collages, ‘readymades,’ ‘found objects,’ ‘surrealist objects,’ ‘combine-paintings,’ and other varieties of assemblage are diverse manifestations of a common tradition which is unique to the 20th century.”

Assemblage, in art, is work that incorporates found objects, fragments, and everyday materials – elements not originally intended as art materials – into a composition.  The ready-made elements may be identifiable within a work or transformed to some degree but, within the context of an entire composition, take on a new aesthetic or symbolic meaning.  Assemblage works may be considered collages with aspects of volume.  The artists below continue this ‘new’ tradition into the 21st century, creating works in encaustic that incorporate common materials in uncommon ways each giving expression to their unique and poetic vision.


Catherine Nash

Nash_Catherine_Traversing Stars_4_72ppi

Catherine Nash, Traversing Stars, 2013; encaustic, raku fired clay, handmade paper and found objects in an antique drawer; 15 x 15 x 2.5 inches

“I resonate with the Japanese aesthetics of wabi and sabi . . . concepts of solitude, simplicity, longing and the passage of time. In my poetic assemblages, I juxtapose antique, vintage and found objects with color and drawing to explore deep experiences of nature and the metaphysics of place and memory.”


Graceann Warn

WARNLitanyBox

Graceann Warn, Litany Box, 2015; found papers, wax and objects in vintage box; 8 x 22 x 2 inches

“I use foundry patterns, old drawers and antique boxes to house little worlds whose themes include the mystery of the cosmos, travel, magic and chance. I enjoy collecting the objects as much as the challenge of saying ‘just enough’ in order to leave the rest to the imagination.”


Nancy Azara

Azara_ThirdMoon_3_1

Nancy Azara, Third Moon, 2011; carved and painted wood with aluminum leaf and encaustic;
84 x 84 x 12 inches. Photography: Christopher Burke

“The tree is the inspiration for my work. The lumber and logs have rough and elegant elements. The wood is carved and then “dressed” with color using paint, encaustic and gilding. Encaustic gives the work a semi-opaque, jewel-like glow. These combined elements record a journey of memory, images and ideas.”


Jeffrey Hirst

Pearl.1.MOO (1)

Jeffrey Hirst, Pearl, 2014; wood, encaustic, gesso, screenprint, epoxy; 17 x 16 x 16 inches. Photography: Don Felton, Almac Camera

“For years, I have been interested in building images in layers. I started making relief constructions in late 2012 and have cycled back and forth between painting and sculpture since then.  My current work combines sculpture and painting with an emphasis on the role as a builder.”


Lisa Zukowski

zukowski_darkhorse_4

Lisa Zukowski, Dark Horse (Bundle Series), 2015; encaustic, tar, burlap, coffee bag, encaustic monotype on cloth, embroidery, old clothes, string; 14 x 8 x 6 inches

“Works in the Bundle Series are vessels, reliquaries of a sort, that symbolically, and sometimes literally, hold and protect that which I find precious. Encased in a protective shell of encaustic and wrapped in string are bits of old clothes, scraps of encaustic monotypes, coffee bags, textiles and shredded ephemera.”


Miles Conrad

Conrad_Miles

Miles Conrad, Finding More Time In Your Life, 2015, reclaimed book, sweater, wax, 9 x 6 x 4 inches

“In the series, Self Help, I use discarded books from psychology programs, get-rich-quick guides and business management paradigms to serve as platforms for disembodied phallic forms made from wax, hair, clothing, debris, soap, etc. My intention is to complicate given notions of masculine gender identity, sexual normativity and cultural power.”


Sherrie Posternak

posternak_ElTriunfoDeLaVida_2.

Sherrie Posternak , El Triunfo de la Vida (The Triumph of Life), 2013; encaustic, dress, obituary column, fabric flower petals, cord, vintage beads, lace, joss paper, pigment stick on absorbent fiber; 36 x 24 inches. Photography: Robin Stancliff

“The dress represents youth and vitality, which always emerges, set against the inevitability of death in the cycle of life and death.”


Lisa Barthelson

Barthelson_illuminations4,familydebrisseries,organicmatter_1

Lisa Barthelson, illuminations 4, family debris: organic matter, 2012; mixed media: assemblage with monoprint, organic found objects and encaustic on cradled panel; 36 x 36 x 7 inches

“The mixed media assemblage from the illuminations series, uses an original family debris monoprint as the base for an encaustic and organic family debris composition comprising, egg shells, grape stems, pistachio nut shells, and coffee grounds. The assemblage shines the light on our family’s life, consumption and what remains.”


Nancy Youdelman

Youdelman_ButterflyQueen_1

Nancy Youdelman, Butterfly Queen, 2015, mixed media with encaustic, 18 x 8 x 8.5 inches. Photography: Michael Karibian

“The Bound Doll series is a response to the bittersweet experience of finding secondhand rag dolls and cast-off costume jewelry. At one time, these things were most likely precious to someone but have become tarnished and broken with time.”


Cecile Chong

Chong_MakeAWish_2

Cecile Chong, Make a Wish, 2015, encaustic and mixed media on wooden paddle, 15 x 9 inches

“I create cross-cultural narratives by juxtaposing appropriated images from vintage children’s books and other found images within layers of encaustic. Pigments from Morocco and India, volcanic ash from Ecuador, rice paper, metallic leaf, beads and circuit board components become cultural signifiers, metaphorically representing layering of cultures, identity and places.”


Digging Deep

BY DEBORAH WINIARSKI

“It doesn’t make much difference how the paint is put on as long as something has been said.

Technique is just a means of arriving at a statement.” 

— Jackson Pollock

 Creating Art requires the heart and soul of the artist. For Art to happen, artists must dig deep within themselves and risk being known through their work. Their preferences, concerns – the way they need to see the world – become seeable, identifiable. It’s a risky business. The identity of the artist and their work become synonymous and cannot be separated.

Additionally, the medium of encaustic allows for digging deep in a literal sense. The yielding nature of wax makes it possible for artists to scrape, carve, incise, excavate – revealing the surface below. The physical act of digging becomes a vital means to expression. For these artists, metaphor and process merge.

Each of the artists featured below dig deep in their own unique way – creating works that are distinct to their personal voice and vision.


Patricia Aaron, Aina, 2015; wax, pigment, ink, mixed media on panel; 48 x 48 inches

Patricia Aaron, Aina, 2015; wax, pigment, ink, mixed media on panel; 48 x 48 inches

Patricia Aaron, Portal, 2015; wax, pigment, ink, marble dust on panel; 48 x 48 inches. Photos: Dana McGrath

Patricia Aaron, Portal, 2015; wax, pigment, ink, marble dust on panel; 48 x 48 inches.
Photos: Dana McGrath

“As an ardent observer, I arrive in every new place with open eyes and an open mind. I explore the community, listening to the rhythm of culture and language and absorbing the vibrancy of my surroundings. The elements of human connection and of raw landscape are a vital part of my work.”

— Partricia Aaron


Jeff Juhlin, Ullull Kai (Blue Ocean), 2016; pigmented beeswax, oil, paper, ink on panel; 20 x 18 inches

Jeff Juhlin, Ullull Kai (Blue Ocean), 2016; pigmented beeswax, oil, paper, ink on panel; 20 x 18 inches

Jeff Juhlin, Stratum, 2015; pigmented beeswax, oil, paper, ink on panel; 39 x 35 inches

Jeff Juhlin, Stratum, 2015; pigmented beeswax, oil, paper, ink on panel; 39 x 35 inches

“This body of work is about discovery and revelation. I build up the surface and create veils of drawings, paper, pigments and other materials and then excavate, removing sections and areas of the work exposing the mystery of the painting’s history and evolution.”

— Jeff Juhlin


Christine S. Aaron, Vestige IV, 2015; wood, mirror shards, encaustic; 15.5 x 15.5 x 2 inches

Christine S. Aaron, Vestige IV, 2015; wood, mirror shards, encaustic; 15.5 x 15.5 x 2 inches

Christine S. Aaron, Vestige V, 2015; wood, mirror shards, ink, encaustic; 15.5 x 15.5 x 2 inches. Photos: David Wohl

Christine S. Aaron, Vestige V, 2015; wood, mirror shards, ink, encaustic; 15.5 x 15.5 x 2 inches. Photos: David Wohl

“My work investigates memory, time and the fragility of human connection. The content of the work guides my materials choices. Found tree fragments serve as metaphor for the life cycle. Their history, recorded in rings, remains hidden from view, the way humans hold within the physical and emotional marks of personal experience.“

— Christine S. Aaron


Deborah Kapoor, Residual, 2015, encaustic and mixed media, 16 x 12 x 2 inches

Deborah Kapoor, Residual, 2015, encaustic and mixed media, 16 x 12 x 2 inches

Deborah Kapoor, Peripheral Damage, 2015, encaustic and mixed media, 16 x 12 x 2 inches

Deborah Kapoor, Peripheral Damage, 2015, encaustic and mixed media, 16 x 12 x 2 inches

“I am interested in the connection between nature and the body. In these pieces, I am exploring the process of transformation from one state to another. Working from inspiration image sources of bones, bandages, and blood, I am thinking about the literal and metaphorical aftermath of cutting and burning on the body.”

–Deborah Kapoor


Maritza Ruiz-Kim, Concepción #6, cave, 2014; archival pigment print on moab, wax pigment, 4.5 x 7.5 x 6 inches

Maritza Ruiz-Kim, Concepción #6, cave, 2014; archival pigment print on moab, wax pigment, 4.5 x 7.5 x 6 inches

Maritza Ruiz-Kim, Concepción #1, molten, 2014; digital photograph, archival pigment print on Canson BFK; 28.25 x 20.5 inches

Maritza Ruiz-Kim, Concepción #1, molten, 2014; digital photograph, archival pigment print on Canson BFK; 28.25 x 20.5 inches

Concepcíon is the first image in my series titled Core. I use molten, pigmented wax to form a portrait of a specific persona, then I make photographic records of that fleeting moment when the material is fluid. Subsequent iterations of the persona track its emergence into the public eye.”

–Maritza Ruiz-Kim


Sarah E. Rehmer, positive/negative stories #2, 2015, encaustic and paper on panel, 8 x 10 x 4 inches

Sarah E. Rehmer, positive/negative stories #2, 2015, encaustic and paper on panel, 8 x 10 x 4 inches

Sarah E. Rehmer, stitching stories #1, 2014; hand sewn paper with encaustic on canvas; 30 x 30 x 5 inches

Sarah E. Rehmer, stitching stories #1, 2014; hand sewn paper with encaustic on canvas; 30 x 30 x 5 inches

“In my current works with paper, upheavals and outbursts, I continue to explore the idea of misplaced memories while also considering what happens to these memories and feelings we purposely bury. I am questioning what happens when our buried thoughts and emotions start rising to the surface and breaking through.”

— Sarah E. Rehmer


Lisa Pressman, Mapping Time, 2015, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches

Lisa Pressman, Mapping Time, 2015, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches

Lisa Pressman, Passages, 2014, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches. Photos: Jay Rosenblatt

Lisa Pressman, Passages, 2014, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches. Photos: Jay Rosenblatt

Digging Deep resonates for me conceptually and in relationship to the materiality of encaustic. My imagery emerged from experiencing the passing of my mother. My paintings are multi-layered and include painterly marks and expression along with areas of excavation, the findings of what lies beneath.”

— Lisa Pressman


Art and Social Consciousness

BY DEBORAH WINIARSKI

“Art is not a mirror held up to reality but a hammer with which to shape it.”

— Bertolt Brecht (1896-1956)

“Art is a lie which makes us see the truth.”

— Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

At the beginning of the 20th century in the West, shifts in artistic styles and vision erupted in response to major changes in the atmosphere of society. The Industrial Revolution and all its new technologies altered the individual’s worldview. Artists reflected the impact of these developments by moving away from a realistic representation of what they saw toward a more emotional rendering of how the world affected them. Ideas in Art shifted away from ‘Art for Art’s Sake’ toward an expression of the meaning of the emotional experience. In work from this time, subject matter directly reflected or referenced a surrounding condition. The influence of this ‘Expressionist’ movement is still evident today.

The works included below are engaging us in a conversation within their own frame of reference. They are raising questions, raising awareness, causing us to ponder and to even examine ourselves. In these works, the world is reflected back to us through the interpretation of each Artist.


Corina S. Alvarezdelugo, The Red Wall I, 2014; encaustic, textiles, transferred image, ink, pan pastel; 12 x 12 inches. Photography: Christopher Gardner

Corina S. Alvarezdelugo, The Red Wall I, 2014; encaustic, textiles, transferred image, ink, pan pastel; 12 x 12 inches. Photography: Christopher Gardner

Corina S. Alvarezdelugo, There’s Nothing to Sing About, 2014; encaustic, textiles, transferred image, ink, oil pastel, pan pastel; 20 x 20 inches. Photography: Christopher Gardner

Corina S. Alvarezdelugo, There’s Nothing to Sing About, 2014; encaustic, textiles, transferred image, ink, oil pastel, pan pastel; 20 x 20 inches. Photography: Christopher Gardner

“’Mi Patria’ is Spanish for ‘my country.’ ‘Remendando’ comes from the verb ‘Remendar’: to mend or patch a piece of clothing to fix it. Using this analogy, the Remendando Mi Patria series evolved as my visual expression from delving deeply into the current disturbing political reality of Venezuela, my birth country.”

— Corina S. Alvarezdelugo


Amber George. Mosey on Over, 2013, mixed media on panel, 24 x 20 inches

Amber George. Mosey on Over, 2013, mixed media on panel, 24 x 20 inches

Amber George, Tilde, 2013, mixed media on panel, 36 x 36 inches

Amber George, Tilde, 2013, mixed media on panel, 36 x 36 inches

“While governments consider a border concrete, the organic and ephemeral in life pay no attention. Weather rolls over them, birds fly across, even rest on the fence designating the boundary. The weather forecast is the same, in English or in Spanish in my border town, the storm doesn’t really care.”

— Amber George


Nancy Natale, Barred, 2015; matboard, ink, treated aluminum, leather from handbags, tacks, encaustic on panel; 30 x 30 inches. Photography: John Polak Photography

Nancy Natale, Barred, 2015; matboard, ink, treated aluminum, leather from handbags, tacks, encaustic on panel; 30 x 30 inches. Photography: John Polak Photography

Nancy Natale, White Armor/Undies, 2013; cardboard, matboard, found lace, rubber, carpet, tacks, encaustic on panel; 16 x 17 inches. Photography: John Polak Photography

Nancy Natale, White Armor/Undies, 2013; cardboard, matboard, found lace, rubber, carpet, tacks, encaustic on panel; 16 x 17 inches. Photography: John Polak Photography

“Studying European armor led me to thoughts about the conflicting function and purpose of clothing, especially for women. The body is concealed, protected, decorated, and even abused to confine it to ideals of beauty, societal rank, and cultural dictates. These thoughts underlie my Tribal Meets Tudor series.”

— Nancy Natale


Gwendolyn Plunkett, Linear A3, 2013 on-going; repurposed book pages, Lokta paper, India ink, encaustic and oil bar on panel; 20 x 16 inches

Gwendolyn Plunkett, Linear A3, 2013 on-going; repurposed book pages, Lokta paper, India ink, encaustic and oil bar on panel; 20 x 16 inches

Gwendolyn Plunkett, Linear A1, 2013 on-going; repurposed book pages, Lokta paper, India ink, encaustic and oil bar on panel; 16 x 20 inches

Gwendolyn Plunkett, Linear A1, 2013 on-going; repurposed book pages, Lokta paper, India ink, encaustic and oil bar on panel; 16 x 20 inches

“The New Language series evolved from an interest in body language, specifically literary tattoos, and a desire to create a visual book. Drawings in combination with book pages, soaked, layered and made translucent with beeswax, suggest tactile skin-like surfaces. The result, a physical language translated into the idiom of the bound volume.”

–Gwendolyn Plunkett


Jeff Schaller, Cash Cow, 2015, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches

Jeff Schaller, Cash Cow, 2015, encaustic, 24 x 24 inches

Jeff Schaller, Good Choice, 2013, encaustic, 12 x 12 inches

Jeff Schaller, Good Choice, 2013, encaustic, 12 x 12 inches

“The world is filled with good and evil, good and bad art. The choice is daunting. The pull to one side or the other is great. I focus my talents for the good and sometimes even the BEST! These paintings illuminate good cocktails, good ideas and some oldies but goodies.”

— Jeff Schaller


Off The Grid . . .

by Deborah Winiarski

Pattern in Art may be defined as a reiteration or rational distribution of closely related elements across a given plane or field. That distribution may vary with different degrees of predictability within a composition. A pattern in a work of Art need not necessarily repeat itself but often provides order, offering a strand of unified elements within a larger structural whole.

Though each of the works below visually make reference to some form of pattern, they are far from predictable. These artists have used their affinity toward a reiteration of elements – whether geometrical, kaleidoscopic, musical, or textile in nature – as a starting point from which to sing their singular songs.

The word ‘pattern’ is derived from the Medieval Latin word ‘patronus’ meaning ‘a model of behavior, exemplar.’ Each of the artists included here are exemplars in their distinctive and unique uses of pattern in their work.

 


Dawna Bemis, Kaleidoscope, 2015; encaustic, encaustic monotypes, newsprint, transistors and pigment stick on steel; 24” x 24”. Photography:  Jay York

Dawna Bemis, Kaleidoscope, 2015; encaustic, encaustic monotypes, newsprint, transistors and pigment stick on steel; 24 x 24 inches. Photography: Jay York

 

Dawna Bemis, Antique Tile, 2014; encaustic, encaustic monotypes, book pages, hand stitching, embroidery and pigment stick on copper on panel; 16” x 16”, Photography:  Jay York

Dawna Bemis, Antique Tile, 2014; encaustic, encaustic monotypes, book pages, hand stitching, embroidery and pigment stick on copper on panel; 16 x 16 inches. Photography: Jay York

“In my most recent series I draw upon quilts as a metaphor for the loss of generational knowledge transfer.   With this work I explore issues of identity, gender, and family history. As I develop these pieces, I connect with the many hands that have worked these geometric patterns over time.”
–Dawna Bemis


Cat Crotchett, Surfacing, 2015, encaustic and mixed media on panel, 8” x 8”

Cat Crotchett, Surfacing, 2015, encaustic and mixed media on panel, 8 x 8 inches

 

Cat Crotchett, Together, 2013, encaustic and mixed media on panel, 8” x 8”

Cat Crotchett, Together, 2013, encaustic and mixed media on panel, 8 x 8 inches

“In these pieces I explored what happened to each pattern’s individual and collective identities when they were layered or juxtaposed in wax. It plays with ideas of cultural dominance relative to what parts of each pattern are concealed or revealed.”
— Cat Crotchett


Joanne Mattera, Chromatic Geometry 40, 2015, encaustic on panel, 18” x 18”

Joanne Mattera, Chromatic Geometry 40, 2015, encaustic on panel, 18 x 18 inches

 

Joanne Mattera, Chromatic Geometry 27, 2014, encaustic on panel, 18” x 18”

Joanne Mattera, Chromatic Geometry 27, 2014, encaustic on panel, 18 x 18 inches

“In my Chromatic Geometry series I’ve skewed the grid’s conventional structure into a field of attenuated diamonds. Formally I’m thinking about their division into lesser or greater amounts, allowing me to resolve relationships of color and structure. Each little triangular shape is a fulcrum affecting the equipoise of the field.”
— Joanne Mattera


Karen Freedman, Ruche Off 0565.2, 2015, encaustic on wood panel, 30" x 40" (diptych)

Karen Freedman, Ruche Off 0565.2, 2015, encaustic on wood panel, 30 x 40 inches (diptych)

 

Karen Freedman, Ruche Off 0507.6, 2014, encaustic on wood panel, 16” x 32”

Karen Freedman, Ruche Off 0507.6, 2014, encaustic on wood panel, 16 x 32 inches

“I have always been drawn to patterns. With my series, Kaleidoscoptical, I explore ways to alter visual perception and cognition through the interaction of color within the confines of symmetrical patterning.”
–Karen Freedman


Paul Rinaldi, The Kiss, 2015; encaustic on 2 panels, steel support; 28.5" x 14.5

Paul Rinaldi, The Kiss, 2015; encaustic on 2 panels, steel support; 28.5 x 14.5 inches

 

Paul Rinaldi, Etude No. 18 Voices, 2012, encaustic on four panels, 10.2” x 32.2”

Paul Rinaldi, Etude No. 18 Voices, 2012, encaustic on four panels, 10.2 x 32.2 inches

“I create objects that invite a viewer to a moment of inner contemplation and reflection, objects that in some way offer a gateway to both collective and individuated memory.  I want to produce work that somehow collapses time, where one experiences both the fullness and the silence of an expansive moment.”
— Paul Rinaldi


Tremain Smith, Forest of Delight, 2014; oil, wax and collage on panel; 24” x 30”.  Photography: Karen Mauch

Tremain Smith, Forest of Delight, 2014; oil, wax and collage on panel; 24 x 30 inches.
Photography:  Karen Mauch

 

Tremain Smith, Identity, 2014, oil and wax on panel, 24” x 36”.  Photography:  Karen Mauch

Tremain Smith, Identity, 2014, oil and wax on panel, 24 x 36 inches.
Photography:  Karen Mauch

“I use the grid as a structure that I build upon in layers. My technique is composed of oil glazes, collage and transparent beeswax. I incise, iron, rub, draw, and paint into the layers, and burn imprints into the wax with a desire to express the spiritual through painting.”
— Tremain Smith


On the Horizon

by Deborah Winiarski

Landscape as Art is a fairly recent development in Western Art tradition. Historically, paintings of scenes in nature were relegated to the backdrop of imagined subjects and not considered viable subject matter for painting. The development of visual perspective helped to change this as it allowed artists to create the illusion of depth in space from one particular viewpoint. The possibility of landscape as Art had begun.

Another development particularly important to landscape painting was the development of the paint tube. Finally, artists could take their canvases out-of-doors and paint the world literally around them. It helped make Impressionism possible and sparked fresh interest in landscape. Later, landscapes influenced by Romanticism and Impressionism depicted vast, realistic panoramas whose size and scope reflected the enormity of the scene being painted. Modern times have seen landscape increasingly become a point of departure for work more abstract in character.

The contemporary artists here, all working in the medium of encaustic, offer a broad spectrum of ideals, perspectives and interpretations of landscape reflecting the breadth of its history. Whether imagined, abstract, or realistic, with a land-based, subterranean or aerial perspective, these works resonate with a love of the land and beauty of the environment.

 


Mark Lavatelli, Pine Bluff, 2012; oil, encaustic and collage on panel; 44” x 66”

Mark Lavatelli, Pine Bluff, 2012; oil, encaustic and collage on panel; 44” x 66”

“This unusual horizontal ‘diptych’ is actually a single panel. In the section above is a close-up view of a pine tree. Below it are abstract shapes and words identifying both natural elements and threats to the environment.”
– Mark Lavatelli


Laura Moriarty, Unit No. 1 (Underground Settlement), 2015, pigmented beeswax, 8” x 9” x 1.75”

Laura Moriarty, Unit No. 1 (Underground Settlement), 2015, pigmented beeswax, 8” x 9” x 1.75”

Unit No. 1 is part of a 16-piece collection entitled Underground Settlement. This work illustrates my fascination, not only with the intricately stratified forms of rocks, but also with their metaphorical evocation of human experience.”
– Laura Moriarty


Cora Jane Glasser, Six Stories, 2012; encaustic, oil, pencil on six wood panels; 61 ¾” x 31 ¾” (including built-in frame)

Cora Jane Glasser, Six Stories, 2012; encaustic, oil, pencil on six wood panels; 61 ¾” x 31 ¾” (including built-in frame)

“I work by deconstructing, fragmenting, and abstracting iconic visual cues. These cues are then rebuilt by pulling selected elements to the painting surface with the use of color, form, and texture. The works convey tensions between old and new, solid and void. They evoke gut recognition and an ambiguous sense of place.”
– Cora Jane Glasser


Christy Diniz Liffmann, Fields of Summer, 2012, encaustic on panel, 15” x 15”

Christy Diniz Liffmann, Fields of Summer, 2012, encaustic on panel, 15” x 15”

“Observation and interaction with the natural world are crucial for me on a daily basis. Visual meditations turn into notations on place and space, color and pattern. Often I document specific locations through sketching or plein air painting in oil and watercolor. Recurring concepts in my work are impermanence, life cycles, growth and renewal.”
– Christy Diniz Liffmann


Francesca Azzara, View From My Dream, 2011; encaustic, fabric, paper and oil stick; 24” x 24”

Francesca Azzara, View From My Dream, 2011; encaustic, fabric, paper and oil stick; 24” x 24”

“Usually my work connects with the recurring theme of the imagined and internal landscape. The work from this series, Ancestral Memories, were directly inspired by a recent trip to my family’s hometown of Chiaramonte Gulfe in Sicily. Sitting high in the hills, this ancient town has sweeping views of both the mountains and the gulf.”
– Francesca Azzara


Helen DeRamus, The Wild, Wild West, 2015; paper, India ink, watercolor, encaustic on cradled wood panel; 30” x 30”

Helen DeRamus, The Wild, Wild West, 2015; paper, India ink, watercolor, encaustic on cradled wood panel; 30” x 30”

“This series of paintings began following a residency at The Hambridge Center in Rabun Gap, Georgia. Immersion in the landscape and the solitude afforded to me allowed for the discovery of this imagery as it relates to my continuing interest in memory and the passage of time.”
– Helen DeRamus


Cherie Mittenthal, Cottage with Cloud, 2014, encaustic, 32” x 20”

Cherie Mittenthal, Cottage with Cloud, 2014, encaustic, 32” x 20”

“My work explores the ritual of layering molten wax. I love the sense of the unexpected, the sensation of scent, and the anticipation evoked as I scrape and carve through the wax. I am most interested in marrying image and medium. My imagery is redolent of the meeting of sky, sand, and sea.”
– Cherie Mittenthal


Dawn Korman, Winter Ditch, 2011, encaustic on birch panel, 9” x 13”

Dawn Korman, Winter Ditch, 2011, encaustic on birch panel, 9” x 13”

“In my studio practice, I use a broad range of media. When I work with encaustic, it lets me move with a looseness and an immediacy that I can’t get with other paints. It is wonderful for exploring light and luminosity. I like to approach painting with a sense of wonder and spontaneity.”
– Dawn Korman


Leslie Sobel, Rising to the Clouds, 2014, encaustic on panel, 20” x 24”

Leslie Sobel, Rising to the Clouds, 2014, encaustic on panel, 20” x 24”

“I make expressionistic landscapes responding in a painterly way to a specific place and my environmental concerns. I am more interested in painterly abstraction than strict depiction of landscape while maintaining more than a vestige of representation in my work. I work from drawings and photography.”
– Leslie Sobel


Judy Klich, Tree Hollow Dream Catcher, 2014; encaustic, oil, photo transfers and metallic pigment; 32” x 48”

Judy Klich, Tree Hollow Dream Catcher, 2014; encaustic, oil, photo transfers and metallic pigment; 32” x 48”

“I capture earth’s beauty often missed by our busy lifestyles by combining macro views and overall landscapes. This painting is from a hidden trail hike ending at the Harpeth River in Tennessee. The tree hollow offers an unseen glimpse of the river.”
– Judy Klich

Fluidity

by Deborah Winiarski

Wax in its molten state flows. It is the fluid nature of wax that is inherent in the encaustic process. The combination of heat and wax presents the greatest challenge to artists working in the medium, yet in turn provides its richest rewards. Conversely, it is the intentional and precise control of the wax flow that allows a spontaneous and fluid expression of movement. When happy accidents do occur, it takes an artist’s eye, heart, and mind to see them and hold on to them or to decide to let them go.

Artists, when they are truly that, access what I call an inner creative fluidity. It is their highly creative and intuitive thoughts and emotions, together with their skill, expertise, and experience that make Art possible. The creative life is never static. It is a forever evolving, fluid, and vibrant way of being.

The artists included here are highly attuned to their creative fluidity and have taken the concept of fluidity beyond the literal. Their works flow metaphorically, conceptually, emotionally, musically, linearly, physically. They reflect on geologic processes, weather patterns, self-examinations, socio-environmental interactions, microscopic organisms, and beauty. They flow – wholly and singularly.

 


“My work is about energy and spatial ambiguity. The tension between figure and ground results in amorphous shapes layered with vibrant, exuberant colors that possess a strangely beautiful power and energy. Feelings of dissonance, mystery, and unease prevail. The work represents the ideas of the journey, the flight, and the search.”
– Binnie Birstein

Binnie Birstein, A.I.R., 2014, encaustic and graphite on panel, 30” x 40”

Binnie Birstein, A.I.R., 2014, encaustic and graphite on panel, 30” x 40”.  Photo credit: Elisa Keogh


“I am interested in making objects that are enigmatic and personal, ambiguous yet engaging. The surfaces of my ‘Rhythmo Box’ series contain rhythmic, scored marks into plaster and wax.”
– Lynette Haggard

Lynette Haggard, Rhythmo Box No. 2, 2010; resin, beeswax, pigment, foam, plaster, 10” x 13” x 9”

Lynette Haggard, Rhythmo Box No. 2, 2010; resin, beeswax, pigment, foam, plaster; 10” x 13” x 9”


“In the ‘Microcosm/Macrocosm?’ series, I explore the connections that exist between the cosmos, the terrestrial, and the cellular worlds. The work is a visual account of the human condition through a fantastic voyage of vast atmospheres and biomorphic shapes.”
– Gregory Wright

Gregory Wright, Elemental Antithesis, 2009; encaustic, oil, pigment, shellac on birch, 20” x 48”

Gregory Wright, Elemental Antithesis, 2009; encaustic, oil, pigment, shellac on birch; 20” x 48”


“I make organic, encaustic-covered sculptural forms. I intend my work to be disturbing, funny, and sometimes sexual. It’s about human foibles and disasters. The work – founded formally, conceptually, and technically in history, history, history – rests on Barbara Kingsolver’s ‘Poisonwood Bible’ concept that misunderstanding is the cornerstone of civilization.”
– Pamela Blum

Pamela Blum, Dress-up, 2010; encaustic on paper mache, plaster gauze, wire mesh, 34” x 9 ¾” x 9"

Pamela Blum, Dress-up, 2010; encaustic on paper mache, plaster gauze, wire mesh; 34” x 9 ¾” x 9″


“My work reflects a longstanding interest in environmental change, infectious disease, and our individual and communal responses to our altered world. Over the years, my work has progressed from drawings inspired by microscopic imagery to room-sized environments steeped in the research of epidemiology and the social history of infectious disease.”
– Lorrie Fredette

Lorrie Fredette, (more/less) Reflective, 2010; beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, steel, wood, nylon line, 8’ x 12’ x 6’. Photo credit:  Richard Edelman

Lorrie Fredette, (more/less) Reflective, 2010; beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, steel, wood, nylon line; 8’ x 12’ x 6’. Photo credit: Richard Edelman


“My work references nature from an aerial perspective observed during cross-country flights in a single engine plane to the view through a microscope.”
– Pamela Wallace

Pamela Wallace, Brood, 2014, encaustic on panel, 8” x 8”

Pamela Wallace, Brood, 2014, encaustic on panel, 8” x 8”


“Utilizing processes such as burning, rusting, decomposition, burying, or weather exposure, layers of fabric are collaged with encaustic, images, and found materials. Through pattern and materials, narratives interact with and contextualize the markings, as well as speak to our wants, needs, temptations, and desires.”
– Lorraine Glessner

Lorraine Glessner, Under the Bridge, 2013; encaustic, mixed media, horse and human hair on composted and branded silk on wood, 48” x 48”

Lorraine Glessner, Under the Bridge, 2013; encaustic, mixed media, horse and human hair on composted and branded silk on wood; 48” x 48”


“Though still, my work incorporates and sings movement. In the most recent ‘Relief’ series, elements flow over and around the edges of the picture plane. Monotyped fabrics are cut, sewn, woven, curled, crumpled, and collaged onto the painting surface creating a visual dance of form and color.”
– Deborah Winiarski

Deborah Winiarski, Saffron III, 2014; encaustic, fabric, thread, oil on panel, 25” x 21” x 5”

Deborah Winiarski, Saffron III, 2014; encaustic, fabric, thread, oil on panel; 25” x 21” x 5”


 “Musicality is established through pattern, variety, and intensity. My recent ‘Étude’ series draws the viewer into an abstract musical world. The understated presence of the composition captivates then ultimately satisfies with its meditative rhythm.”
– Winston Lee Mascarenhas

Winston Lee Mascarenhas, Étude No.1/Op.8, 2014, encaustic on panel, 10” x 10”

Winston Lee Mascarenhas, Étude No.1/Op.8, 2014, encaustic on panel, 10” x 10”


“’Pendulum Series’ was created on encaustic-painted panels positioned on the studio floor that received marks made with a wax-drizzling pendulum that was swung, pushed, and propelled. Having been aware of the tension created between the mechanical symmetry and organic flow, I played with the relationship between control and the lack thereof.”
– Kim Bernard

Kim Bernard, Drishti, 2011, encaustic on panel, 48” x 48”

Kim Bernard, Drishti, 2011, encaustic on panel, 48” x 48”


“Documenting the dramatic interaction created by light on water through seasonal shifts, this is my own research into the sublime. In the end, my work is based on memory, both the memory of place and my connection to the emotional qualities held by light and color.”
– Carol Pelletier

Carol Pelletier, West Beach, 2013, oil and cold wax on panel, 13” x 13”

Carol Pelletier, West Beach, 2013, oil and cold wax on panel, 13” x 13”


“My artwork explores the breadth of metaphoric meaning that can be derived from non-objective abstraction. Through mixed media paintings, drawings, and prints, I make paradoxical concepts tangible with formal elements, such as the repeated use of the color black, acting as both presence and absence, simultaneously weighted and ephemeral.”
– Toby Sisson

Toby Sisson, Timeline of Seemingly Unrelated Events IV, 2010; encaustic, oil, charcoal, and silver leaf on wood, 24” x 48”

Toby Sisson, Timeline of Seemingly Unrelated Events IV, 2010; encaustic, oil, charcoal, and silver leaf on wood; 24” x 48”


“With allegiance to no particular religion, my paintings are prayers and/or meditations. The dots made with hot tools were placed freehand, creating a motion that represents the fragility of the human spirit. ‘Prayers for the Earth: Belly’ was inspired by my 14 year old cat, Paris Frankenstein.”
– Fanne Fernow

Fanne Fernow, Prayers for the Earth: Belly, 2011, encaustic on two panels, 24” x 48”

Fanne Fernow, Prayers for the Earth: Belly, 2011, encaustic on two panels, 24” x 48”

The Pull of Paper

by Deborah Winiarski

Artists have been pulled to work with paper since the time of its invention centuries ago. In addition to using paper to sketch or capture a moment quickly, they have been pulled to paper as their primary vehicle of creative expression. Working with paper is tactile, intimate, immediate. To work with paper is to be close – one can only be as far away as the length of an arm with scissor, brush, pencil in hand.

Art that combines paper and the medium of encaustic is a fairly new concept that began with Jasper Johns in the 1950s. Johns collaged papers into his paintings using pigmented wax both as paint and adhesive. But it was not until the middle 1970s when Dorothy Furlong-Gardner pulled the first encaustic monotype off a heated plate that paper became viable as a primary support for encaustic work.

Artists working in encaustic today are pulled to paper for a variety of reasons, citing its tactility, delicacy, and history. Paper, when combined with wax, becomes translucent and textural. The works below, created by ProWax artists, offer some exemplars of the contemporary push and pull of combining paper with wax. These artists have been pushing the boundaries of creative expression combining paper and encaustic in ever-innovative and exciting ways.

Enjoy.

 

“The focus of my work is on the shredding, cutting, compartmentalizing and shedding of the past.  This work, from my ‘Transformations’ series, echoes and expands on the use of repetition of action, wrapping, painting, concealing and celebrating the humblest of materials; old clothing, burlap coffee bean bags, paper, and wax.”
– Lisa Zukowski
Lisa Zukowski, Constant Cravings, 2012.  encaustic monotype on paper, 72" x 72"

Lisa Zukowski, Constant Cravings, 2012; encaustic monotype on paper, 72″ x 72″

 

“This image is from a series of collages using scraps from encaustic papers that were too interesting to trash. I’ve been saving scraps for over 20 years hoping to someday set aside a period to produce a body of collages.”
– Dorothy Furlong-Gardner
Dorothy Furlong-Gardner Garden Party 2 2012 Various papers (mulberry, Superfine, interleaving, Rives lightweight, Masa) 12 X 12 inches Photo Credit:  John Barrois

Dorothy Furlong-Gardner, Garden Party 2, 2012; various papers (mulberry, Superfine, interleaving, Rives lightweight, Masa); 12″ x 12″. Photo Credit: John Barrois

“This encaustic collagraph from the series, “Above and Below” addresses the tension in opposing forces while juxtaposing their connections. My intention is to create a narrative based on abstraction evoking science and spirituality. The conversation between wax and plate results in layers of texture while additional plates render transparency and color.”
Dorothy Cochran
 
Dorothy Cochran Vivid Dream 2013 Encaustic collagraph and relief on Rives BFK 28 x 16 inches

Dorothy Cochran, Vivid Dream, 2013; encaustic collagraph and relief on Rives BFK, 28″ x 16″

I have always loved working on paper, whether using pastel, ink, oil, or encaustic. Working on paper gives me a sense of freedom and immediacy. This piece is from the series “Between the Lines,” that uses text, book pages, and monoprints to create an abstract narrative.”
Lisa Pressman
Lisa Pressman Between the Lines 17 2009 Encaustic on paper 17 x 17 inches Photo Credit:  Jay Rosenblatt

Lisa Pressman, Between the Lines 17, 2009; book pages, monoprints, encaustic,
17″ x 17″. Photo Credit: Jay Rosenblatt

“I use parallels between human life and the life of trees as a framework for exploring our physical and spiritual movement through time and space. I include wood shards as relics of life; tree rings serve as maps of the past. I strive to create work with a sense of history and personal journey.”
Peggy Epner
Peggy Epner The Long Game 2014 Wax, watercolor, and oil on paper 38 x 34 inches Photo Credit: Hal Samples

Peggy Epner, The Long Game, 2014; wax, watercolor, and oil on paper; 38″ x 34″
Photo Credit: Hal Samples

“I explore abstraction through a variety of found supports and collaged elements.  Using the medium of encaustic, I imbue battered cardboard found on the street with a kind of offbeat beauty – and transform the most ephemeral and fragile of objects into something enduring.”
Gail Gregg
Gail Gregg Rosebud 2012 Encaustic on found cardboard 14 x 14 inches

Gail Gregg, Rosebud, 2012; encaustic on found cardboard, 14″ x 14″

“Printmaking gives me the ability to work on the same or several images at once. This is instrumental for me towards building a series of works that are comprehensive and consistent yet dissimilar and original. Printmaking  has a direct correlation to my painting palette; the inks I use inform the colors I formulate for my paintings.”
Elise Wagner
Elise Wagner Traces & Transits Print 2013 Encaustic collagraph monotype 10 x 20 inches Photo Credit: Rebekah Johnson Photography, Portland, Oregon

Elise Wagner, Traces & Transits Print, 2013; encaustic collagraph monotype, 10″ x 20″
Photo Credit: Rebekah Johnson Photography, Portland, Oregon

“‘Ancient Histories’ explores the marks left behind. These prints are about the trace, the bones and artifacts of ancient impulses. They are the accumulated witnesses of time marching ever forward.”
– David A. Clark
David A. Clark Ancient Histories #61 2014 Encaustic monoprint on Sakamoto heavyweight 25 x 38 1/2 inches

David A. Clark, Ancient Histories #61, 2014; encaustic monoprint on Sakamoto heavyweight, 
25″ x 38.5″

 “The images used in these transfers were taken at the erotic temple carvings of Khajuraho, India, depicting sexual union between people, with a focus on pleasure. Just as there is an urge for the physical act of sex, most people experience a desire to merge body and soul with another. The paper substrates are constructed into forms that reference the movement of human form and language.”
– Deborah Kapoor
Deborah Kapoor Physical Pleasure (Kama) 2011 Photo Transfer on Paper, Snaps, Encaustic 19 x 1.5 x 3 inches

Deborah Kapoor, Physical Pleasure (Kama), 2011; photo transfer on paper, snaps, encaustic; 19″ x 1.5″ x 3″

“My sculptural work is about defensiveness versus vulnerability. The Cluster series falls on the vulnerable side of that spectrum. They are open and fluid, rather than closed and static.”
– Helen Dannelly
Helen Dannelly White Gray Cluster 2013 Encaustic, cone coffee filters 11 x 9 x 4 inches

Helen Dannelly, White Gray Cluster, 2013; encaustic, cone coffee filters; 11″ x 9″ x 4″

“I have always been drawn to the beautiful fragility of paper. Using Japanese papers (mostly Kozo and Gampi), allows me to have a surface that is fragile and sensible yet strong enough to suffer the beating I impose to the paper while working with monotype.”
– Alexandre Masino
Alexandre Masino Je touche au monde IV  2014 Intaglio, gold leaf & encaustic monoprint on Kozo paper 12.5 x 10.5 inches

Alexandre Masino, Je touche au monde IV, 2014; intaglio, gold leaf & encaustic monoprint on Kozo paper; 12.5″ x 10.5″

“My current works explore intuitive mapping of evolving landforms in our rapidly changing environment, and systems in weather and other phenomena and events whose interaction resemble neural networks of the mind. These are reflected in the works on paper and paintings through physical movement and response to media.”
Paula Roland
Paula Roland Dual Map I 2014 Encaustic monotype (two layers) on kitakata paper 36 x 25 inches

Paula Roland, Dual Map I, 2014; encaustic monotype (two layers) on kitikata paper, 36″ x 25″

 “I am interested in the relationship between manmade architectonic structure and the natural landscape, and the interplay between these two forces in an urban environment. My prints work as a shorthand for movement and space between manmade and the natural environment.”
Jeffrey Hirst
Jeffrey Hirst Circuit 2014 Encaustic collagraph on Rives BFK 20 x 15 inches

Jeffrey Hirst, Circuit, 2014; encaustic collagraph on Rives BFK, 20″ x 15″

“The encaustic image was created on a Hotbox as a monotype. It was then twisted and glued into a continuous strip and suspended from the forged iron framework.”
Pat Spainhour
Pat Spainhour Mobius 2013 Rives BFK, encaustic paint, forged iron 17 x 12 x 6 inches

Pat Spainhour, Mobius, 2013; Rives BFK, encaustic paint, forged iron; 17″ x 12″ x 6″

“Using a technique that I learned in San Pablito, Mexico, I draw with and layer cooked mulberry fiber. Using minimal systems of circular repetition, I engage in the act of constructing/arranging and deconstructing/rearranging until the dialogue between the components is complete.”
Jennie Frederick
Jennie Frederick Construct/Deconstruct #3 2013 Thai Kozo (mulberry) and encaustic 30 x 30 inches

Jennie Frederick, Construct/Deconstruct #3, 2013; Thai Kozo (mulberry) and encaustic, 30″ x 30″

“Illuminated by multiple light sources and hung off the wall, these hand sewn cut paper lace works produce a visible dance of light. In this way, the work visually alludes to the delicate yet strong relationships that we form with one another when we are physically distant or separated by time. What is not there is as important in this work as what is there.”
Milisa Galazzi
Milisa Galazzi Waggle Dance Four 2013 Paper, thread, bees wax, damar resin 48 x 24 x 8 inches

Milisa Galazzi, Waggle Dance Four, 2013; paper, thread, beeswax, damar resin; 48″ x 24″ x 8″

“I use paper on its edge to create sculptural drawings that convey the immateriality of clouds, while referencing the curly strokes that an artist (and everyone!) often uses to sketch clouds or smoke. Wax creates warm translucence, and the reflected colors and dimensionality (shadows) change with the light.”
Shelley Gilchrist
Shelley Gilchrist myCloud 3 – Ninfa (side view) 2014 Kozo paper, wax, ink 5 feet x 5 feet x 5 inches

Shelley Gilchrist, myCloud 3 – Ninfa (side view), 2014; Kozo paper, wax, ink; 60″ x 60″ x 5″

–•–

This issue’s featured images have been curated by Deborah Winiarski, now Featured Artworks Editor for PWJ.  Deborah Winiarski teaches a mixed media class at The Art Students League of New York and has been teaching encaustic workshops there since 2009. Her work has been exhibited at venues in New York City and across the United States. In 2014, her work was included in WAXING at Denise Bibro Fine Art in NYC, ‘Far and Wide,’ The 6th Annual Woodstock Regional, Woodstock, NY, and BIG BAD WAX at Mount Dora Center for the Arts, Mount Dora, Fla.  In 2014, Ms. Winiarski was an invited artist-in-residence at The Studios at Key West in Key West, Fla. She was also a presenter and workshop instructor at the Eighth International Encaustic Conference in Provincetown, Mass.  This is her first contribution to PWJ.

www.deborahwiniarski.com

The Loop of Abstraction: Amy Ellingson at San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art

By Maritza Ruiz-Kim

Amy Ellingson’s artwork probes into what we’re experiencing now: the use of digital tools to understand our world, which exists increasingly online. Ellingson uses illustration software to begin her abstract paintings; from these, she discovers and creates additional work. It’s this loop of abstraction that we’re living. As with big data, where computers are used to grasp the breadth of information that’s created as our lives increasingly take place online, Ellingson uses the computer to reach what she terms “essential abstraction”. In archeology, ancient tools are excavated; Ellingson uses the ubiquitous tool of our time to reveal marks that exemplify our changing cognitive landscape. Her work with computer graphics, and later with the materials of painting and sculpture, involve a tangible participation in understanding what is abstract. Below are questions I posed to Ellingson just before I visited her current solo show at the San Jose Institute for Contemporary Art. (Iterations & Assertions is up through September 2014 at the San Jose ICA.) – Maritza Ruiz-Kim

Artist: Amy Ellingson Photographer: John Janca

Amy Ellingson, Installation, Iterations & Assertions. The show features a painting diptych, a site-specific wall mural, 1700 cast encaustic forms, oil on linen on shaped panel, and oil on prepared paper. San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art, June 7-Sept. 13, 2014. Photo: John Janca © 2014

MRK: I’m excited about the ways that your marks reference the development of written language. They mimic that sense of grasping for ways of communication that are imperfect yet persistent; I see both the beginning of line and its destruction. Your particular marks additionally lend themselves to meaning as you translate them from a digital world to a human one. Well, those two worlds are really merging these days. Which do you feel more drawn to now that you have completed your work at ICA?

AE: Many people see text fragments, of a variety of languages and alphabets, in the work. I don’t deliberately add text fragments. It is merely a byproduct of the process. The forms I use (straight lines, curved lines) is the very stuff of all letter forms. I have always been interested in typography as well as word play, and my early works from 1990-98 utilized text and typography in a very direct way. I love that this has come back into the work through the back door.

Artist: Amy Ellingson Photographer: John Janca

Amy Ellingson, Installation, Iterations & Assertions Photo: John Janca © 2014

As for mark-making and gestural image-making, I am drawn to it, fascinated by it, and appreciative of its place within the history of abstract painting. People have gotten lazy about looking at and thinking about gestural abstraction. It’s easy for viewers to focus on the emotive aspects of the work–to regard gesture as merely a record of mood or state of mind, and to be dismissive of that. But all of the great mid-century Abstract Expressionists were dealing with headier issues. Abstraction has been given short shrift lately, even as contemporary abstraction surges in the today’s art market. I am very interested in the current scuffle over “Zombie Abstraction,” which implies, among other things, that artists are merely trying stylistic strategies on for size, untethered to the lengthy, historical, philosophical debates about the intrinsic issues of painting. Remember, Joan Mitchell was wrestling with Cézanne. Bridget Riley was thinking about Seurat. A sense of personal urgency and the impetus to grapple with historical precedents is necessary.

The digital (virtual) versus real (human) is such an interesting subject in general, and it greatly informs my work. I want the human aspects to win the battle, but I fear that they won’t, in light of the seductive ease of all things digital. My paintings are very much a process of reifying the digital image. The digital is dead, flat, lightning-fast, facile, endlessly variable. The decision to make a painting based on a flimsy digital file is about commitment, time, labor, effort. So, I translate a sketch I make in an hour or two to a painting that might take 500 hours to complete. I see this dichotomy as a means of furthering the philosophical project of abstract painting. How do we make relevant abstract paintings, now, that relate to the great history of abstraction, while also confronting the enormity of contemporary virtual experience? The digital/virtual is the antithesis of the humanness of painting. I suppose my use of digital tools and imagery is a means of keeping the enemy close.

MRK: What role does the transcription of the abstract mark play as you bring the simple abstract lines into complicated physical surfaces in your work?

Screenshot 2014-07-17 22.26.36

AE: The transcription/translation process is essential to the work. There is an evolution from beginning to end. Things are lost along the way, things are gained. Each shape is rendered in five steps: design, projection, transferring, taping, painting. At each point, minute decisions are made. Each of the thousands of shapes is working hard to assert itself, though many of them are covered up when all is said and done.

MRK: You have described your 3D forms as “artifacts liberated from the physical plane”. Do you sense a linear progression between the “wireframe interpretation” of the mural grayscale lines, the layered paintings, then the sculptural forms?

AE: Absolutely. For the San Jose ICA show, Iterations & Assertions, the diptych, Variation: Apparent Reflectional Symmetry, Parts I & II, was conceived first. Everything else keys into that piece. The mural was designed shortly after the diptych. It is essentially a wire-frame version of the diptych, for which I went back into the files for the paintings, selected shapes and outlined them, removing all of the high-key color and using only warm and cool grey tones. The mural isn’t inclusive of every shape in the painting. I see it as a suggestion, a diagram or a map. I’ve never done a mural until now, so a big part of the process was figuring out a means of production. We used vinyl masking to paint the mural, in five complete and separate layers; every little glitchy pixel is captured in the image, whereas the in my paintings, the imagery is more refined by the hand.

Amy Ellingson, [detail] Variation: Artifacts, approximately 1700 cast encaustic forms. Dimensions variable. Photo: John Janca © 2014

Amy Ellingson, [detail] Variation: Artifacts, approximately 1700 cast encaustic forms. Dimensions variable. Photo: John Janca © 2014

I knew I wanted to make a sculptural piece. Again, so much of the process was determining how these fragments would be made. I carved forms out of styrofoam, keeping them similar to the forms in the paintings. I had silicone molds made, and my assistant and I did all of the encaustic casting in the studio.

The mural was produced on-site. The diptych took many months to complete, and all the while, we were also casting forms for Variation: Artifacts. The smaller pieces in the exhibition were completed during the final months of production.

For many years I have created groups of closely related paintings for exhibitions. Until now, the progression was more literal in a sense. For this show, I wanted to tease out particular qualities, elements, characteristics in a more fragmented way. The diptych is the “mothership.” Everything else relates to it, but in a more exploratory way. As the work progressed, I felt that a creative cosmology of sorts was developing. In a sense, one could deduce that anything in the room might be the seed of the large diptych. One might conclude that the diptych is the ultimate crescendo, all of the pieces coming together. But in fact, Variation: Apparent Reflectional Symmetry, Parts I & II is the beginning point; everything else is a deconstruction of that piece.

MRK: You’ve explained that you have work that is based on what you’ve termed a “hermetic” language. Does that refer to each series or to your works as a whole?

AE: It refers to the whole of my work. Most of the forms and shapes appear again and again. The language of forms was initially rendered in Illustrator. It is a very simple vocabulary: straight lines, curved lines, an oblong form, as well as the repetition of these forms into grids. In earlier works, the geometry was quite intact. Recently, it is all but lost. But the DNA of the work never changes. It merely manifests in different ways.

Artist: Amy Ellingson Photographer: John Janca

Amy Ellingson, [detail] Variation: Large Delineation, Site-specific mural on two walls, 13′ x 40’8″, 10′ x 12′; acrylic. Photo: John Janca © 2014

The basic forms are further manipulated in Photoshop. They are stretched, nudged, pulled, scaled, etc. Sections are erased. Pixels are added or subtracted, shapes are outlined, etc. When I arrive at something interesting, I will often use it dozens of times, in many paintings, over a period of years. At a certain point, I began to feel that these forms took on a larger presence: they have become personal gestures in a strange way, even though they were originally conceived via keystrokes rather than the hand. There are many procedural steps and points of translation between the digital rendering and the final painting. There are varying degrees of both digital and material mediation, throughout the labor-intensive process of making a painting. I feel that the imagery is imbued with some power along the way, via the investment of time, attention and physical energy, belying the humble beginnings of the digital imagery.

So, the language is hermetic, in that it is essentially and absolutely a self-referential system, with each part of the image related to every other part of the image in a very literal way. Further, it has become very personal and idiosyncratic, even though the means of devising it is seemingly impersonal.

MRK: Do you consider sets of works to be worlds unto themselves, or are they pieces of a larger abstract world that you are constructing?

Both. There is a connectedness throughout all of the work. When I start a new body of work for an exhibition, I will open a bunch of old files, and start grabbing layers out of them, laying them down into new files. It’s an organic process. But I also see each body of work/exhibition as a contained system. In fact, it is a little difficult for me to make a painting that isn’t part of a larger context. I’m making a couple of new paintings now, for an art fair later this summer, and they feel rather orphaned. They’ll go off on their own, without the context of a particular exhibition space, without a full complement of companions. I don’t do this very often. It disrupts my sense of the work.

MRK: How does encaustic inform your process of translating the digitally composed lines into the physical? What role does transparency play in your work?

Screenshot 2014-07-18 07.27.46

AE: The clear encaustic layer that covers the oil underpainting acts as windowpane in sense, like a glaze in an oil painting. There is a “looking through” that happens. The background is pushed back and it is unified. The top shapes, which are pigmented wax, are really the ultimate manifestations of the other forms–they have pushed up through the surface, asserting themselves with edges and dimensionality and texture. They create subtle shadows. They have a different kind of presence.

In the earlier works that were comprised of intact geometric compositions, transparency was perhaps more important, but it is still very much in play. One of the most challenging aspects of making the paintings is managing the transparency of each layer. If it is “off” it really changes everything. And then one must evaluate and perhaps compensate.

MRK: I’ve read that the history of painting plays a large part in the concepts that you spend time investigating. Do you have in mind to be in conversation with certain artists (or artworks or art movements) of the past, or is that something you see taking place once your works are created?

Artist: Amy Ellingson Photographer: John Janca

Amy Ellingson, Installation, Iterations & Assertions, Photo: John Janca © 2014

AE: I am always thinking about art history, particularly the history of abstraction–its chronology, its digressions, its overlaps. There are artists that are in my mind all of the time, such as Pollock, Mitchell, Al Held, Bridget Riley, Jonathan Lasker, among others. Of course, some of it is more apparent after the fact. Sometimes we don’t realize how deeply embedded our influences are.

MRK: You’ve moved away from abstracting appropriated material, and the digital rendering mitigates your gestural interaction with line. Now having removed the human hand in the development of the line(s), has computer manipulation allowed you to achieve essential abstraction?

AE: That’s an interesting question. My raw imagery has no “hand” in it, but some of it is actually pretty rough and unkempt. The way in which I paint the forms is neutral and precise, not expressive. But I think (hope) the overall effect is one of the hand trying to be perfect, more perfect than the the digital, more mediated by processes and materials, more real, more human.

I strive for a more pure or essential abstraction. I decided to create a vernacular of rather meaningless, noisy imagery, and I try to make it into something bigger, through accretion, repetition, accumulation, processes, materiality and scale. Through time and labor.

I have issues with a lot of abstraction today; though I might like it in a visual sense, there is a lot of painting that loosely ties itself to a subject although the subject might not be apparent or even very significant. I won’t name names… The larger question is: how do we deal with dead ends? Okay, so Abstract Expressionism is over. What do we do about that? Can we still be in dialogue with the movement? It was a point in the continuum. I just want to be a participant in that ongoing dialogue.

Amy Ellingson’s paintings have been exhibited nationally. She is the recipient of the 2009 Fleishhacker Foundation Eureka Fellowship and the 1999 Artadia Grant to Individual Artists and has been awarded fellowships at the MacDowell Colony, the Ucross Foundation, and the Civitella Ranieri Foundation. Notable group exhibitions include Bay Area Now 3 at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts; Neo Mod: Recent Northern California Abstraction at the Crocker Art Museum; and Nineteen Going on Twenty: Recent Acquisitions from the Collection at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu. Her work is held in various public and corporate collections, including the Crocker Art Museum, the San Jose Museum of Art, the Oakland Museum of California, the Berkeley Art Museum and the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts. Ellingson’s paintings have been reviewed in numerous publications, including the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, NYArts Magazine, and Art issues. She received a B.A. in Studio Art from Scripps College and an M.F.A. from CalArts, and was Associate Professor of Art at the San Francisco Art Institute from 2000 to 2011.  She is currently working on a permanent large-scale public commission for the San Francisco International Airport, due to open July 2015.  Amy Ellingson lives and works in San Francisco.  

ProWax Journal 5: Featured Artworks

Naturally Occurring

“I’m enthralled by leaf edges, stem shapes, their reflection in my mark-making, rhythm, light, line, and form.” – Debra Claffey

Debra Claffey, Theory of Impermanence, 24″x24″, encaustic on panel.

 

“My intention for these works is to transport the viewer to a place of consciousness where beauty, peace, and tranquility exist in tandem.” – Charyl Weissbach

---Charyl Weissbach Encaustic, metal, metal leaf, and resin.

Charyl Weissbach, Arabesque, 12″x12″, encaustic, metal, metal leaf, and resin.

 

“While I am concerned with mark-making and calligraphy in this series, I am always highly influenced by nature, and particularly plant forms. #116 takes on a dance-like quality of falling leaves.” – Jane Allen Nodine

"While I am concerned with mark-making and calligraphy in this series, I am always highly influenced by nature, and particularly plant forms. #116 takes on a dance-like quality of falling leaves"--Jane Allen Nodine, Encaustic monotype

Jane Allen Nodine, Apparition #116, 24″x18”, wax and pigment on Japanese paper.

 

“We move in close to have the blossoms surround us.” – Marilyn Banner

Marilyn Banner, "Lavender", Encaustic on panel.

Marilyn Banner, Lavender, 12″x12″, encaustic on panel.

 

“Last night I dreamt in green and nature’s shapes and colors.” – Susan Delgavis

Susan Delgavis, Encaustic on panel

Susan Delgavis, Verdant Dreams, 24″x24″, encaustic on panel.

 

“Benthic Mapping references the bottom of a body of water and the plant and animal life that exist there.” – Tracey Adams

"Benthic Mapping references the bottom of a body of water and the plant and animal life that exist there."--Tracey Adams,

Tracey Adams, Benthic Benthic Mapping 1 and 2, encaustic and ink on Kozo paper, each scroll is 144″x18″.

 

“They are created by making collagraph plates from actual sections of trees, replicating bark patterns, imperfections, etc. I choose the color arbitrarily.” – Pamela Wallace

Pamela Wallace

Pamela Wallace, In the Woods XXXVII,  18″x36″, encaustic/collograph collage on panel.

 

“Trees hold the record of their lives in their rings. These inner marks remain hidden from view, the way that humans hold within the physical, mental and emotional marks of personal experience.” – Christine Shannon Aaron

Christine Shannon AaronEcho I, lithographic monoprint, asian paper, and encaustic on wood. Echo III and Echo II from left to right,

Christine Shannon Aaron, from left to right, Echo III, Echo II, and Echo I, lithographic monoprint, Asian paper, and encaustic on wood.

 

“There was a specific moment when my art started “sprouting”, when my sculptures “grew” foliage.” – Catherine Nash

Catherine Nash, Phases, mixed media assemblage in an antique sewing machine drawer, wood carving, encaustic branch, roots, paper “leaves”, seeds, mirror, nautilus shell. 31”h X 9”w X 6”d

 

“The beautiful and solitary nests of the Osmia avoseta bees are the inspiration for my brood chambers. My chambers are empty, signifying both the missing honey bees and hope that the O. avoseta bees will bring regeneration.” – Susanne Arnold

The beautiful and solitary nests of the Osmia avoseta bees are the inspiration for my brood chambers. My chambers are empty, signifying both the missing honey bees and hope that the O. avoseta bees will bring regeneration.--Susanne Arnold

Susanne Arnold, O. avosetta Brood Chamber – Autumnal, 6″x3″x 3″, encaustic, botanicals, beeswax .

 

 

“My work is inspired by the rhythms, patterns, light and colors in nature. These pieces contain images of wildflowers and grasses in the mountains of Colorado.” – Jane Goethel Guthridge

 

Jane Goethel Guthridge My work is inspired by the rhythms, patterns, light and colors in nature. These pieces "The Space Between 39 & 40" contain images of wildflowers and grasses in the mountains of Colorado.

Jane Goethel Guthridge, The Space Between, 19” x 36”, archival pigment print and encaustic on translucent Asian papers.

 

“The images are firmly grounded in the natural world, reflecting the geographic region, season and light in which they were captured.” – Jeri Eisenberg

Jeri Eisenberg

Jeri Eisenberg, Under the Norway Maple, No. 4, archival pigment ink on Kozo paper infused with encaustic, 36″x34″.

 

“Bizarre, spiky things sprout up through the brackish waters, bathed in luscious sun-soaked colors.” – Leslie Neuman

Bizarre, spiky things sprout up through the brackish waters, bathed in luscious sun-soaked colors.--Leslie Newmann

Leslie Neumann, Garden of Unearthly Delights, 48″x64″, encaustic.

 

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This issue’s featured images have been guest curated by Debra Claffey, a visual artist who uses encaustic, oil, and mixed media in her work.  She holds a BFA in Painting from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and Tufts University and an Associate’s Degree in Horticultural Technology from the University of New Hampshire. Claffey has exhibited across the country, especially here in New England, and has work in several private collections.  She is represented by the Hole in the Wall Gallery in Raymond, Maine. She is a juried member of the NH Art Association and the current President of New England Wax, a collective of artists who use encaustic. Additionally, Claffey writes a blog, Making Something Out of Nothing. In June 2013, she organized her first curated exhibition, Natura Viva: Flora, Fauna, and Us, at ArtCurrent Gallery in Provincetown in conjunction with The Seventh International Encaustic Conference.

debraclaffey.com