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Encaustic Art - waxpainting

To paint with beeswax is an art, which was known as long ago as 400 BC. The Ancients of Greece, Rome and probably Egypt, used this fascination method to paint. In fact the word "encaustic" is Greek and means "burned in". This method was a little difficult as you had to melt the wax and mix it with pigments as indigo, ochre etc. They painted with palette knifes, stiff brushes and small sticks in the molten wax. The Roman author Plinius the elder (23 - 79 AC), who died in the ruins under Pompeii during the eruption of the volcano Versus in the year of 79 has written a book which he called "Natural History".
In this book he describes the technique. However, his knowledge of painting with wax was very insufficient, he describes the different ways the artists used the wax, whether they painted portraits, scenes of mythology or decorated marble or terracotta. Plinius tells for example that the painter Apelles, who was the portrait painter of Alexander the Great, made portraits which were so unbelievable that the people who mastered interpretation of foreheads could tell how many years the person on the picture would live or how long he had been living. The Greeks proofed their ships with beeswax that they were watertight. Then they got the idea of mixing pigments with the wax and at the same time decorate the ships. The poet Homer has described the wax painted ships, which the Greeks used in the battle of Troy. They were decorated with awesome monsters that frightened the enemies. The well-known Encaustic paintings today are the mummy portraits from the valley of Fayum in Egypt. After Alexander the Greats conquest of Egypt (322 BC) many Greeks moved to Egypt. In the valley of Fayum they joined the Egypt artists who painted mummy portraits and icons. The Greek taught the Egypt's how to paint with beeswax, and soon more than 50 % of all the mummy portraits were Encaustic paintings. Fortunately many of these portraits are preserved, and today you can admire them in our great museums all over the world. In the Copenhagen National Museum two very fine portraits of a man and 
a woman are placed in the collection of antiques. Owing to the very difficult method gradually very few painted wax-paintings. Only a few Italian monasteries had monks who painted images - icons. However in the 1980`s an Englishman, Michael Bossom found out that wax paintings could be painted with some special constructed low heat electrical tools. A painting iron and a stylus heated exactly to the 60,2 degrees Celsius where the wax is melting. This invention caused that many artists has revived this very old technique. In Germany and in Holland there are a great deal of Encaustic-painters and even in Denmark the number is increasing. Several artists are mixing the techniques and paint oil- acryl- and wax paintings, generating very fascinating works of art. 
Browse on "the net" and have a look at "encaustic", "enkaustik" or "enkaustikos".
You will find plenty of inspiration.

Best wishes
Ingrid Slott

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