encaustic painting

encaustic painting

art
 painting technique in which pigments are mixed with hot, liquid wax. After all of the colours have been applied to the painting surface, a heating element is passed over them until the individual brush or spatula marks fuse into a uniform film. This “burning in” of the colours is an essential element of the true encaustic technique. Encaustic wax has many of the properties of oil paint: it can give a very brilliant and attractive effect and offers great scope for elegant and expressive brushwork. The practical difficulties of using a medium that has to be kept warm are considerable, though. Apart from the greater sophistication of modern methods of heating and the use of resin (or oil for use on canvas), present-day technique is similar to that described by the 1st-century-AD Roman scholar Pliny the Elder. Encaustic painting was invented by the ancient Greeks and was brought to the peak of its technical perfection by the genre painter Pausias in the 4th century BC.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • ENCAUSTIC PAINTING —    an ancient style of decorative art somewhat similar to enamelling, which consisted in overlaying the surface (e. g. of walls) with wax, then inlaying a coloured design, the whole being subsequently polished …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Encaustic — En*caus tic, a. [L. encausticus, Gr. ?, fr. ? to burn in; ? in + ? to burn: cf. F. encaustique. See {Caustic}, and cf. {Ink}.] (Fine Arts) Prepared by means of heat; burned in. [1913 Webster] {Encaustic painting} (Fine Arts), painting by means of …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • Encaustic — may refer to:*Encaustic painting *Encaustic tile Painted with wax colors filled with heat, or with any process in which colors are burned in …   Wikipedia

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  • Encaustic tile — For encaustic painting see Encaustic painting Encaustic tiles are ceramic tiles in which the pattern or figure on the surface is not a product of the glaze but of different colors of clay. They are usually of two colors but a tile may be composed …   Wikipedia

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