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Encaustic: Or, Count Caylus's method of painting in the manner of the ancients. / To which is added a sure and easy method for fixing of crayons cover

Encaustic: Or, Count Caylus's method of painting in the manner of the ancients. / To which is added a sure and easy method for fixing of crayons

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About This Book

The treatise revives and explains an ancient wax-based painting technique revived by Count de Caylus, combining historical enquiry with practical instruction. It opens with a discussion of Pliny's reference to painting with wax and summarizes competing experimental approaches, then gives a clear, step-by-step method: preparing and waxing the support, applying a powdered ground, using water-mixed pigments, and gently heating the finished panel so the wax absorbs and fixes the colors. The author compares results, reports on durability and appearance, reproduces letters and observations from contemporaries, and appends a straightforward technique for fixing crayon drawings.

As the foregoing Treatise is written and published with an intention to communicate a discovery that will prove of infinite advantage to the loveliest of arts, in all its branches; the author, conscious of wanting the necessary qualifications of a writer in a language not natural to him, hopes for indulgence, for all the inaccuracies and improprieties of expression he may and must have fallen into: as to facts, he begs leave to assure the public, that nothing has been advanced but what is strictly true.

If any artist or others should in practising be at a loss or stand for any thing, the author shall always be willing and ready to give them farther light on any occasion.

The treatise on Practical Painting in general, which was to have been published together with this, as has been intimated to the public in an advertisement of the third of January, will be published as soon as possible; the author being engaged in a work of a very extensive nature, had not time to bring it in perfect order himself; a gentleman and friend of his has been so kind as to undertake the finishing and correcting of it; it will soon be ready for the press.