About Me

Margaret Adams is a working Artist and Art Teacher

I am a painter with a varied background. Currently I am enjoying painting with wax. I mix beeswax with oil paint  hardened with dammar resin. I often incorporate old metal I find in Mexico as well as gravel, pieces of scrap paper and anything else that creates a spark of interest. My work is usually abstract with a leaning to towards landscape.

Working with the children in Mexico I use acrylics on large pieces of paper or board. By working in a larger format the children are freed up exploring out of their comfort range in both colour and size. Many of the children have never used paint in this way before. It only takes a few minutes for them to find their style and focus. Without exception they are thrilled and excited with the results.

 

 

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A Brief History of Encaustic Painting

Encaustic Painting has been around since the time of the Greeks. Plutarch mentioned it in a poem in the first century AD:

A beautiful woman leaves in

the heart of an indifferent man

an image as fleeting as water,

but in a lover's heart the image is fixed with fire

like an encaustic painting

that time will never erase.

 

In the nineteenth century we saw a resurgence of interest in the medium. Artists tried to recreate the recipes from the early Greek painters; they were interested primarily in the Fayum Portraits, funeral masks, placed on the mummified body as a memorial.

There are still a few of these nineteenth century recipes around - but it wasn't until the 1950's with artists like Jasper Johns that we saw a rebirth of encaustic painting on a major scale. This rebirth was, in part, because of the use of electricity, or gas, which made it easier to heat and apply the wax.

Many modern artists have experimented with encaustic painting, and often incorporate areas of wax into their paintings, but because of its labour intensity, most do not continue.

More about encaustic painting at R&F Paints

I have worked with wax since I stumbled upon it when doing a series of collages of my women ancestors. I decided to coat the images with wax as this seemed to give an authentic and aged look to the pieces. I decided to study more about this method of painting, incorporating oil paints, wax and pigments. I find it truly satisfying, almost addictive, and it has now become almost my full time practice.