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Designs on the Sky Artwork by Jeffrey Lewis
An encaustic painting
results from incorporating melted beeswax, a colored pigment, and a
hardener (usually a resin), and distributing this mixture(s) on a surface
with brushes and tools to create the image. The name encaustic derives
from the Greek word meaning ‘a burning in or inustion,’ thus
signifying the final stage in the painting process during which a heated
element is passed over the painting, thereby fusing the layers of paint
and creating a permanent image. When I was a child, I spent a great deal of time out-of-doors . . . at the beach, either at Lake Ontario or Keuka Lake, one of the New York State’s Finger Lakes. Through these years of growing up and being in the landscape so intimately I think a deep impression of the Creator’s presence in nature took hold within me. When the “Towards Ontario” series of paintings began, it was out of a dual response to, and longing for, childhood, as well as a remembrance of and commemoration of beauty as found in creation. I try to convey a sense of contemplation, quietness, awe, and occasionally drama within the paintings. I want to slow the view down—to make the viewer spend time with the painting. When I think of the craftsmen who were building the great cathedrals of Europe, most of them knew that they were working for and in God’s kingdom. Just by being good craftsmen, they knew they were fulfilling their ‘calling.’ This is the kind of attitude I try to sustain as an artist and as a teacher. When I am able, by Grace, to do this I have a sense of satisfaction and contentment.
I hope to gently remind viewers of God’s character and presence in space and time. The arcs seen in the skies of my paintings represent an example of this. Many people will view these as contrails from a jet. For me however, they are a visible representation of God the Creator having dominion over his creation by playfully, (why not? Play is a part of our personhood), making marks or designs on the sky, not unlike us when we ‘doodle’ on the edge of a piece of paper. This of course has theological implications as it means that we live in an ‘open universe,’ one in which God has authority and still works; one which in my field as a visual artist I seek to give proclamation to.
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