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  • Nov. 1, 1878
  • Page 15
  • ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1878: Page 15

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    Article ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 15

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Art-Jottings In Art-Studios.

And noAv a Avord or two as to the " manipulation . " Why did the Greeks use the Avord

artist had his Kavr-npiov ( chafing-dish ) , and AA'hen the varnish Avas dry , it Avas heated by fire , " usque ad sudorem " ( to the SAveating-point ) , ancl it Avas then rubbed AA'ith AA'ax candles ancl polished AA'ith napkins . This method the Greeks called / cawns ( burning ) , and AA'hy should not this have been the meaning of the iveKavo-ev . Amongst artists " vehicles " ancl " varnishes" are used someAvhat interchangeably , ancl it is therefore reasonable to suppose that " ceris pingere" ( to paint Avith Avaxes ) ancl " pictiu-am inurere " Avere

the same methods . So , at least , says Pliny , ancl he adds , " There Avere anciently two methods , one cera ( Avith Avax ) ancl another on ivory Avith a cestrum ; then came a third , boiling the AA'ax ancl painting ships at once with it , AA'hich was a lasting mode , so that neither sea , Avhid , nor sun destroyed it . " It appears , from another passage , that the ships Avere painted in the same Avay as pictures AA'ere burnt in ( " eerie tinguntur iisdem coloribus , ad eas picturasqua ) inuruntur ; alieno parietibus generesed classibus

, , famihari " ) . So then there Avere four distinct methods of encaustic painting . ( 1 ) Mixing the colours Avith AA'ax and thinning them Avith a liquid at the moment of painting ; ( 2 ) placing distinct pieces of coloured Avax on ivory , like a mosaic , and uniting by means of a heated cestrum ; ( 3 ) boiling the Avax and using it hot ; and ( 4 ) softening the Avhole p icture , after completion , by heating it Avith a " cauterium " ( chafing-dish . )

Both Pliny ancl Vitrnvius describe the mode of Avorking , the latter b y far the most minutely ancl accurately . "After your AA'all is dry and smooth , " he says , "liquefy punic AA'ax a little by the fire ancl temper it Avith oil . Then A'arnish , ancl AA'hen dry-heat it Avith a chafing-dish ancl rub it smooth . Pliny does not settle the discoverer of this art , but seems to incline to Aristides or Praxiteles . In any case he says Polyguotus ancl Nicanor , Lysippus of Egina and Pamphilus , the great master of Pausias , practised it ; the last-named , Pausias , seeming to have excelled in it to the greatest degree .

Various attempts have been made in modern times to revive it . About the middle of the last century Count Caylus and M . Bachelier , ancl in 1792 Miss Greenland , made various experiments AA'ith a A'iew to its resuscitation . The Count laid the result of his studies before the Academies of Painting and Sciences at Paris , Avhilst the Society for the Encouragement of Arts at London aAvarded Miss Greenland a golden pallette . ' The subject soon dropped , to be reviA'ed , hoAVOA'er , in Germany under the patronage of the

late King of BaA'aria , Avho had some important Avork executed in this style of art . The mode employed Avas to grind the colours aud lay them on Avith a " vehicle " composed almost Avholly of wax . Miss Greenland dissolved gum-arabic in Avater , aftera-arcls adding gum-mastic , which AA'as dissolved by stirring and boiling , and AA'hen the mixture reached the boiling point she added the Avax . After painting the picture , she passed a thin coating of melted

Avax over it , Avith a hand brush , ancl then drew an ordinary flat-iron moderately heated over the surface . The picture , Avhen cool , AA'as rubbed Avith a fine linen cloth . The German method is somewhat similar , but some other ingredients are used ; among these potash A \ dth the wax ; whilst in place of an iron being passed over the face of the picture , the Avax is brought to the surface by a vessel containing lire being held at a little distance from itThisof course nearlresembles the ancient method

. , , more y of the chafing-dish . Encaustic painting , so-called , is never likely to come into very general use , for it cannot be compared to ordinary oil-painting either in brilliancy of colouring , facility of execution , or durability : AA'hilst for the decoration of large surfaces it cannot for an instant compete with its sister-art , " painting in fresco . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-11-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111878/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE LOCKE MS. Article 2
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE PLATT MEMORIAL.—OLDHAM. Article 6
AUTUMN. Article 8
BEATRICE. Article 9
DO THY DUTY BRAVELY. Article 11
AN ELEGY. Article 12
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 13
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 19
FAITHFULLY. Article 22
SOMETHING FOUND. Article 23
THE BROOK-SIDE. Article 24
LOST AND SAVED ; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 25
FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Article 30
THE BETTER PART. Article 34
THE BENI MZAB. Article 35
LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Article 36
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 38
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 42
THE WORDS OF STRENGTH. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Art-Jottings In Art-Studios.

And noAv a Avord or two as to the " manipulation . " Why did the Greeks use the Avord

artist had his Kavr-npiov ( chafing-dish ) , and AA'hen the varnish Avas dry , it Avas heated by fire , " usque ad sudorem " ( to the SAveating-point ) , ancl it Avas then rubbed AA'ith AA'ax candles ancl polished AA'ith napkins . This method the Greeks called / cawns ( burning ) , and AA'hy should not this have been the meaning of the iveKavo-ev . Amongst artists " vehicles " ancl " varnishes" are used someAvhat interchangeably , ancl it is therefore reasonable to suppose that " ceris pingere" ( to paint Avith Avaxes ) ancl " pictiu-am inurere " Avere

the same methods . So , at least , says Pliny , ancl he adds , " There Avere anciently two methods , one cera ( Avith Avax ) ancl another on ivory Avith a cestrum ; then came a third , boiling the AA'ax ancl painting ships at once with it , AA'hich was a lasting mode , so that neither sea , Avhid , nor sun destroyed it . " It appears , from another passage , that the ships Avere painted in the same Avay as pictures AA'ere burnt in ( " eerie tinguntur iisdem coloribus , ad eas picturasqua ) inuruntur ; alieno parietibus generesed classibus

, , famihari " ) . So then there Avere four distinct methods of encaustic painting . ( 1 ) Mixing the colours Avith AA'ax and thinning them Avith a liquid at the moment of painting ; ( 2 ) placing distinct pieces of coloured Avax on ivory , like a mosaic , and uniting by means of a heated cestrum ; ( 3 ) boiling the Avax and using it hot ; and ( 4 ) softening the Avhole p icture , after completion , by heating it Avith a " cauterium " ( chafing-dish . )

Both Pliny ancl Vitrnvius describe the mode of Avorking , the latter b y far the most minutely ancl accurately . "After your AA'all is dry and smooth , " he says , "liquefy punic AA'ax a little by the fire ancl temper it Avith oil . Then A'arnish , ancl AA'hen dry-heat it Avith a chafing-dish ancl rub it smooth . Pliny does not settle the discoverer of this art , but seems to incline to Aristides or Praxiteles . In any case he says Polyguotus ancl Nicanor , Lysippus of Egina and Pamphilus , the great master of Pausias , practised it ; the last-named , Pausias , seeming to have excelled in it to the greatest degree .

Various attempts have been made in modern times to revive it . About the middle of the last century Count Caylus and M . Bachelier , ancl in 1792 Miss Greenland , made various experiments AA'ith a A'iew to its resuscitation . The Count laid the result of his studies before the Academies of Painting and Sciences at Paris , Avhilst the Society for the Encouragement of Arts at London aAvarded Miss Greenland a golden pallette . ' The subject soon dropped , to be reviA'ed , hoAVOA'er , in Germany under the patronage of the

late King of BaA'aria , Avho had some important Avork executed in this style of art . The mode employed Avas to grind the colours aud lay them on Avith a " vehicle " composed almost Avholly of wax . Miss Greenland dissolved gum-arabic in Avater , aftera-arcls adding gum-mastic , which AA'as dissolved by stirring and boiling , and AA'hen the mixture reached the boiling point she added the Avax . After painting the picture , she passed a thin coating of melted

Avax over it , Avith a hand brush , ancl then drew an ordinary flat-iron moderately heated over the surface . The picture , Avhen cool , AA'as rubbed Avith a fine linen cloth . The German method is somewhat similar , but some other ingredients are used ; among these potash A \ dth the wax ; whilst in place of an iron being passed over the face of the picture , the Avax is brought to the surface by a vessel containing lire being held at a little distance from itThisof course nearlresembles the ancient method

. , , more y of the chafing-dish . Encaustic painting , so-called , is never likely to come into very general use , for it cannot be compared to ordinary oil-painting either in brilliancy of colouring , facility of execution , or durability : AA'hilst for the decoration of large surfaces it cannot for an instant compete with its sister-art , " painting in fresco . "

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