Ruth Maude
Ruth Maude is a Canadian artist, blogger, instructor and web designer.
Her work is in the permanent collection of The Museum of Encaustic Art, (MoEA) NM, and in private collections in Canada and the United States.
She paints with molten pigmented beeswax, an ancient medium called encaustic. Heat is used at every stage of the process to apply and fuse the medium.
The founder of the popular All Things Encaustic blog, she is constantly experimenting with a variety of encaustic materials, techniques and tools and sharing her discoveries with her readers.
She works from her home studio in Toronto.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
To me, art-making is a creative practice of exploration and play. I’m committed to carving out space in my life to show up and learn what it has to teach me about myself and my world.
Encaustic is a wonderfully versatile medium. I love the natural beauty of beeswax and the wide range of techniques that work with it. I’m drawn to the way encaustic painting engages my senses—the way that it looks, smells and feels. Encaustic painting is done in layers. It is a process of building up and scraping away to reveal what lies beneath the surface. Each layer of encaustic medium is fused using heat. Working with different fusing tools I can either maintain or eliminate texture.
Often there’s an interesting call-and-response dynamic between what the wax chooses to do and my intention as I paint.
- Ruth Maude
Ruth Maude is a Canadian artist, blogger, instructor and web designer.
Her work is in the permanent collection of The Museum of Encaustic Art, (MoEA) NM, and in private collections in Canada and the United States.
She paints with molten pigmented beeswax, an ancient medium called encaustic. Heat is used at every stage of the process to apply and fuse the medium.
The founder of the popular All Things Encaustic blog, she is constantly experimenting with a variety of encaustic materials, techniques and tools and sharing her discoveries with her readers.
She works from her home studio in Toronto.
ARTIST’S STATEMENT
To me, art-making is a creative practice of exploration and play. I’m committed to carving out space in my life to show up and learn what it has to teach me about myself and my world.
Encaustic is a wonderfully versatile medium. I love the natural beauty of beeswax and the wide range of techniques that work with it. I’m drawn to the way encaustic painting engages my senses—the way that it looks, smells and feels. Encaustic painting is done in layers. It is a process of building up and scraping away to reveal what lies beneath the surface. Each layer of encaustic medium is fused using heat. Working with different fusing tools I can either maintain or eliminate texture.
Often there’s an interesting call-and-response dynamic between what the wax chooses to do and my intention as I paint.
- Ruth Maude
$350.00
Encaustic, mixed Media, photograph on book cover on panel (framed).
14.25x14.25"
$350.00
Encaustic, mixed Media, photograph on book cover on panel (framed).
14.25x14.25"
Edith was my partner’s maternal Grandmother, a woman I never knew. When I came across her World War I-era photographs, I was inspired to imagine and create stories out of the opaque moments pictured there.
I combined images from Edith’s album with my own photographs of rust and peeling paint and with ephemera—book covers and pages, stamps, sewing patterns, recipe and postcards, music from old hymnals, and birch bark—all layered with encaustic medium.
My intention was to create contemporary paintings imbued with the past.
$185.00
Encaustic, mixed media, photograph on panel (framed).
8x8"
$245.00
Encaustic, mixed media, photograph on panel (framed).
10x12"
A vintage photo was digitally combined with my own photograph of rust. The image was mounted to a panel and then painted with encaustic paints.
$245.00
Encaustic, mixed media, photograph on panel (framed).
10x12"
A vintage photo is combined with my photograph of a rusty dumpster. The mounted image is then painted with encaustic paints.
$350.00
Encaustic, mixed media, found photograph on plywood (framed).
14.25x14.25"
Three women pose at the base of a waterfall for a photo. One starts to slip and is caught by her friend. The camera captures the moment of their relief and laughter.
$370.00
Encaustic, mixed media, photograph on panel (framed).
17.50x13.50"
In Layers of Time, the sense of place can be strongly felt. I merged a historic wedding party scene with my present-day photo of the same spot. I may not have known these people personally but I have stood where their photographer stood. I have walked where they walked.
$650.00
Encaustic, mixed Media, photograph on panel (framed).
19.50x25.50"
For Moment of Stillness, I combined a vintage family photograph with my own picture of rust and peeling paint, this speaks to the slow passing of time. Adding the vivid colour of rust to the black-and-white image, created a vibrant sunset. The time-worn texture and colour gives the old image a more contemporary feel. Encaustic mixed media techniques enhance the photograph and add texture to the rushing waterfall. The photo captures a young woman in a calm, thoughtful Moment of Stillness, contrasting with the water rushing around her.