ARTIST STATEMENT

My path as an artist diverged when I began to study encaustic painting. Throughout high school, to college, and then as a high school art teacher, my work tended to be realistic not abstract, observational not fantastical, and drawn not painted; figures, landscapes, interior studies in charcoal, sometimes ink, sometimes gouache, mostly a study of light and dark to create a sense of form. When I first began to study encaustic painting, I found that I lacked the experience and the control with the heated wax to be able to paint realistically, and I became much more abstract with my imagery and mark-making

I have recently found a way to bring my work full-circle; to connect my encaustic painting style to my charcoal figure drawing technique that I have used and loved for so many years. Using my own sketches as a reference when I paint, I will push and pull the values of the figures, building the lights and the darks to allow the 3-dimensional forms of the figure to take shape, to recede and emerge out of the middle tones. 

Encaustic painting has allowed me to abstract forms in a way that is both measured and unexpected. It is planned and controlled, until it isn’t.  It then becomes a tale of layers, reactions to what came before, choices about what will remain, what will be concealed, what will be revealed. 


BIO

Amy Vander Els studied Studio Art and Art Education in college, earning both a B.A. and an M.Ed in k-12 Art Education from the University of New Hampshire. Her teaching career brought her overseas to teach art at international schools in Italy, Hungary and the Cayman Islands. Amy returned to New England in 2014, and now designs jewelry, creates artwork and teaches encaustic workshops out of her mill studio in Amesbury, Massachusetts.

Amy’s artwork has been featured in group, invitational, and juried exhibitions and is represented in private collections in the US and abroad. Her jewelry can be found in boutiques, galleries and gift shops throughout New England. Amy is treasurer of the Amesbury Cultural Council, and is a juried member of the New Hampshire Art Association and the Newburyport Art Association.