The first summer
we set out for Asheville, North Carolina, a friend told me that we were
embarking on a busman’s holiday–after all, The Mountain here at Sewanee is
2,000 feet, and we enjoy the same type of scenery in Tennessee. What she didn’t
understand was that we needed a “shot of the city” and its culture after living
four months in a village of 2,000 people.
For writers who need stimulus, Asheville offers
the best of mountain destinations. In 2010 and 2011, The American Style Magazine named Asheville among ten top artists’ destinations, and
in 2010, the city claimed the top place on this list. Our first visit to the
River Arts District in Asheville confirmed that report, and our visual senses
were treated to a plethora of unique art work in ceramics, fiber, glass,
jewelry, metal, paint, prints, photography, stone, and wood.
For four years
we’ve haunted the district where 175 artists display their work in 24 different
historic buildings, most of which are warehouse type studios where artists
engage visitors while they work at their craft. Many of the artists have been drawn
to and inspired by the Blue Ridge Mountain landscape, which is represented in
paintings, sculptures, and photographs.
We wandered into
the studio of Constance Williams, an expressionist encaustic painter whose work
fascinated me, and within five minutes, the artist and I had connected–as poets
and artists often do. Constance, eager to instruct us about the encaustic
process, gave us a short course on the luminous art pieces in her studio, explaining
that she uses hot fluid paint, a blow torch, and fireproof tools to create
conceptual pieces that appear to have captured her subconscious for a complex,
poetic effect.
Constance is
originally from Somerset, England and dropped out of a course in advanced art
because she wanted to veer off course and try new approaches to art. She moved
to London, and later migrated to the U.S. where she found her way to the
mountains of North Carolina in 2004, working on clay sculpture, then began
rendering encaustic paintings. As she had a background of working with clay and
knowledge of firing glazes and stains multiple times, encaustic painting was a
natural medium for her. She uses a blowtorch to fuse and work on dozens of
layers of wax, damar tree resin and pigment, and a brush on birch wood
substrates, to achieve an impression of reflecting light out to the viewer from
translucent layers. She moves the blowtorch flame continually and manipulates
carving and incising tools to create arresting designs.
The technique of
encaustic painting was used in Fayum mummy portraits in Egypt in 100-300 A.D.,
and the word “encaustic” derives from the Greek word “enkalen,” meaning “to “burn
into.” Encaustic artists painted on walls and statues, even hulls of ships to
waterproof them and to enhance the ships with artistic design. During the 17th
century encaustic painting became a popular medium for the indigenous tribe of
Samar Island. Also, during the muralism movement in Mexico, Diego Rivera
sometimes used encaustic techniques in his paintings. The technique has burgeoned
since the 1990’s, and Constance is among the top artists working in this
medium.
Her artist’s
statement is a simple one: “Inspiration always exists for me, and it finds me
working every day…to create a tactile and emotional response, to open the mind
to a world beyond the obvious…” A conversation with her is an adventure in learning
about incising, scraping, burning, making luminous sensual effects. A warm,
affable person, Constance initiates lively conversations with viewers and gives
them lessons in encaustic technique, as well as the story about the artist who
created the work. She has created both small and large art forms, some of which
can be found at the historic Grove Park Inn in Asheville. A world traveler, she
spends most of her time in Asheville and has a second home in Bermuda.
Constance has
been featured in Verve Magazine, The New York Times,
North Carolina Home and Garden
Magazine, and various other
publications. Her gallery was filmed in 201l for the Asheville Convention and
Visitors Bureau’s tourism campaign, and she served as president of Asheville’s
historic River Arts District from 2010-2011. In addition to these credits, she’s
a wonderful “people person” and believes in engaging with her viewers when they
visit her gallery. I came away from the encounter with a small abstract encaustic
painting she gave to me and which is now displayed in the living room of our cottage here at
Sewanee.
As I often write
ekphrastic poetry–poems that are a response to viewing a painting–I was
inspired by this gifted Asheville artist to write the following poem about my
prize encaustic painting:
UPON VIEWING AN ENCAUSTIC PAINTING
BY CONSTANCE WILLIAMS
We swim in the open sea,
gnarled outlines of moon shells,
organ and bone within a dream,
raised sludge forms
revealing contortions of the brain
from which we sprang.
And what are we?
How do we enter the doors
of narrow houses carved
at the bottom of the frame,
saved from solitary life?
They are the frames of places
where we have dared to come on land,
shapes pushing through to another
world
to find holiness in everything,
where the air is celestial green,
the ocean, a flickering light,
and the Infinite indulges his play
impulse,
his spidery lines defining many
lives,
the world we lived in,
the world we live in.
And we will go on and on
despite the shadows whispering,
What are we doing here?
Why have we been summoned
to this provisional place...
this box of translucence on a wall?
2 comments:
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing - does she have website where we can see her work?
Sounds like a wonderful "artist date." The poem is lovely. Thanks for sharing.
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