“I paint large scaled, nature-based abstractions in
wax, with a blow torch.”
Betsy Eby
Betsy Eby
As a classically
trained pianist music is an integral part of the life of American lyrical
abstract painter Betsy Eby and as such
informs her work to a major extent.
As she told The
Paris Review’s Liz Arnold “When you
start playing music at the age of five, it’s just all in you. It’s the way that
you move through the world and perceive it—you see rhythms everywhere. You see
what you look for—the phrase—and what you become steeped in; that shapes the
lens through which you see the world. So certainly the music is in me. It’s in
me inherently.”
However Eby found her artistic
voice not in music, but in encaustic painting;
the century’s old method involving beeswax, damar resin and pigment applied in translucent layers that are fused
together by heat which in Eby’s case is supplied by a blow torch.
Eby came to this ancient art form
that dates back to the 4th Century BC through her study of history.
She has a Bachelor’s Degree in Art History from the University of Oregon
with the emphasis being in Greek, Roman and Asian antiquities. An interest also
informed by music, as she has explained “I think my study of antiquities grew
out of my primary study of classical piano, perhaps, because that’s a nod back
to ancient composers.”
Essential self-taught, Eby
experimented with oils and acrylics before settling on encaustic painting. As
she told the Ledger
– Enquirer “They become these
solid, solid objects, yet solid objects and heavy objects trying to convey
weightlessness and things that are actually immaterial…The process is sort of
tough, but the content I’m addressing is ephemeral and delicate.”
With her paintings
having been described as being “more of a verb than a noun” her
visual voice resonates with a musical ambiance. As she has said “I wanted to give a voice to the unsayable. What is it
about a resonating musical line that sends you into nostalgia or melancholy?
That’s that world of the unsayable. That sense of ambiguity, of trying to
create something that isn’t absorbed just at first pass—I think that taps the
quality of musical sound.”
Eby’s museum touring
exhibition Painting with Fire
is currently on show at the University of New Orleans’ Ogden Museum of
Southern Art until the 25th of October.
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