Morning Light, Abstract Oil Encaustic Texture Canvas 30X46 inch – Martine LEtoile

$5,060.00

Sold By : Thou Art SKU: 283435808493 Categories: , , Tag:

Description

Title: Morning Size: 30 X 46

 

Martine L Etoile is a master encaustic artist. She likes to convey an emotional work of art that is still and silent and yet filled with ‘static’, as she calls it; lots of pieces of wax that cloud the objects in the painting and give it movement. Somehow, this ‘static’ makes the intent feel more vulnerable and at the same time heavy and solid. She has been painting in this style for twenty-two years and has been published in several books and magazines. Her original studies were in Fiber Arts at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. At SAIC, she focused on Fabric Surface Design of both Japanese and Indonesian methods. Batik, being her favorite, uses wax, which is such an integral theme of all her work. Martine L Etoile creates a very tactile experience the viewer can enjoy on large and small scale work. Her greatest influence and inspiration is mixed me

New England oil and wax artist, Martine L Etoile, paints original art on canvas and occasionally sells work as well as online galleries such as Art Span. She has been published in several books and magazines on modern art. Her unique style is unlike any contemporary work. Deeply engrossing , unknown feelings , powerful and ahead of its time , are a few words describing her art. Some of her subjects include rooms, factories and attics in decay and others are stories of creatures, called Chamilles, who come to life in painted scenes. Discover the strange and endearing world of Martine L Etoile on the web.

The Encaustic Style

 

One of the first things that come to mind when using wax as a medium is that it brings multiple perspectives to the imagery. Layers of wax are like pieces of energy that are piled on top of the core image, which is the sketch itself. The very first movement on the canvas is the sketch, painted in black oil thinned with turpentine. The sketch is lucid, free flowing and bold, it defines the concept, the direction of the intent. Because the dark lines of the sketch are painted over and over with thick white gesso and layers of melted wax, a series of concepts arise, giving way to new perspectives.

 

Martine L’Etoile is a New England artist who paints in her own original style called abstract deconstruction. A method of painting she started in 1998 in Western Massachusetts after graduating in 1996 from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been described as “spiritual”, “before its time”, “deeply engrossing” and “powerful”. Several pieces of her art have been published in art magazines such as Direct Art and New ART Review as well as books including, “International Contemporary Artists, Volume I and International Contemporary Masters, Volume III.” Presently, Martine continues to add on to the bleedthrough series and to ten different other series of work. CV

 

he first concept is that the image wants to know more about itself. Layers of wax that are brushed on the canvas are unpredictable texture -wise. This spontaneous creation is the idea of random perfection. The artist here does not control exactly how the wax will cover the canvas. In the beginning, the wax is in liquid form, allowing it to adhere to the cotton fibers of the canvas in multiple ways, sometimes with air pockets of bubbles, other times with deep crevices where the pigment of the oils concentrates and sometimes it accumulates in lumps, dense and hardened. With all these variables, the image then takes on a story of its own, enriching the first intent the artist hand in mind. Whenever a medium is not controlled, it is willing and free to create itself, lending to the depth of emotion the viewer can cognize. Layer over layer of information is directed towards the overall intent. What happens is a moving or stirring of feelings, igniting the viewer’s imagination to something relative or completely new.

 

he second concept is vulnerability. Wax is then scraped away allowing the raw canvas to show through, called ‘abstract deconstruction.’ This creates a vulnerability that is powerful. Since the medium is then taken away in parts and left in other parts, certain information can be conveyed, leaving the viewer with a sense of a time line. The process, another words, can be seen clearly. When we see how something has been worn away or sliced away or discarded, we are allowed to feel the vulnerability. The image is being authentic, creating itself in front of the viewer’s eyes, showing how it came into being and is constantly becoming itself.

 

Texture of the painting is what brings the third concept to life; texture equals movement. Even though this is two dimensional art, movement can be felt. Layers of emotion are the tones of pigment used along with wax, together creating texture. These deconstructive, encaustic paintings are meant to be touched causing another dimension of the image. Through the tactile sense, these paintings feel smooth and rough in parts. The paintings themselves are static, but to be static in the first place there has to be friction, here, being layers of energized wax. The painting’s surface can be felt with the fingertips, going over the crevices and bumps, sending a palatable experience to the brain. Inside this experience of feeling, texture is movement. Also, the random scraping away of wax and oils is a deconstructive process. It too is spontaneous, not completely controlled by the hands of the artist. ‘Abstract deconstruction’ has been compared to being ‘static’, as in electricity being built up by friction and then releasing a shock. All at once, the image appears still and silent, static if you will, from raw canvas to scraped away particles, to texture build up and finally release of intent, making the piece of art move as a whole.

 

 

Encaustic art has been around for many years in of the history of art and it has been developed creatively in countless ways. In this particular style, ‘abstract deconstruction’, the artist finds the subtraction of the wax alongside the layering of wax to speak volumes. The emotional content arrives first, as abstract in form and leaves the viewer with a sense of knowing.

 

Additional information

Painting Surface

Canvas

Height (Inches)

46

Type

Painting

Unit of Sale

Single-Piece Work

Original/Licensed Reproduction

Original

Signed?

Signed

Color

Green

Style

Semi Abstract Deconstruction

Year of Production

2018

Artist

Martine L'Etoile

Framing

Unframed

Date of Creation

2000-Now

Time Period Produced

2010-2019

Certificate of Authenticity (COA)

Yes

Material

Oil Wax

Features

Signed

Country/Region of Manufacture

United States

Size

Medium

Subject

Interior

Item Height

46 in

Listed By

Artist

Production Technique

Oil Painting

Size Type/Largest Dimension

Large (Greater than 30")

Item Width

30 in

Handmade

Yes

Width (Inches)

30

Region of Origin

US

Original/Reproduction

Original

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.