ENCAUSTIC
PAINTING
(from The Artist's Handbook by Ralph Mayer)
Encaustic
is a beeswax based paint that is kept molten on a heated palette.
It is applied to a surface and reheated to fuse the paint into
a uniform enamel-like finish. The word encaustic comes from
Greek and means to burn in, which refers to the process of fusing
the paint.
Encaustic
has a long history, but it is as versatile as any 20th century
medium. It can be polished to a high gloss, it can be modeled,
sculpted, textured, and combined with collage materials. It
cools immediately, so that there is no drying time, yet it can
always be reworked.
The
durability of encaustic is due to the fact that beeswax is impervious
to moisture. Because of this it will not deteriorate, it will
not yellow, and it will not darken. Encaustic paintings do not
have to be varnished or protected by glass.
Encaustic
paint has no toxic fumes, nor does it require the use of solvents.
As a result, a number of health hazards are reduced or eliminated.
The
History of Encaustic
Encaustic painting was practiced by Greek artists as far back
as the 5th century B. C.. Most of our knowledge of this early
use comes from the Roman historian Pliny, who wrote in the 1st
century A. D.. Pliny seems to have had very little direct knowledge
about studio methods, so his account of techniques and materials
is sketchy. According to Pliny, encaustic was used in a variety
of applications: the painting of portraits and scenes of mythology
on panels, the coloring of marble and terra cotta, and work
on ivory (probably the tinting of incised lines).
Wax
is an excellent preservative of materials. It was from this
use that the art of encaustic painting developed. The Greeks
applied coatings of wax and resin to weatherproof their ships.
Pigmenting the wax gave rise to the decorating of warships.
Mention is even made by Homer of the painted ships of the Greek
warriors who fought at Troy. The use of a rudimentary encaustic
was therefore an ancient practice by the 5th century B. C..
It is possible that at about that time the crude paint applied
with tar brushes to the ships was refined for the art of painting
on panels. Pliny mentions two artists who had in fact started
out as ship painters.
The
use of encaustic on panels rivaled the use of tempera, in what
are the earliest known portable easel paintings. Tempera was
a faster, cheaper process. Encaustic was a slow, difficult technique,
but the paint could be built up in relief, and the wax gave
a rich optical effect to the pigment. These characteristics
made the finished work startlingly life-like. Moreover, encaustic
had far greater durability than tempera, which was vulnerable
to moisture. Pliny refers to encaustic paintings several hundred
years old in the possession of Roman aristocrats of his own
time.
The
nature of encaustic to both preserve and color gave it wide
use on the stone work of both architecture and statuary. The
white marble we see today in the monuments of Greek antiquity
was once colored, probably delicately tinted like the figures
on the Alexander sarcophagus in Istanbul. Pliny says that when
the sculptor Praxiteles was asked which of his pieces he favored,
he answered those "to which [the painter] Nicias had set his
hand." Decorative terra cotta work on interiors was also painted
with encaustic, a practice that was a forerunner to mosaic trim.
Fayum
funeral portraits
Perhaps the best known of all encaustic work are the Fayum funeral
portraits painted in the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D. by Greek
painters in Egypt. A significant Greek population had settled
in Egypt following its conquest by Alexander, eventually adopting
the customs of the Egyptians. This included mummifying their
dead. A portrait of the deceased, painted either in the prime
of life or after death, was placed over the person's mummy as
a memorial. Many of these pieces have survived to our own time,
and their color has remained as fresh as any recently completed
work.
In
the great period of economic instability that followed the decline
of the Roman empire, encaustic fell into disuse. Some work,
particularly the painting of icons, was carried on as late as
the 12th century, but for the most part it became a lost art.
The process was cumbersome and painstaking, and the cost of
producing it was high. It was replaced by tempera, which was
cheaper, faster, and easier to work. In the 18th century the
idea of encaustic painting was revived, initially by amateurs
as a novelty to rediscover the techniques of the ancient painters.
It was further explored in the 19th century, to solve the problem
of dampness faced by mural painters in northern climates. The
success of these efforts was limited, and encaustic remained
an obscure art form.
In
the 20th century, the availability of portable electric heating
implements and the variety of tools has made encaustic a far
less formidable technique. This factor has created a resurgence
of encaustic painting, and it is once again taking its place
as a major artists' medium. "Its effects, its visual and physical
properties, and its range of textural and color possibilities
make it eminently suitable for use in several different contemporary
styles of painting that are not adequately served by our traditional
oil-painting process."
- Ralph Mayer, The Artist's Handbook
(This book available from Amazon.com HERE)