From beehive to hotplate to the artist's hand, encaustic has evolved as
a versatile medium applied to almost every artistic style. A
long-overdue look at a newly popular art form, this book explores 79
North American artists' feelings about their work in encaustic and how
they use it to express their inner worlds and the world around them.
Eight chapters organize the artists by geographical region and focus on
how the heated beeswax and resin material is used to create seductive,
skin-like surfaces and rich, layered membranes. More than 2,000 years
old, this cross-disciplinary medium ranges from painting to sculpture,
assemblage, collage, and printmaking and encourages risk-taking in a way
that other materials do not. Its inherent contradictions--it can be hot
or cold, malleable or solid, opaque or translucent, layered or thin,
permanent or fragile--make it all the more fascinating.