Showing posts with label Encaustic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Encaustic. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2023

Transformation: Inspired by Jay DeFeo

Jay DeFeo, The Rose, 1958-1966
                                                                                                                  

      The study of masterpieces necessarily involves some consensus about who the masters are or were.  In my first year of college in the late 70s, the year-long survey course in art history exposed me to perhaps three female artists - Mary Cassatt, Frida Kahlo, and Georgia O’Keefe.  The museums I visited, and the art history books I studied, displayed a nearly unbroken line of male artists stretching back through time.  It pains me now to realize how seldom I questioned that dominance.
    Two unrelated events this summer turned me around.  The first was a visit to the Whitney Museum of American Art in NYC on day trip in July to meet some good friends for lunch.  We’d hoped to walk the High Line after lunch but it was so infernally hot we couldn’t bear the thought of it - so instead we went to the Whitney, which is at the bottom of the High Line, and which would be a good starting point if it cooled off enough later to take a stroll.  While in the museum we were mostly occupied with chatting and
catching up, but at one point I found myself in front of a massive work that was new to me.  This was The Rose, by Jay DeFeo, a monumental painting with incredible dimensionality and texture.  Arresting, to say the least.
    The second event was attending a lecture/book talk at the Hyde Collection in Glens Falls, New York about the book Ninth Street Women, by Mary Gabriel.  This prodigious tome chronicles the work and experiences of Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan,


Joan Mitchell, and Helen Frankenthaler - women who were in at the dawn of the New York abstract expressionist movement after WWII.  They were there along with the male artists whose voices and visions always insisted on the lion’s share of attention, (deserved or not), sharing gallery space with Jackson Pollock, William de Kooning, Robert Rauschenberg, Robert Motherwell, and other rising stars of the New York scene.   It wasn’t until I got home from the book talk that these two events converged to bring me to my Master Piece for this column.
    I was chagrined and angry about the gap in my art education that Ninth Street Women illuminated for me.  Down the Google rabbit hole I went, learning more and more about the female artists of the post-war era who contributed so much to the world of abstract art, and who had to fight so hard for recognition.   Across the country from New York, the vibrant Beat scene of San Francisco brought together poets, painters, and musicians for an exchange of exciting ideas and innovations.  Jay DeFeo was one of those vibrant creatives.
    Her work The Rose, which I encountered that day at the Whitney, took her seven years to complete - it is an accretion of paint and mica, layer upon layer, that she carved into, making it, in her words, “a marriage between painting and sculpture.”  At 11 feet tall and almost two thousand pounds, it was so large that one exterior wall of her apartment had to be opened up in order to extract it.  The Rose was first exhibited in 1969 at the San Francisco Art Institute, and eventually acquired by the Whitney in 1995.  The surface is highly textured, both dark and glittery.  During the seven years she labored on this painting, she developed a habit of sticking her paintbrush in her mouth, gripping it with her teeth while she used her hands to manipulate the surface.  As a consequence of repeatedly chewing down on the paint-laden brush, she developed gum disease and even lost some of her teeth. 
Jay DeFeo working in her San Francisco apartment, with The Rose in the background


    Which brings us to her painting, Crescent Bridge I.  These pale, rock-like forms, smooth and polished, seem to rise out of the white of the paper, with dark shadows or reflections beneath them.  It seems both abstract and realistic, and also deeply mysterious.  Where does it lead? Why does it stop?  What kind of a bridge is it? 
Jay DeFeo, Crescent Bridge I, 1970-1972, Whitney Museum of American Art

Well, as it turns out, it is her dental bridge, which replaced the teeth she lost working on The Rose.  Crescent Bridge II makes it more explicit.  Now we can see they are teeth.   Jay DeFeo also made extensive use of photography in her later work, making dramatic photos of her own paintings as well as objects in her studio that stood alone as separate works. 
Jay DeFeo, Crescent Bridge II, 1970-1972, Whitney Museum of American Art



    As the project for this column I decided to pay tribute to both The Rose, and Crescent Bridge I, by creating a photo series of a dimensional work I call Archipelago.  I used just one stencil for this - Stone Stack, by Jane Monteith L929.  This is a 9x12 stencil but I decided to use a 6x6 square cradled panel (a repurposed wall decor piece from the craft store).  I suspected this project could end up being heavy, so I needed a sturdy substrate.  I had already given the panel one coat of gesso; now I needed to lay out the stencil to fit, and tape over the shapes that I didn’t want to use as part of the composition.  This stencil comes still attached to its mylar matrix so you can carefully cut it loose and use the outline as a mask.  I needed to keep it all intact, so that I could build volume inside the openings and keep the rest of the surface clean.  To build up the “islands” of my archipelago I used joint compound in multiple layers, removing the stencil each time to let the compound cure.  After the islands were as big as I wanted them to be, and had dried, I very carefully sanded them smooth to mimic the smooth teeth of Crescent Bridge I, and then applied several coats of gesso thinned with water to give it all a smooth, enamel appearance.  I used gesso rather than paint, so there would be enough tooth (no pun intended) to hold wax, graphite, and gold leaf.  I’ve used encaustic before for a project in this Master Pieces series and I knew encaustic medium would give me exactly the smoothness and ivory color I wanted.
    As usual, the process of painting with melted wax presented its own challenges, especially as melting wax wants to flow downward as it is reheated.  The mounds of gessoed joint compound slowly began to assume the abstract organic forms I was going for. I dusted powdered graphite around the bottom of each island, and then added a patchy strip of gold leaf just above the “water line.”  I then photographed the work from a few different angles to find the ones I liked best, and treated them to some digital editing with the Distressed_FX Pro app.  

process step 1

process step 2 or 3...

another view of the Archipelago before sanding

After sanding and several coats of thinned gesso

the archipelago shown with wax, graphite, and gold leaf

Archipelago I

Archipelago II

Archipelago III

Archipelago IV

Archipelago V


    This project took quite a long time.  There was considerable amount of drying time for the thick mounds of joint compound. I didn’t try to speed up the process with a heat gun, because I was worried it might lead to cracking.  Each coat of watered-down gesso took half a day to cure completely, and of course applying multiple layers of wax requires heating up and cooling off periods (as well as periods of walking away in a fit of anxious frustration).  Painting with powdered graphite and applying gold leaf were finicky and tense - it’s hard to undo when working on wax!  And finally, the photographing and digital editing is a process that can go on and on, endlessly trying out different angles, lighting, formats, filters, and layering effects.  With each stage of the long process, the piece underwent transformations of shape, size, texture, hue, tone, and weight, from a two dimensional plane to a three dimensional sculpture back to two-dimensional photos in electronic form.  The model itself is a very physical thing, inviting touch, whereas the digital image is virtual and untouchable.  The effects of time and transformation are the lessons I learned from Jay DeFeo while working on this, and they are lessons I am grateful for.
    
    
    Learn more about Jay DeFeo at The Jay DeFeo Foundation 


Jane Monteith Stone Stack L929







Thursday, March 16, 2023

The Woodgrain Collection from Bridget Benton, Encaustic Artist, and Our Newest Designer!

 

The stencils in this collection are all inspired by my nature prints, actual prints done by directly inking and printing the visible woodgrains in tree stumps, logs, and lumber ends! I love these natural textures and the ways that the patterns echo other natural elements like the whorls of fingerprints or ripples on the surface of the water. The stencils can lean more industrial with the lumber ends, or more organic with the full tree cross sections. 

 

I do a lot of collage – whether in acrylic or encaustic - and am always looking for interesting textures to add interest and depth. And I’m a symbolism junkie . . . Woodgrain represents years of growth and the passage of time. Trees and wood provide us with shelter and warmth.  As I’ve been playing with these stencils, I began to see them not only as background textures for a forest-themed encaustic piece or fabric for a cabin quilt but as clock faces and the sands of time in an hourglass! I hope you are similarly inspired. 

 

 

 

Stacked Lumber Cross Section  (L959)



These woodgrain patterns, taken from scrap lumber ends, are both organic and industrial. Stack or stagger the lumber shapes, and you can create the look of rough boards, floors, or walls. Focus on just the curving lines, and you’ll see they resemble the whorls of fingerprints, the ripples on the surface of the water, or even topographic maps. Ideal for creating textured papers for collage, printing fabric, and creating backgrounds for art journals. Use with paint, gel plate printing, stitching, and encaustic.



 

Post Lumber Cross Section (S952)


 

Stacked 4x4 lumber, intended for fenceposts, became the inspiration for this stencil! The whorls of woodgrain come straight from nature, the strong square shapes straight from the hardware store.  Ideal for creating textured papers for collage, printing fabric, and creating backgrounds for art journals. Use with paint, gel plate printing, stitching, and encaustic.

 



 

Big Tree Cross Section (L960)


 

Based on a nature print done by directly inking and printing the visible wood grain in an old tree stump, this captures the rough texture of the bark and the variation of the tree rings. This stencil is so full of possibilities. Woodgrain represents years of growth and the passage of time. Trees and wood provide us with shelter and warmth. Use this gorgeous texture to enhance any nature-based project, to call in the essence of home, or celebrate a major milestone.  Ideal for creating textured papers for collage, printing fabric, and creating backgrounds for art journals. Use with paint, gel plate printing, stitching, and encaustic.




 

Small Tree Cross Section (S951)


 

This stencil was adapted from a nature print created by directly inking the cross-section of a small log. It captures not only the visible wood grain of the tree rings but also calls to mind labyrinths, halos, spinning wheels, a vibrating aura, and even a glowing sun! Ideal for creating textured papers for collage, printing fabric, and creating backgrounds for art journals. Use with paint, gel plate printing, stitching, and 

encaustic.





About Bridget

 


Bridget Benton loves making stuff, and helping other people make stuff! She has been a working artist and teacher for over 20 years. 

 

Bridget has always been drawn to mediums that support working intuitively and building layers - printmaking, photography and collage, fiber, and assemblage. In 2006, she began incorporating encaustic into her work, and found her “perfect medium.” She comes to encaustic with a collage sensibility, combining encaustic with nature print, her original photography, and joyful mark-making.

 

Her work has appeared in Wax Fusion, Mixed Media Art Magazine, Professional Artist Magazine, and in galleries from coast to coast. She has taught for Art Unraveled, The Nature Printing Society, and the Painting with Fire online encaustic masterclass. 

 

Bridget’s passion as a teacher is helping people discover and develop their own creative voice. Her workshops focus on techniques and processes that facilitate self-discovery and creative exploration. Her workshop-in-a-book, The Creative Conversation: ArtMaking as Playful Prayer, is a guide to creating flow in your creative work and building intuitive artmaking skills. In 2012, the book was awarded a Nautilus Book Award Gold Medal as the best book of the year on Creative Process. Bridget is currently the lead encaustic instructor at 310 Art in the historic River Arts District in Asheville, NC.


Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Mary Beth Shaw's VLOG: June 2021

Go behind the scenes with Mary Beth in her studio today!
And remember to leave your question for Mary Beth in the comments below for your chance to
win a Gift Certificate to StencilGirl® Products!
If Mary Beth selects your question for an upcoming VLOG, you win!
Ask her anything!
We hope you enjoyed this episode of Mary Beth's VLOG!

Stay tuned!
Mary Beth Shaw will be back again next month with another new VLOG post!

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting

Shari Replogle here! Super excited to share a variety of  techniques
that use stencils in encaustic painting!

I love adding marks, lines, and patterns especially with StencilGirl® stencils because they are easy to clean and hold up nicely with heavy use and heat of the hot encaustic wax.
If you have never painted with encaustic before, it is purified beeswax mixed with damar resin which is used to harden the wax over time. Any pigments can be added except for acrylic based products because of their plasticity.

These are the stencils from StencilGirl® that I used in today's project:

Soulful Scribbles

There are a variety of ways to create with stencils on the encaustic surface. To begin I paint 3 layers of white encaustic paint onto hard boards primed with encaustic gesso. You can also use primed encaustic boards by Ampersand.

In encaustic painting every layer of wax and pigment that you add must be “fused” (bonded by
heat) to the layer below to form an archival bond. The best way to begin when you are adding stencils is to fuse those first layers of wax very flat so that you can get all those great marks onto an even surface.
Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
The pigments I am using today are Panpastels and R and F pigment sticks:
Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
I like to build up rich layers of patterns, marks, and colors on the encaustic surface so that you can peer back through the layered history of a piece and view bits and pieces that reveal themselves in all of the previous layers. The dreamy translucency of the beeswax allows this to be possible.Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
Great textures can also be added with stencils and encaustic paint!
Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
Shari Replogle: StencilGirl® Stencils in Encaustic Painting
In the following video, I show multiple ways that you can incorporate and apply StencilGirl® stencils in super fun ways to your encaustic painting process. Never tried encaustic? Come on in! It’s highly addicting!


Shari Replogle’s Encausticology studios are in Downtown Cincinnati. 
Shari Replogle
You can find Shari on the following links:

Friday, November 9, 2018

Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products

Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
Greetings!
I’m Glenda Miles and my heart is on fire for ancestor art.
Join me on a journey of adorning the ancestors! 


Perhaps you have experienced creative well-being as a healing force in your life? The simple gesture of making something somehow ends up creating profound meaning and a way of being in the world… that’s how I feel about ancestor art.

When I see stacks of tossed aside old photos in family storage, estate sales and antique stores, I am intrigued by their journey to the place of unwantedness. I feel strongly that creativity can transform these forsaken photographs into reclaimed stories.

I find that when I’m making art with a known or found photograph it shines the light on shared human experiences. No matter who we are and no matter how different we are from others, we all share commonalities. Things like pride in our families, need for comfort and companionship, instinct for resiliency, desire for health and happiness, and the need to be seen, heard and accepted, just to name a few are captured in photos. I especially love and need to make art from the precious few photos I have of my childhood with my Mother and Grandmother.
Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
We’re all immortal, as long as our stories are told.”
Elizabeth Hunter

Honoring these nostalgic connections and feelings reminds me about what’s important and possible in life. Often during the deep dive of looking back and the creative process, surprising symbolism, storytelling and heartfelt expression is revealed. Ancestor art is intuitive, mysterious and magical.

Products Used
2.  Seth Apter's Retreat Circle Stencil
3.  Seth Apter’s Emerald Creek Baked Texture Embossing Powders and Emerald Creek Fractured Ice
4.  Versamark watermark stamp pad + Versa Mark Pens
5.  Idea-ology Vintage Design Tape Paperie
6.  R & F Encaustic Medium

 MISH MASH STASH
Start with gathering ideal collage materials from the mish mash of everyday life. “Shop at home” for papers, documents, book pages, maps, letters, post cards, certificates, manuals, recipes, etc. You can use a variety of substrates; journal pages, vintage book covers, wood panels, and even flashcards. Search for known relative or insta-ones and explore expression, posture, clothing, and environment to determine what was frozen in time at that moment when the camera clicked. Be both intentional in designing of specific symbolic images, text and papery AND intuitive in reimagining and feeling your process…what is your ancestor telling you?
Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
My preference is to use original vintage papers to create a vertical or horizontal neutrally muted background. This creates an appealing, engaging and beautiful composition for the ancestor to be the star of the piece! I love how the tones come out in the layers of paper {especially later when encaustic medium is added.}Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products 
HEART LEAD THE WAY
During the creative process of collage let your heart lead the way. Audition a simple layout that feels and looks good. The photo needs to emotionally connect to your story and viewer. It’s okay to edit and change your mind during this process. Make sure the background paper elements come through at just the right place you want. You’ll notice in the video I edited out the red heart and wanted California and Kentucky to be highlighted. Once your ancestor photo is in place - there are many things you can do to dress it up with such as inks, Washi tapes, sprays, art crayons and my favorite; circle and halo stencils from StencilGirl® Products!
Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
FORGOTTEN NO MORE
I tape a punched circle to the center of the halos to create a mask so I only use the crowning edges. Grandma Aletha, my Mother Rebecca, Eloise, Zella and a few adopted ancestors are all getting sacred accents of circles in their new found art stories.
“You are the fairy tale told by your ancestors.”
Toba Beta
Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products 
I have a passion for circles and Pam’s Halo stencils, Beautiful, Faithful, Radiant, and Creative are my best loved ones! I also join Seth Apter’s Retreat Circle with Pam’s halos or use it solo to capture images or messages.
The circle beckons and welcomes . . . it is universally understood to draw the viewer in to take a closer look. Using the halos and circles in ancestor art is a simple, yet powerful message of revelation and honor. For texture I use my second best-loved artsy supply of Seth Apter’s Emerald Creek Baked Textures for grit, shine and texture. Because I use so many of his powders I created sample cards for quick reference.
Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® ProductsGlenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
For an endearing topcoat, I use, fuse and polish two coats of encaustic medium. Aletha and Eloise are now transformed into evocative masterpieces - finally never to be forgotten or lost again.Glenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® ProductsGlenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® ProductsGlenda Miles: Adorning the Ancestors with StencilGirl® Products
Because art comes from a deep emotional place inside us, I have found that making ancestor art awakens an emotional response. I feel very connected and somehow attached to my creations. I absolutely love this about the experience and thus have adopted many new “family” members at my studio.
Thank you StencilGirl® Products for the invitation to peek into my little corner of the world at:
Studio #103
Pendleton Art Center
Middletown, Ohio 45044

**CREATE YOUR OWN ANCESTOR ART WITH GLENDA MILES IN PERSON AT EPHEMERA PADCUAH!! DETAILS ON HER UPCOMING WORKSHOP HERE!**
Glenda Miles
Links:
Creative Communion Facebook: www.facebook.com/GlendaMilesCreativeCommunion
Pendleton Art Center: http://pendletonmiddletown.com

Friday, October 26, 2018

Art Journal: Rooted Strong by Cheetarah




Hi, it's Cheetarah here, and this month at StencilGirl® Talk we share what we feel grateful for. I've made an art journal spread about my hometown, Amsterdam. I'm feeling grateful for the roots I have there, the city I've spent the better part of my life in and in connection to my remaining family whom still live there. It's quite a personal spread, but it has so much meaning that I decided I wanted to share this with you here as it helped me worked through processing loss.


Earlier this year in April my father passed away and needless to say, it really uprooted a lot in my life. He was my last living parent and with his passing & not having my parental house to go to anymore and living in another city really made think about my connection to my family and my roots. How our parents aren't there to go to anymore and how we as siblings can stay rooted in connection towards each other, going forward. Journaling has been such a big part of my life to process all these feelings and art journaling also helps to get that visual representation out.



This art journal page just naturally came into being when I got my most recent StencilGirl® order with the inclusion of the Encaustics set of Stencils Club May 2013. The tree rings in the large stencil reminded me a lot of the canal rings in Amsterdam. As I placed it over a transit map, over the heart of the city it just clicked into place.

 

From the same set I used the roots & the female figure on top of it is the ATC size figure from Pam Carriker's ATC Mix Up large stencil. She stands so perfectly STRONG on the tree trunk, her roots digging in deep into the soil of her past, which grounds her in the present and supports her in her future. The word strong is from Carolyn Dube's Uplifting Words large stencil.


The Stencil Past Present  Future by Seth Apter was just a perfect addition to the whole sentiment of this art journal page and I used the smaller elements on the stencil for mark making throughout the whole page. Nathalie Kalbach's Amsterdam was an absolute must to this page to add a bit of flair and whimsy.

I have filmed the process of this art journal page which you can view here:


Off camera, I also added some more doodles with the sakura while gel pen and some stamping with VivaLasVegaStamps! texture stamps for a little bit more texture in the background.


To finish it off I added a quote "Roots are not in a landscape or a country or a people, they are inside you" from author Isabel Allende. I'm grateful to have grown up in such a dynamic city with my parents and to have build such strong roots that connects me to them in my past, present and future, as they live within me, always.

A few close up pictures:


You can see all the layers peeking through in the center and the female figure. 


I am absolutely grateful to have these strong roots supporting me in my life moving forward. 

Stencils I used are:



I hope you enjoyed watching the process of this art journal page. 
Thanks so much for stopping by! Have an awesome day & see you next time :)