And after working with oil paint last week, I realized again how messy oil cleanup is compared to encaustic. With encaustic, I can just unplug, clean off my hands with vegetable oil and sayonara.
But of course, everything is relative.
If you've never worked with encaustic and/or only know it from looking at instruction books, you probably think it looks like this.
So neat, so clean and so totally staged. (You can tell that this was taken a long time ago because my heat gun is still aqua and the rubber tree is still alive.)
In the foreground of this fairly neat looking table are some of the lovely wax balls that scraping paintings makes.
But tthis is more the reality - wax everywhere, heat gun turned grey from wax buildup and table barely visible.
Wax drippings everywhere you look.
And the floor is basically rising around the painting area.
And the floor is basically rising around the painting area.
When I walk from the painting area to the woodworking area where the wax on my shoes picks up the sawdust, I know I'm really becoming part of the process.
But that's life in the studio.
5 comments:
I just love these photographs because as there is disorder, there is also organized order. At least your studio looks better than that of Francis Bacon.
Thank you for sharing,
Egmont
So true, so true. My heat gun got so bad, the switch was difficult to turn on. Don't know what to do about the floor but I did finally clean the heat gun.
I love everything about those pictures of your studio. One look and you can tell there is some serious creativity going on in there.
Wow, Egmont, that's quite a comparison! His studio was a horror. I'm glad mine hasn't reached Bacon's level yet.
Gwen, I have to admit that I have cleaned my heat gun too and it needs it again. Those gummy hands of mine keep clogging it up.
Mary, thanks for your comment. Something is serious but not me - usually!
Boy, wax is sure messy- but shows an artist hard at work-- with great results.
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