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Waxworks was showcased in the May 2007 issue of Great Output, the digital photography magazine published by LexJet. Download the article. |
Publicist: Sheryl Raskin, Out There Public Relations 215.542.8887 o 215.219.2410 c outtherepr@verizon.net |
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Entangled - Photographs byLeah Macdonald magazine article.
Published in Photo Techniques, May 2007 Issue
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(Philadelphia, PA, April 24, 2007) Renowned Philadelphia Photographer, Susan Beard is pleased to announce the launch of Waxworks a collaboration of photography and the ancient Greek technique, encaustic painting with dates back to 800 B.C. Encaustic painting features the use of beeswax and paint pigment and liquid resin to create a truly unique piece of artwork. Waxworks is a photography franchise that invites professional photographers to market the use of a unique, ancient Greek technique that transforms normal photographs in to tactile pieces of art. Details of this offering premiered at Wedding and Portrait Photographers International (WPPI) in Las Vegas at the end of March.
“Technology has changed the way we look at everything, says Susan Beard. “I think it is important to keep photography fresh by incorporating old and new techniques into products that clients find interesting. Beard continued, “In 2007 clients want to enhance the traditional wedding or Bar/Bat Mitzvah album with extra special keepsakes that capture the day. So now, clients have the option to showcase their moment in time with something more than a book of photos or a framed photo—Waxworks expands the medium to another very special choice. Waxworks pieces can be used to make any photograph more interesting and memorable. Babies, anniversaries, standard family portraits, boudoir shots, the choices are unlimited!
Every Waxworks piece is created by hand under the direction of the highly skilled professional artist and educator Leah MacDonald. MacDonald begins with a photographic image that is mounted on to a natural wood panel and coated in multiple layers of natural beeswax, oil paint and liquid resin. Custom colors and intricate strokes of hand painting are added to enhance the texture and tonality of each piece so that a special photograph becomes a piece of fine art for all to admire.
For more information about pricing and ordering call 215.499.7649 or visit waxworksphoto.com.
By: Jaime Bramble from AroundPhilly.com
Restoration of old photos is one thing, and Photoshopping some of your own snapshots to crop out your ex is another. But WaxWorks is doing something completely different still. Far from Madame Tussaud and her creepy statues, this is wax used in a process that blends photography with the ancient Greek technique of encaustic painting (which dates back to 800 B.C.) to transform pictures into works of fine art. Created by Susan Beard, Leah Macdonald, and Julia Lehman-McTigue, WaxWorks involves your image being mounted on natural wood and coated in layers of natural beeswax, oil paint, and liquid resin before customized colors and hand-painted details are added for texture and nuance. Now only available at Susan Beard's Chestnut Hill studio, the process will soon become available to professional photographers nationwide. Which is good news - because let's face it, you're not fooling anyone with your Photoshopping skills.
By: Alina Sandor from paintingdrawing.suite101.com
June 16, 2007
This third instalment of Interview with the Pros is with encaustic painter Leah MacDonald.Leah MacDonald: I got started working with wax in graduate school, I was a photo major for my masters degree, but I really enjoyed mixed media and pushing the photo paper and what I could do with it.
PD: What is your medium? Why did you choose it?
LM: I use photographs and encaustic painting together.
PD: Tell us about what you paint. (Subjects, styles, genre, impressionism vs, realism, etc.) Why?
LM: I started primarily using still life images and nudes, romantic and sensual images of women that I would add paint onto the surface. I was also very interested in collage and mixed media book arts and paper...
PD: What kind of schooling did you take to get to this level of style?
LM: I have a bachelor's Degree and a Master's degree from the West Coast San Francisco Art Institute, California College of Arts. I Learned everything from other artists and I really got started with my style of work after an internship I had with a painter named Jeff Long, also teachers and friends.
PD: Can you walk us through the steps you take to create a work? (Inspiration, reference, glazes, brush work, layer work, varnish, etc.)
LM: I mount a photograph onto a strong surface, I use wood , Then I pour a layer of thin beeswax over the photograph and then I paint onto that beautiful flat surface with medium and oil paint. I can change the mixture by brushing the wax when it's melted or draw on the surface. I also paint in reduction. I apply paint and move it around to cover by adding medium and working the brush strokes, sometimes I wipe the surface and then work the paint until I am happy with the balance between paint and photograph.
PD: Do you have a story you would like to tell about being an artist?
LM: I have many stories about being an artist, the greatest story is about happy accidents. I was collaging with kitchen wax paper and making books before I discovered encaustics. It was the answer to all my artistic needs and desires..I was really collaging a lot and experimenting with paper on wooden panels when I made my first wax piece.
I had a vision and went to the art supply to find some wax. I wanted to veil or cover the work and create another surface to work with... I like complicated processes and many layers in the work. I was never satisfied with just a beautiful photograph, I wanted the images and the paper to tell a story of age and time and have marks on it... evidence of my hand. I enjoy embellishing the photographs and watching them transform into something else.
I think my life experience really adds to my artistry and I am fortunate to have met some wonderful artists along the way, friends and teachers. I feel like a combination of all the great work that inspires me, photographers and painters and graffiti artists and sculptors. I love Kiki Smith, The Starn Twins, Todd Hido, Joel Peter-Witkin, Barry McGee, Tom Judd , there are so many artists and all my favorites come from many different media. I look at all the images and material I possibly can, from documentary, to fine art and even fashion imagery.
Right now , I am very interested in graphics and design work...and I have had the wonderful opportunity to work with an amazing painter, Carrie Ann Baade, and she has enlightened me to various brushes and medium mixtures and drawing techniques that have completely shifted my work in a new direction.. I embrace collaboration and thrive on working with other artists.
PD: How do you publicize your work?
LM: I publicize my work through my website, LeahMacdonald.com and also through my galleries, GalerieBMG, and Roger Lapelle Gallery. Also now I am involved with Waxworks and we publicize through conventions, articles and website, Waxworksphoto.com.
PD: What is the priciest work you’ve ever sold? (If you don’t mind.) Why did it sell for that price?
LM: The most expensive piece I have sold is $1500, that was a 20 x 24 encaustic piece in a gallery show in Philadelphia. My work ranges in size and is priced by size. All my works are one of a kind, because I paint on the photographs, that was also one of my motivations for becoming a mixed media artist, I wanted every piece to be an original.
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