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Myths and Realities about Acrylic Gesso and Encaustic

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012 by Darin

This past June at the 6th Annual International Encaustic Conference in Provincetown, I had the opportunity to sit in on Richard’s session about the adhesive properties of different substances and their compatibility with encaustic paints and mediums.  There was an abundance of information about a variety of different materials and it was all pulled from real-world testing done here at R&F.   (Read more about testing here)   One thing that really struck me more than anything else is that it is not the binder that dictates whether or not a ground is suitable for encaustic - it is how you use it.

encaustic adhesion test samplesAdhesion Test Samples

To be clear, very early on we were advising artists against the use of encaustic over acrylic mediums.   From 1988 (when Richard began advising artists) until 2007, that was perfectly sound advice.   We did not feel that the acrylic mediums and grounds that were on the market at that time had the porosity or “tooth” necessary for encaustic paint to reliably adhere to a substrate.   Then in 2008, after quite some time in development, we introduced our acrylic based “Encaustic Gesso”.  But how does this work?

Acrylic is bad, right?

Well, no.

Used properly, acrylic is a very reliable, and durable binder.  It has wonderful adhesive properties and flexibility. Carefully tweaked with some other materials, it is quite suitable for use with encaustic paint.  What I took away, more than anything else, from Richard’s presentation in June is that it is not about the binder.

adhesion-1
Cadmium Red Encaustic on a “typical” Acrylic Gesso

Think of it this way: For years artists have quite successfully used traditional rabbit-skin glue gesso as a ground for encaustic.  Rabbit-skin glue by itself is a slick, non-porous, brittle medium.  On it’s own it is not a very good ground for encaustic.  When you combine it carefully with the right proportion of solid materials (titanium, chalk, etc) it becomes a very suitable ground for encaustic.  So, one more time:  it’s not about the binder.

The reason I feel confident about this (like all our products) is that we test them.  Again and again, until we feel confident about their performance.  Then we test them some more.

When we developed our Encaustic Gesso, (and later, when we worked with Ampersand to create Encausticbord) we wanted something that was absorbent and felt like watercolor paper but could be brushed on smooth and dry quickly with little effort.  We also wanted something that was not soluble with water after it dried since many artists combine encaustic with other media.  And we wanted a gesso that had excellent adhesion on all kinds of substrates and would be flexible and durable to withstand changes in the environment over very long periods of time.   After a lot of hard work and lots of testing we got all of these things.  And some acrylic.

Encaustic Gesso applied
R&F Encaustic Gesso applied

Gameday at R&F

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011 by Darin

Paintmaker Matt Kelly shares a day in the life at R&F making encaustic paint and Pigment Sticks:

Testing the Adhesion of Encaustic Paint

Monday, May 2nd, 2011 by richard
Umber/adhesion
Raw Umber on untempered hardboard

One of the most frequently asked questions about encaustic painting is “What is the right surface to paint on?”  The mechanics of adhesion in oil and acrylic are well established but there is no equally standard body of knowledge about the adhesion of encaustic to various surfaces.

In 2008, when we worked with the chemists who helped us develop our Encaustic Gesso, it was necessary to test its performance. We needed to know how well the gesso adhered to a panel and how well encaustic paint would adhere to the gesso. This became all the more crucial when we partnered with Ampersand Art Supply to create a machine-made panel based on our Encaustic Gesso.  Encausticbord™ had to be both durable and seductively inviting to work on.  It was also important that it would be suitable for multi-media use since encaustic is so often used in conjunction with other mediums and materials.

Once it was clear that the Encausticbord™ worked well with oil, water, and wax based mediums, we applied a series of systematic tests for durability that we had used when we released our brushable Encaustic Gesso.

Cross section of Cadmium Red, R&F Encaustic Gesso, and Hardboard
Cross section of Cadmium Red, R&F Encaustic Gesso, and Hardboard

The first and simplest test, of course, is to freeze a painted panel and then slam it to see if the paint will break off.  We have been using “The Freezer Test” since the early nineties when we needed a simple way to help artists determine compatibility of their substrate with encaustic.  This mainly tells you how well the painting should hold up under acute impact when shipped in cold weather.

The longevity of a painting however, depends on many variables, the most important of which are the gradual fluctuations in temperature and humidity that take place over long periods of time in normal conditions for exhibiting or storing artwork.

To simulate this, we have developed a procedure of cycling painted panels through freezing and thawing periods to exaggerate those fluctuations in temperature. We follow this with quantifiable stress tests designed to detach any areas of paint that became vulnerable from the repeated contraction and expansion of the freezer test.

We repeat these tests using a range of colors, because, as most of you who work in encaustic know, every pigment has a characteristic effect on the wax (as it does on other mediums). Umbers, for example make the wax very hard and brittle. Cadmiums make it soft. Titanium white can make it gummy.  Each family of colors has to pass the test for a ground to be considered suitable for encaustic.

How dependable are these tests? It’s fairly easy to say if you’re talking about a couple of decades. Most of us have experienced how materials behave in that amount of time.  We know from the Fayum portraits that beeswax will last 2 millennia and longer. Yet our modern pigments differ from the ancient ones.  The supports and grounds we work on are also different. This is why it is important to continue developing tests to simulate fluctuations in the environment over time.  It is important to test the effects of temperature, humidity, light, vibrations, pollution, and phases of aging in the medium that over time can break down the structure of the paint and cause the separation of one material from another.

The methods used in these tests do not result in predictions, only educated guesses. What they can do is separate materials with short-term durability from those that promise to survive much longer.

One last word about shipping in cold weather:  Most artwork is fragile in extreme cold, even work that is made with materials that easily withstand normal temperature fluctuation. The best precaution in any instance is careful packaging and, when feasible, expedited shipping time.

Take special care when shipping artwork in cold weather
Take special care when shipping artwork in cold weather

R&F’S 23rd Anniversary

Monday, January 17th, 2011 by richard

Last Saturday, January 15th, was the 23rd anniversary of R&F’s founding in the now proverbial basement in Brooklyn. But what’s so special about a 23rd anniversary? It’s not a marker like a 20th or a 25th anniversary. I have to admit even we didn’t pay much attention to it here.

But then I got to thinking how much this year really does represent something very special in R&F’s history. This was the year that we collaborated with Ampersand Art Supply to create EncausticbordTM, and that led to the introduction of the Encaustic Center, a fully integrated selection of encaustic paints, tools, and supports now available in art supply stores around the country.

Our 1st anniversary represented our continuation of commercial encaustic paint begun by Torch Art Supply in the late 1940s, which was for many years the only commercial encaustic paint in the world. But it was, particularly back then, a specialty paint relegated to the back corners of most art stores.

original Torch Art Supply encaustics

Original Torch Art Supply encaustics

R&F’s original hand cut encaustic cakes

R&F’s original hand cut encaustic cakes

Our 23rd anniversary represents the establishment of encaustic paint as a mainstream art material. While the symbol of a 20th anniversary is china and the symbol of a 25th is silver for R&F the Encaustic Center signifies this milestone in our history.

R&F's encaustic paint is available in three sizes (40 ml., 101 ml. and 333 ml.)

R&F's encaustic paint is available in three sizes (40 ml., 101 ml. and 333 ml.)

The Encaustic Paint Center

The Encaustic Paint Center

UCDA Designers Award First Krider Prize to R&F Handmade Paints

Friday, October 8th, 2010 by admin

R&F was greatly honored to be the recipient of the first Krider Prize for Creativity given by the University and College Designers Association. The presentation took place during UCDA’s 40th anniversary and annual conference in Minneapolis on October 2. The prize was presented to Richard Frumess by UCDA Foundation board member and frequent R&F workshop participant, Barbara Esmark.

RF stack

The Krider Prize was created in memory of UCDA member John Alden Krider to honor “creativity wherever it may be found.” As stated in the announcement, UCDA recognizes “that designers draw their inspiration and influences from a broad range of fields and experiences. Therefore, the criteria for the Krider Prize is deliberately broad to reflect that creativity takes countless forms and is demonstrated in many ways.”

UCDA gave the award to R&F for our company’s “creativity and demonstrated impact on the industry and the community.” In specific, the Association acknowledged

  • Our role in the revival of a previously under used and misunderstood medium that impacts many others (photography, design, painting, sculpture, ceramics, drawing, collage);
  • Our influence on, and assistance to, artists across the country through our workshops and high-quality encaustics and oil sticks;
  • Our creation of jobs for artists in teaching, training and production of waxes and paints;
  • Our policy that allows students to use studio space and virtually all materials for free;
  • Our promotion of art and artists through our public exhibition gallery; and
  • Our creative, nurturing and productive environment.

Richard, in accepting the award, pointed out that UCDA was honoring many people in granting this prize – our teachers, our workshop and gallery director, our office staff,  hundreds of artists who have contributed so much to our workshops and exhibitions, and, not least, our paint makers, for at the core of all of our activities is our wonderful and beautiful paint.

The $1,500 prize will be set aside for R&F workshop scholarships for UCDA members.

rfsticks2

2010 Annual Encaustic Painting Conference at Montserrat

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010 by richard

3666069855_26264ca766
There are a number of things about the Annual Conferences of Encaustic Painting at Montserrat College of Art that amaze me, and a good deal of the credit goes to its founder and director, the indomitable Joanne Mattera, who began building a network of painters back in 1999 with her book, The Art of Encaustic Paintingjoanne-mattera-in-studio
Joanne has kept the conference program broad enough to appeal to a wide range of interests, allowing the event to build upon itself each year.  This momentum is a reflection of the social nature of the current encaustic movement. So much of the development of contemporary encaustic has been community-driven – artists teaching themselves and each other. From this have sprung networks, conferences, retreats, exhibits, and collaborations.

Hallway Gallery at Montserrat
Hallway Gallery at Montserrat

Another thing that amazes me about the conferences is how much I myself learn. Here I am, involved in all areas of encaustic matters 364 days of the year (I take off Groundhog’s Day), and I still come across information about materials and methods that I did not know or was only vaguely familiar with.  For example, Roberta Bernstein’s excellent keynote talk on the work of Jasper Johns was both refreshing and enlightening. Johns’ great feat was to usher the medium into the modernist era.  He did this by concentrating on surface effects that had as much to do with his thematic concerns as the images themselves. Except for the use of Japanese kimono irons, his encaustic tools were simple everyday implements. Yet with these, as Dr. Bernstein showed with examples from major points in his career, he explored much of what is now standard encaustic vocabulary – collage, layering, and muted color surfaces.

     Roberta Bernstein delivered the keynote talk about the work of artist Jasper Johns
Roberta Bernstein delivered the keynote talk about the work of artist Jasper Johns

Several of the sessions that I attended dealt with either materials or with social aspects of encaustic: Ask Dr. Wax, Inquiry into Soy Wax, Batik and Encaustic, and Creating an [encaustic] Organization.

John Dilsizian, dubbed Dr. Wax at the conference, has long been the technical mentor on wax. Here are some of the things he discussed:
·    Microcrystalline and paraffin waxes as substitutes for beeswax. Both microcrystallines and paraffins are derived from petroleum, and one of the problems of working with either is their tendency to turn yellow, due to residual oil in the refined wax.  Although blends of micros and paraffins can imitate some of the characteristics of beeswax, the long-term structural integrity is not known.  Blends of microcrystallines/paraffins/beeswax are linear. This means that if you combine waxes with the following approximate melting temperatures: 2 parts of a micro (170°F) with 1 part of a paraffin (140°F) and 4 parts of beeswax (145°F), you will get a wax with an average melting temperature of 151°F.  Blends of carnauba or resin with beeswax, however, are not linear but geometrical and their combined melting point has to be measured because it is not easily calculated.
·    Resin and beeswax. Some of the virtues of adding damar resin to the wax is that it retains heat and remains flexible for a longer time. It also adds to the adhesiveness of the wax. Its hardening effects on the wax are progressive over time and not entirely immediate.
·    Bleaching and blooming of beeswax. The best way to decolorize beeswax for artists’ use is by running the wax through filters. Using chemical bleaches can reverse over time; the wax retains some of the bleach, and is more likely to react with pigments.  However, not all crude waxes can be decolorized by filtering. Surprisingly, the greater the tendency of a beeswax to bloom, the easier it is to be decolorized by filtration.
·    Colony Collapse Disorder among bees is still of grave concern. There has been a larger count of bee deaths this last year than previously. Autopsies have shown a higher incidence of pesticides and virus. This is surprising and disturbing because each cause should be countering the other – if higher pesticide deaths, there should be lower virus deaths and visa versa. But this is not turning out to be the case. The mystery continues with potentially major consequences for our general food supply, honey production, and wax supply.

Left: Barbara Walton Right:
Barbara Walton                Dr. Toni Wang

Barbara Walton has been conducting experiments with soy wax as an alternative to beeswax for encaustic with her colleague Dr. Toni Wang, a food scientist, at Iowa State University. The initial results of soy wax and damar resin proved too soft and dull, cracking occurred, and there was a lack of adhesion between layers. Later formulations were more successful. Still, this was an in-progress report of experiments that are continuing.

Barbara Walton, Soy Test #12.
Barbara Walton, Soy Test #12.

Regardless of whether or not they result in a useable soy wax-based encaustic, the mere effort to research this avenue is one more sign that encaustic is an open field with many possibilities still to be explored and discovered by the inquisitive.

Cat Crotchett’s talk on a collaboration she did with batik artisans in Indonesia gave another demonstration of the expanding encaustic community. The project began with a visit of batik artists to Western Michigan University who were fascinated to discover an artistic use of wax in which the wax remained as part of the image, rather than being used as a resist to produce a negative image. Grant money from arts and cultural organizations and a donation of paint from R&F funded a trip last summer to Yogyakarta, the major arts city in Java.

workshop-2
Indonesian Painters Seated Around An Encaustic Palette

Many technical hurdles were overcome, such as the improvised use of the pans normally employed to heat the tjaps (copper pattern blocks). Available tools such as the traditional tjanting tools, torches, palette knives, and brushes were used. Fusing was often done simply by leaving the work in the sun.

Student work (Giyanti) using capting and canting tool
Student work (Giyanti)

Two sets of workshops were set up, one with batik artists, the other with fine arts painters, and their approaches were greatly different. One very interesting cultural difference emerged from the workshops. Painters here in the West tend to work individually, sharing palettes and their work space only when necessary. But the Indonesian artists worked communally, sharing palettes and work space out of custom.

encaustic-art-institute-cerrillos-nm
Encaustic Art Institute, Cerrillos, NM

Harriette Tsosie and Kim Bernard talked about the setting up their respective encaustic networks, The Encaustic Art Institute (formerly New Mexico Wax) and New England Wax. Each organization has between 60-70 members. New Mexico Wax merged earlier this year with the Encaustic Art Institute located in a spacious 2,400 sq. ft. building built by its founder, Douglas Mehrens, with the intention of being a national center for encaustic art. New England Wax was formed in 2006 and focuses on group participation through bi-monthly meetings, exhibits, and museum and gallery visits.

Listening to Kim and Harriette made me think once again about an anomaly in our encaustic world. It is striking how so many artists are drawn to encaustic, seek out other encaustic painters, form encaustic organizations, publish encaustic manuals and videos, set up encaustic exhibits, and attend encaustic events yet emphatically state that they are not encaustic painters but artists who happen to use encaustic.

In a sense, that’s what the encaustic networks are  about – a counter to the solo artist making her or his way in the gallery world in which encaustic becomes a vehicle for creative communal activities.  The EAI held an exhibit called “Dialectic” that partnered artists using encaustic with artists using other mediums. NEW collaborated with the International Encaustic Artists in the “Diptych Project,” in which an NEW member sent a finished piece along with a blank panel to the IEA member to complete as the second half of a diptych. In these activities is a sense of community, certainly grasped by the Indonesian artists whom Cat Crotchett encountered.

2010 R&F Vendor Booth
2010 R&F Vendor Booth

R&F at Rileystreet’s 14th Annual Art Materials Festival 6/26

Thursday, June 24th, 2010 by heather

Come out this Saturday, June 26th from 10am-4pm and Paint

This coming Saturday artist Eileen P. Goldenberg will be representing R&F at Rileystreet’s 14th Annual Art Materials Festival  in Santa Rosa, CA.  Eileen will demonstrate various materials, techniques, and uses of  encaustic paint from 10am-4pm.

Rileystreet Art Supply
103 Maxwell Ct.
Santa Rosa, CA 95401
p. 707.526.2416
e. info@rileystreet.com

There will be supplies on-hand for participants to try their hand at working with encaustics and Eileen will be happy to answer any and all technical questions that you may have.

This event only happens once a year with over 30 demonstrators participating.  If you live in Northern California this is the event to go to.  All the demos are free, but space is limited.  To save your spot, contact Rileystreet at 707-52602416 or info@rileystreet.com.

For additional information please go to Rileystreet’s website .

array-75-24x48-c2a92010epgoldenberg-300dpi2
Artwork: Array 75 , Triptych, each panel 48"x8", encaustic on wood, by EileenP.Goldenberg©2010.

About Eileen:

Eileen has been an artist her whole life, doing photography, ceramics, drawing and painting using encaustics. Her extensive research and studying diverse topics, such as quantum physics and biology, gives her a rich visual language to serve as a vehicle to express herself. She passionately teaches art and believes that no one should be denied learning to express themselves. Eileen received her BFA from Alfred University and her MFA from the University of Iowa.  Her work is shown in galleries all over the US including Hallway Gallery in Bellevue, WA and Conrad Wilde Gallery in Tucson, AZ. She also shows her work at many prestigious art shows such as the Bellevue Arts Museum Show and 225F: Encaustic Encounters at the Turchin Center for the Visual Arts.

Artist Statement
The Array series is minimalist, grid based, with a soft geometry and emotional color. My work is a quiet reflection of my experiences and feelings. I paint for the pure pleasure of feeling the substance of the encaustic paint and putting my voice into a visual form. I sketch ideas and then paint from those concepts, creating long series of paintings that are related. Complexity, surface, and translucency are elements in my work.

R&F Update: Partnerships for a New Era

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010 by heather

bannerrf5R&F Update: Partnerships for a New Era

At R&F Handmade Paints we have always prided ourselves on being an artist-focused business. Over the last twenty-two years much of the growth and success of R&F has been due to the loyal support of you, our customer. In recent years our customer base has rapidly expanded as encaustic has emerged onto the contemporary art scene as an interdisciplinary media with limitless boundaries. With this growth the demand for our paint and technical support has increased greatly.

In response, R&F has been working in new ways to bring our product line to you. We have partnered with art stores on new packaging and display cases to best showcase both our encaustic paints and Pigment Sticks. These new displays will be showing up in more and more stores soon. We believe that a stronger presence in stores will be convenient to you, the customer, but will also help to support local art shops and in turn local economies, which are so vital to the arts community. Please click here to see a listing of our retail outlets. If you know of a specific store that you feel could benefit from having R&F please let us know.

Last month R&F had a chance to talk to many of these local retailers when we attended the NAMTA (National Art Materials Trade Association) convention and trade show in Indianapolis, IN. For retailers and manufactures NAMTA is the place where industry professionals have a chance to see and preview new and innovative art materials. It is important to let you know that we have also been collaborating with other companies to introduce new products. There was a lot of interest and enthusiasm from stores about R&F. We received two awards including an Art Business Innovation Award with Ampersand and Best Small Booth Award. The momentum from NAMTA has been contagious and everyone at R&F is looking forward to a productive summer.

We gave you a taste of things to come with the introduction of our new, more affordable encaustic medium pellets a few weeks ago. This is just the beginning. In the next few months you will see several more new products we have been preparing. You will also see our new packaging and displays popping up in more stores, so be on the lookout. We will keep you posted via our newsletter and online blog.As we keep growing, R&F will continue to craft our high-quality artist paints in small, carefully controlled batches and as we look towards the future we assure you that we will continue to work for you, our artist partners, to best meet your needs.

Most importantly, we thank you all for making this possible.

Warm Regards,
The Team at R&F

Upcoming Encaustic Demonstration Events in CT and WA

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010 by heather

Mark your calendars!

Saturday, May 1st from 1pm-4pm

This coming weekend R&F has teamed up with Jerry’s Artarama in West Hartford, CT and artist Leslie Giuliani for a demonstration of materials and techniques in Encaustic Painting on Saturday, May 1st from 1-4pm at:

Jerry’s Artarama of CT
1109 New Britain Avenue
West Hartford, CT 06110
860-232-0073

Leslie will demonstrate the uses of both encaustic paint and Pigment Sticks.  There will be supplies on-hand for participants to use.  This is a great way to explore encaustic painting.

The demonstration is $10.  With your registration fee you will receive Free Samples and a $ Saving Event Coupon.  Call 860-232-0073 for more information and to reserve your space.

Leslie Giuliani, Ritual, 2003.  Encaustic on wood.
Artwork: Leslie Giuliani, Ritual, 2003.  Encaustic on wood.

About Leslie:

Leslie Giuliani received her BFA from the University of Delaware and has studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the School of Sacred Arts, and the Finishing School. She has an extensive education in the materials of making art. Her work is in the collection of the State of Connecticut and has been featured in two international encaustic biennial exhibitions and the national touring exhibition Oil and Wax. She incorporates printmaking, drawing, collage, and textiles in her own encaustic pieces. She has been an independent teacher for 15 years.


Sunday, May 2nd from 11am-2pm

On  Sunday, May 2nd R&F and artist Kristin Swenson-Lintault will be celebrating the Grand Opening of  Blick Art Materials in Seattle, WA with a free encaustic  demonstration from 11am-2pm.  Additional information regarding the Grand Opening events  can be found on Dick Blick’s website or by clicking here.  This event is a great chance visit Blick’ new art store, meet Kristin, and try your hand at encaustic painting.  Kristin will have materials available so that all participants can express themselves with paint.

Blick Art Materials
1600 Broadway Avenue
Seattle, WA 98122
206-324-0750

Kristin Swenson-Lintault, Synergy II, Encaustic, oil, rope, pastel, muslin on wood panel, 2009.

About Kristin:
Kristin Swenson-Lintault is a multi-media artist (born 1969) in Kentucky, raised in Illinois, and currently lives in Seattle, WA. with husband and son. She earned her MFA in Fiber/Textiles and BA in Fine Art-Drawing at Southern Illinois University. She studied painting at Hospitalfield House, a 13C. Studio Arts Centre in Scotland and studied traditional natural dye and indigo textile printing and dyeing, washi papermaking, and wood fired ceramics in Japan and South Korea. In addition she has traveled to France, Netherlands, Germany, Mexico and Belize to research art, history and architecture.

In 2001, after a visit to R&F Handmade Paints to witness encaustic paint production, she began combining aspects of her earlier approach to drawing, painting, textile dyeing and printing, paper pulp painting, floor cloths, ceramics, outdoor installations, and photography, into her encaustic painting. Her encaustic paintings were juried into the first 2007 Annual Encaustic Conference exhibition as well as last year’s 2009 Conference show at Montserrat College of Art in Beverly, MA.  Her KSL STUDIO blog is her art studio journal of recent work, sketchbook drawings and travel photos that together explore her creative process. Kristin teaches mixed media encaustic painting workshops with a fiber/textile emphasis at her studio in Seattle.

Introducing Encaustic Medium in Economical Pellet Form

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010 by heather

R&F Handmade Paints has introduced a new bagged Encaustic Medium in pellet form. This medium is 45% less expensive by weight due to an innovative manufacturing process. Made of the same 100% Pharmaceutical Grade beeswax and damar resin as our popular cakes, this product is used to create transparency and extend encaustic paints. R&F’s medium is still available in standard cakes as well as in pellet form.

R and F Handmade Paints

Bagged medium is available in convenient (1) one, (5) five, and (10) ten pound bags. Click here for a list of Retail Outlets in your area.