The Mystery Of Encaustic Paint Techniques
The Mystery Of
Encaustic Paint Techniques
The Society of Creative Arts of Newtown (SCAN) will host an encaustic techniques demonstration by Nash Hyon at its next meeting, scheduled for Wednesday, May 12, at 7:30 pm. The free demonstration will take place at in the lower meeting room of Newtown Meeting House, 31 Main Street in Newtown.
âTransformationâ is the word that springs to mind when viewing the paintings of Nash Hyon. She combines the raw materials of an artist â paint, paper, graphite â with a passion for every aspect of human culture, mixing concepts in science and medicine with striking symbolic imagery, thereby transforming them into timeless, emotionally evocative works of art.
Ms Hyon works primarily with encaustics, a historic process of applying molten beeswax to a surface. It is a fitting choice, given the theme of transformation that runs through her paintings.
Bees transform natural substances into wax. The wax with the addition of pigment and damar resin becomes encaustic paint. That paint is then transformed through heat, the mind, the hand and the eye of the artist, to create a work that is far more than the sum of its constituent parts.
The meticulous process of melting, layering and scraping give Ms Hyonâs pieces an almost archaeological feel: there is depth, and substance, a sense of history, and how even the sharpest remembered experiences gradually fade with the passage of time. She will talk about and demonstrate this process on May 12.
Ms Hyon is currently teaching a class at Silvermine Guild of Art.
Reservations are not needed, but additional information concerning SCAN programs is available by calling Ruth Newquist at 203-426-6654.